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Bike Racks

| IMAGES | MAP | ABOUT | HOW & WHY | BICYCLE DIARIES |

David Byrne and the New York City Department of Transportation, in conjunction with New York art gallery PaceWildenstein, have unveiled nine unique bicycle racks designed by DB and installed in various locations throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn. An avid bicyclist for almost 30 years, Byrne was invited to join the panel of jurors selected by the DOT to judge a design competition for outdoor and indoor bicycle racks. Inspired by the city's initiative, he submitted some original design ideas of his own named after specific locations and neighborhoods, which the DOT enthusiastically agreed to install. The bike racks are now on permanent loan to the city, and wil remain in their locations.

Click on any image below for more pictures/video

 

Drawings
The Villager - Photo
Coffee Cup - fabrication
DB Drawings
Bike racks in situ
Bike rack fabrication
Mudflap Tammy - video still
Shoe with shadow
rackumentary
Michael Neff's chalked shadows

Bike rack locations—click markers for more information:


 

ABOUT:

"The Streets Are Safe (From Whimsical Bike Racks)", The New York Times Cityroom blog, 2.4.10
"The NYC Design Commission", DB Journal entry, 2.1.10
"David Byrne Perking Up Bike Parking in NYC", The City Fix, 12.26.08
"Bike Rack Art Installation Shines in New York City", Gadget Lab (WIRED Blog), 8.26.08
"A Bicycle Built for 'Shoe'", The New York Post, 8.20.08
"David Byrne Does Bike Racks, Too", Stereogum, 8.20.08
"NY Hosts 9 bicycle racks designed by David Byrne", AP, 8.20.08
"New Bike Racks, Courtesy of David Byrne", The New York Times Cityroom blog, 8.19.08
"David Byrne, Cultural Omnivore, Raises Cycling Back to an Art Form", The New York Times, 8.8.08
"Biking with David Byrne", The Wall Street Journal, 7.18.08 [Video & article]
"How New Yorkers Ride Bikes", DB Journal entry, 10.7.07

BIKE RACKS—HOW AND WHY:

The Department of Transportation is holding a design competition for outdoor and indoor bicycle racks, and I have agreed to help judge the entries. Enthused by their initiative, I sent them some sketches for imaginary bike racks named for specific NYC neighborhoods and locations. Here are the sketches:

Drawings/titles/locations

To my surprise, they responded by saying, “If you make these we'll put them up.” Holy Moses! I was over the moon — what happened to the legendary red tape and years of bureaucratic haggling I was supposed to go through?

I then approached my friends at Pace Gallery to see if they might want to cover the costs of fabrication and then possibly sell these items as original works down the line. They responded quickly, too — also with yes and yes! (make and sell.) With the help of Bill Scanga, who runs the production dept. at the gallery, we got the legal specs from the DOT, and the folks at New Project in Brooklyn then began to ponder how these curvy shapes could be produced. Bill, it turns out, is maybe more of a bicycle nut than I am, so for both of us this was a labor of love — we'd ride out to the edge of Park Slope to check on the progress over the Manhattan bridge and then down 5 th Street, picking up iced coffees on the way.

Near the metal and woodworking shop a man has created a diorama in his front yard in which all kinds of miniature beasts cavort and do battle with one another:

beasts

The folks at New Project came up with an ingenious solution for the fabrication, as bending the squarish shaped pipe that the city uses into these convoluted shapes would have been close to impossible. It was important to me that these things be the same thickness and material as the existing U- and M-shaped racks — to help identify them as practical bike racks and not modern art — but actually making a mudflap Tammy by bending would have been impossible. The solution was to weld pieces together and then grind the edges so it perfectly simulated the city racks, though the fabrication process was completely different.

Bike rack fabrication

Zac Frank at the DOT helped secure some of the locations — which are about as perfect as one could imagine — Wall Street for the dollar sign! And Bergdorf Goodman for the giant high heel!

Thanks to Janette and everyone at the DOT. Marc Glimcher at Pace. Danielle at Todomundo. These will be up starting last week of July for almost a year — for 364 days.

—DB

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