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  2. Santander Cycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santander_Cycles

    The scheme commenced operations as Barclays Cycle Hire on 30 July 2010 with 5,000 bicycles and 315 docking stations distributed across the City of London area and parts of eight London boroughs. [21] The scheme was at first located mainly within the central zone, roughly bounded by the Zone 1 area of the Transport for London zoning system.

  3. Santander Cycles MK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santander_Cycles_MK

    The scheme launched on June 17, 2016 with 300 bikes across 42 docking stations [4] in Milton Keynes. Santander UK ambassador Jenson Button is the face of the bicycle hire scheme . Nextbike is a German company that develops and operates public bike sharing systems with a number of successful bike sharing schemes .

  4. Bicycle-sharing system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle-sharing_system

    The programmes themselves include both docking and dockless systems, where docking systems allow users to rent a bike from a dock, i.e., a technology-enabled bicycle rack and return at another node or dock within the system – and dockless systems, which offer a node-free system relying on smart technology.

  5. List of bicycle-sharing systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bicycle-sharing...

    GM Cycle Hire Beryl November 2021 [325] Liverpool: City Bike May 2014: July 2022 [326] London [327] [328] Santander Cycles (formerly Barclays Cycle Hire) PBSC & 8D: Serco 30 July 2010: TIER [24] Leicester: Santander Cycles Leicester RideOn 14 April 2021 [329] 2023 [330] Milton Keynes: Santander Cycles MK: 3 Gen. nextbike CycleSaviours 17 June ...

  6. Forest (bicycle-sharing system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_(bicycle-sharing...

    [2] [3] As of September 2021, Forest has over 800 bicycles [4] on city streets, making it one of the four main e-bike operators in London, competing with Santander Cycles (docked) and Lime, these services replacing Chinese companies Mobike and Ofo after their insolvencies and removal.

  7. BCycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BCycle

    The joint venture worked with a non-profit created to operate the system, Denver Bike Sharing, operating as Denver B-cycle, to launch with 500 bikes and 40 stations in Denver on Earth Day, April 22, 2010. [13] [14] [15] In 2018, the eighth year of Denver B-cycle, it received a US$400,000 subsidy from the City of Denver government. [16]

  8. Nice Ride Minnesota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nice_Ride_Minnesota

    The Nice Ride system was first put in place in areas near downtown Minneapolis and has been expanded in multiple phases. The system expanded into western areas of neighboring Saint Paul in summer 2011 and had its first stations deployed in downtown Saint Paul in June 2012, bringing the total number of bikes to 1,328 and stations to 146.

  9. San Antonio B-Cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Antonio_B-Cycle

    San Antonio B-cycle is a privately owned for-profit public bicycle sharing system that serves San Antonio. In operation since March 26, 2011, it is the largest bike sharing program in Texas and the second largest bike sharing program in the B-Cycle program. [2] As of June 2013, the San Antonio B-cycle system consisted of 42 stations and over ...