Let's have a really big science project - a Beer Bike! Here is another article from the NY Times:
A Hybrid That Runs on
Foot Power and Beer
By SALLY MCGRANE
AMSTERDAM — Eight British
bankers in orange jumpsuits, their ID patches embroidered with the names of
Tolkien characters, were in town for a bachelor weekend (Frodo was getting
married). They had just finished a two-hour city tour on a beer bike. “Arwen
fell off!” said a very cheerful Pippin. “He almost killed himself!”
“We had girls running
after us!” Gandalf said.
“Well,” Pippin pointed
out, “they wanted a lift.”
“Still,” said Aragorn,
the best man, “we talked to women. It was great.”
A kind of pub on wheels,
propelled by pedaling, the beer bike
— which in Europe is usually but not always steered by an employee of the tour
company rather than by one of the partygoers — is thought to have been invented
in the Netherlands in the late 1990s.
But in recent years, the
contraption, variously promoted as a social lubricant; an original,
environmentally correct way to see a city; and a healthier, calorie-burning
alternative to sitting in a bar, has expanded its appeal beyond the Dutch
border to several European countries and the United States.
“We are just human
beings,” said Ard Karsten, who started building beer bikes and running tours in
the Dutch capital in 2005. “We like enjoyment.”
Mr. Karsten installed a
new keg of beer on his bright blue, 20-foot-long, 1,500-odd-pound machine,
which can hit speeds of five miles per hour and accommodate 12 riders on
regular bicycle seats around a wooden bar, where beer is on tap. A bench in the
back provides more seating.
The next group, a
bachelor party from Paris, settled in, and Mr. Karsten took the helm.
“Everybody needs to pedal,” he barked, as the bike began to move forward,
merging into street traffic. “Don’t give beer to locals. Don’t slow down. Don’t
scream and shout.” He looked around as the Parisians lighted cigarettes. “And
stop smoking! It’s bad for your health.”
“Tourists like to see
Amsterdam in a new way,” Mr. Karsten explained.
But the beer bike is
increasingly international. “We receive requests from countries I’ve never even
heard of,” said Zwier van Laar, the Dutchman who claims to have invented the
first beer bike in 1997 as a way to help a pub owner advertise his
establishment in a local parade.
Udo Klemt, a German
lawyer, saw his first beer bike while on a trip to the Netherlands. “I fell in
love immediately,” he said, and imported one of Mr. van Laar’s machines to
Cologne in 2005.
Two years later, Mr.
Klemt founded the BierBike
company, which offers tours on Dutch-made beer bikes in some 30 cities in
Germany and Budapest. “All I know is that it is really fun to ride one of
these,” he said. “I have plans for the whole world.”
In much the same way,
James Watts, an American who used to work in the software industry, saw one of
the bikes while on vacation in Cologne two years ago. “I said, ‘I’m going to
bring one of those back to Oregon.’ ”
At home, Mr. Watts built
the first Cycle Pub, then teamed up
with Mr. Karsten to import Dutch beer bike technology. So far, they have made
vehicles for Reno, Nev.; Boise, Idaho; Portland; Madison, Wis.; Tucson; Denver;
and Santa Monica and Redondo Beach in California. Mr. van Laar said he had sold
11 beer bikes in the United States. At least one American company, Caztek, based in St. Paul, started
building them last year.
Exactly why beer bikes
carry such appeal is still something of a mystery. There is the beer, of
course, which for some is reason enough. For many, it is the combination of
partying and pedaling, which accomplishes a special kind of bonding.
“It kind of inspires a
sense of silliness,” said Luke Roberson, based in London, who built his first Pedibus, a beer-bike-type
vehicle that sometimes also serves champagne, in 2008. Once, he said, a group
of actors in a London tomb-themed haunted house spotted the passing bike. In
full ghoul costume, they gave chase and boarded. Another time, the police pulled
a tour over, asked for a card and booked one the next day.
Bart Sallets, who started
running beer bike tours in Belgium in 2007, said that while “of course, getting
drunk together is a very nice way to bond,” things can occasionally get out of
hand. Like the time a middle-aged, kilt-wearing Belgian almost set his bike on
fire during his bachelor party. When the police arrested the groom-to-be,
everyone else ran away, leaving the tour guide stranded with the bike, which is
too heavy for one person to move.
Beer bikes are not
welcome everywhere. Munich banned them in August, and after a court ruling in
November, beer bikes now need a special permit to operate in Düsseldorf.
Michael Zimmermann, head of Düsseldorf’s public regulatory agency, said that
the bikes blocked the old city’s narrow streets, causing traffic jams, and that
the loud, off-key singing was annoying.
Operators insist that
clear rules are the solution to rowdy behavior. For example, “if someone can’t
walk, he can’t get on the bike,” Mr. Karsten said.
Or, as Ulrich Hoffmann,
managing director of BierBike in Berlin, said, “You can take off your shirt,
but you can’t bare your bottom.”
Even in their native
land, the bikes are not universally popular. “I wouldn’t be caught dead on
one,” said Machteld Ligtvoet, spokeswoman for the Amsterdam tourism board.
“It’s not something that we promote.”
The bachelor party from
Paris, however, was having a good time, if somewhat sheepishly. “If my wife saw
me right now, she would leave me immediately, I look so stupid,” said Julien
Paumelle, a filmmaker.
Despite complaints about
the lack of ashtrays and a humiliating defeat in a race against a bachelor
party from Madrid on another beer bike, the French deemed the outing a success.
“Beer or sport?” mused
the brother of the groom-to-be. “It doesn’t need to be a choice.”