Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Revel introduces a $99-a-month e-bike subscription for NYC residents

February 16, 2021
Reading Time: 5min read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Electric moped rental company Revel is expanding its product lineup to include monthly e-bike subscriptions for residents of New York City. It’s the latest company to try to capitalize on the e-bike boom by shifting to a Netflix or Spotify subscription model for transportation.

For $99 a month, interested customers can get a stylish electric bike manufactured by NYC-based e-bike company Wing delivered straight to their door. The price also includes complimentary maintenance, including flat tires fixes, loose chains repairs, or brake upkeep. Service requests can be submitted via Revel’s smartphone app, and Revel says a repair technician will respond within 24 hours. The company will also supply a bike lock and educational material to help subscribers navigate New York City’s less-than-bike-friendly streets.

In an interview, Revel CEO Frank Reig said he watched his fellow New Yorkers embrace cycling in much greater numbers during the early months of the pandemic, and was determined to meet that demand with a product of his own.

“We’ve been listening to our users to understand what they want and what they need,” Reig said, “and being ready to deliver a vehicle at a time when it couldn’t be more needed for a city like New York.”

“being ready to deliver a vehicle at a time when it couldn’t be more needed for a city like New York”

It’s an interesting move from Revel, the shared electric scooter company that has been operating in New York City since 2018. But it’s also very much in line with where things are headed for micromobility companies that survived the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Scooter company Lime recently added electric mopeds to its lineup, as well as e-bikes after acquiring Uber’s bike-share company Jump. Bird also dabbled with electric bikes and mopeds before deciding to stick with scooters.


With e-bikes typically costing between $1,400 and $3,000, subscriptions are seen as a more affordable alternative to personal ownership. The founders of SoundCloud recently launched an e-bike subscription service in Germany called Dance. Swapfiets is another service that is well-established in some European markets. The Dutch company just recently added e-bikes to its roster of products and launched in Berlin in July. And in the US, Bird and Lime have been experimenting with subscriptions for its electric scooters, with mixed results. Another company, Unagi, offers its electric scooters for $39-a-month in some US cities.

Subscriptions have been a mixed bag for the auto industry. Ford walked away from its service last fall following low demand. Cadillac shut down its service, Book, in 2018, only to resurrect it several months later with fewer options. BMW recently discontinued its $2,000-a-month Access by BMW service.

subscriptions are seen as a more affordable alternative to personal ownership

Revel’s in the shared moped business; why not something similar for e-bikes? Asked whether Citi Bike’s exclusive contract with the city of New York meant Revel couldn’t have launched a shared e-bike service, Reig said Revel wanted to avoid blocking the sidewalks like most scooter companies. “We don’t want to be on the sidewalk,” he said.

It’s also Revel’s latest effort to grow beyond mopeds. The company recently announced plans to building a DC fast-charging station for electric vehicles in New York City, where it is based. Revel first launched its shared moped service in Brooklyn in 2018, eventually expanding in Manhattan and Queens. And it has been growing ever since landing a $27.6 million investment from a group of backers including Ibex Investors, Toyota AI Ventures, Blue Collective, Launch Capital, and Maniv Mobility.

Now the company is ready to branch out into a new mode of electrified transportation, though not too divergent from its fleet of battery-powered mopeds. Wing has been making and selling e-bikes since 2018, when it first released its stylish, VanMoof-looking Freedom model. Its latest models, the Freedom 2 and Freedom X, are cleaner versions of that original bike.

The Freedom 2 includes an integrated 36-volt battery and a 550W Bafang hub motor. It has a top speed of 20 mph and a range 60 miles, depending on which power setting you’re in. The Freedom X includes the same parts, as well as a hidden digital display and torque sensors that regulate the motor based on how hard you’re pushing the pedals.


Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

Seth Miller founded Wing after his first e-bike was stolen from in front of his office building. The company that manufactured the bike had disbanded, so he started researching different suppliers. He soon discovered that a majority of the e-bikes sold in the US are just cobbled together from a variety of off-the-shelf Chinese-made parts found in a catalog. It sounded simple, so Miller figured he’d try it himself. (The Verge reviewed the original Freedom in 2019 and found it to be a stylish and affordable ride.)

“We couldn’t be more excited to partner with a fellow NYC company that shares our vision for modernizing and electrifying urban transportation in an environmentally friendly way,” Miller told The Verge. “Simply put, New York is better with bikes.”

Mopeds are arguably a faster way to get around than e-bikes, but they can also be more dangerous, especially for novice riders. Revel was forced to temporarily shut down its service in New York City last year after two customers were killed and one was critically injured while riding the shared electric mopeds. The company eventually resumed service with new protective measures for riders like a mandatory in-app safety test and a requirement that all riders take a selfie of themselves wearing a helmet before they’ll be allowed to ride.

Revel is also partnering with helmet company Fend to offer a discount on its foldable bike helmets. The e-bike subscription service will be called Coast by Revel and interested customers can joining a waitlist, after which Revel will start delivering bikes starting in March.

————————

Originally published at https://www.theverge.com/2021/2/16/22279921/revel-ebike-subscription-nyc-price-specs on February 16, 2021 9:00 am.

Related Posts

Few organizations have a risk of cloud deplatforming. Review your contracts anyway
News

Few organizations have a risk of cloud deplatforming. Review your contracts anyway

February 26, 2021
Testing a new COVID-19 test: How T-cells beat antibodies in helping to detect past infections
News

Testing a new COVID-19 test: How T-cells beat antibodies in helping to detect past infections

February 26, 2021
Search for software ‘Bliss’: Iconic desktop image from Microsoft’s Windows XP still lures hill seekers
News

Search for software ‘Bliss’: Iconic desktop image from Microsoft’s Windows XP still lures hill seekers

February 26, 2021
Atlassian moves into business intelligence with acquisition of Chartio
News

Atlassian moves into business intelligence with acquisition of Chartio

February 26, 2021
The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO
News

Sources: Lightspeed is close to hiring a new London-based partner to put down further roots in Europe

February 26, 2021
The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO
News

How to ace the 1-hour, and ever-elusive, pitch presentation at TC Early Stage

February 26, 2021

Recommended

Furniture maker Steelcase shut down for two weeks following ransomware attack

Furniture maker Steelcase shut down for two weeks following ransomware attack

November 13, 2020
Medical Second Opinions Can Save You Anxiety and Money

Medical Second Opinions Can Save You Anxiety and Money

November 13, 2020
2021: The Year of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence

2021: The Year of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence

January 4, 2021
The HomePod mini finally adds its long-promised ultra-wideband handoff feature

The HomePod mini finally adds its long-promised ultra-wideband handoff feature

January 26, 2021
Looking Glass’s next product is a holographic digital photo frame

Looking Glass’s next product is a holographic digital photo frame

December 26, 2020
In Clubhouse chat, Bill Gates talks bitcoin, iPhone, the pandemic and what he’s binging on Netflix

In Clubhouse chat, Bill Gates talks bitcoin, iPhone, the pandemic and what he’s binging on Netflix

February 25, 2021

© 2020 Techmoca. We aggregate tech news around the world

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
  • Reviews
  • Devices
  • Games

© 2021 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.