I found a reliable site to buy a bicycle online - my hesitations over quality are gone after putting my bike through its paces on the pothole-riddled streets of NYC
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- The Brooklyn Bicycle Company makes high-quality city bikes that they sell through bike shops, and directly to consumers online.
- I've been riding one of their bikes for the past few weeks, treating it as roughly as I could to test the quality.
- All in all, I'm impressed with how the bike is holding up, and with how it performs on city streets - especially considering the low price.
This spring, I started riding my bike to work most days. It's something that I've wanted to do for a while, but finally got around to buying a bike last fall (great timing, right?).
Biking to work has had a ton of benefits, especially for me. The main reason I started was that, well, I hate going to the gym. I like moving around, and getting exercise, but I find doing cardio at the gym about as fun as getting teeth pulled, and I'm not a fan of running. I either need to find a team sport to join - and I often find it hard to commit the regular time to it - or I need to rely on incidental exercise. Biking to work gets me 45 minutes of mild-to-moderate cardio each way, during time I'd otherwise be spending on the subway.
Speaking of the subway, one of the biggest benefits of biking to work means that I don't get stuck dealing with unpredictable and frequent subway delays. Although I do get a bit sweaty biking into the office, it's usually cool enough in the mornings that it isn't too bad. Plus, my subway station gets so hot and humid that I get just as sweaty either way. Ah, summer in the city.
I bought my bike without too much thought, heading into a nearby shop, talking to the sales person, going for a quick test ride, and then riding it home. I didn't really pay attention to the brand, reviews, or anything like that.
However, more and more people have started buying bikes the same way as just about everything else: online.
That's what's helped the Brooklyn Bicycle Company take off. The company has been around since 2011, and since its inception, it's sold bikes through a dual-channel approach: by distributing to shops around the US, where anyone can buy one, and by selling directly to consumers online, then shipping the bike disassembled to a local bike shop, where it's put together before you pick it up.
When Brooklyn Bicycle approached us earlier this year, interested in being featured as an Insider Picks choice, we hesitated. The brand seemed interesting, it offered sharp looking bikes, and the prices were competitive compared with what we found in local bike shops, but still - it's hard to judge quality based on just their company's website.
Brooklyn Bicycle offered us a bike to test out, to see if it held up to our standards, and we decided to take them up on it. I used the Bike Finder tool on the company's site, and came up with a model - the Bedford 3 Speed ($450). I figured out the right size, and instead of shipping it to a third-party store, arranged to pick it up at the company's new Brooklyn showroom so that I could have a look around.
Generally, I prefer sportier bikes to the city-style ones that Brooklyn makes, so it took me a couple of miles to get comfortable - I was used to riding my hybrid. Once I did, I decided that in the interest of testing it well, I was going to have some fun; I decided to ride hard and beat it up. I took every pothole and every bump I could find, rode on roads desperately in need of paving, and left it outside my building in the rain - and there's been plenty of that this July.
After a couple of weeks beating the bike up as best as I could, my hesitations over quality are gone. This bike is top-notch.
Aesthetically, it's a great look, with a shiny paint job and stylish vegan leather binding on the handlebars and seat. The steel frame is fairly lightweight - more so than my hybrid bike - but is heavy enough to soften the feeling of bumps. The gears are internal, protecting them from the elements. Ultimately, the bike reminds me of a Citibike - a New York City docked bikeshare - with a diamond frame instead of a walkthrough, a smoother ride, and about 1,000 pounds lighter.
Over the past few weeks, it's held up well, despite my abuse. Based on the reviews I've found, it looks like the bikes hold up for much longer than that - I'm looking forward to finding that out for myself - and it looks like my experience with the Bedford is representative of what other people have found with other models.
With high quality and competitive prices, I'd definitely recommend checking out Brooklyn Bicycle Company if you're in the market. If you're not sure which model you want, just check out the Bike Finder.