Hooks are a cheap way to store bikes. Or you can create long and tall saw horses and just hang bikes by their seats. In Salt Lake we contacted bike shops and were able to get their old display racks, ideally a retail bike shop will change everything every 3-5 years.
As for materials Bikes Not Bombs and Cycles for Change have their instructor manuals online.
Sincerely,
Jonathan Morrison Project Coordinator Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective www.slcbikecollective.org
On 1/14/07, velocipede-bikes@riseup.net velocipede-bikes@riseup.net wrote:
Hello out there--
I'm new to this list, working on Baltimore's first bike collective. We're woking towards our first year of active existence, and we have lot's of questions and could use any advice we can get. In paticular we are trying to figure out the best way to store bikes efficiently and inexpensively...Also we are working on starting up mechanics classes for kids and adults and would appreciate any advice, curricula, written materials, or funding sources anyone could shoot our way...
I sent something out to all the bike collectives before, but I thought I'd try this list as well and see what came up....
thanks in advance-- i'm excited that this list exists! -beth of Velocipede Bike Project _______________________________________________ thethinktank mailing list thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org http://lists.bikecollectives.org/listinfo.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.o...