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Help Neighborhood Bike Works win a $25,000 grant

Posted on 27 April 2012 by WPL

bikesNeighborhood Bike Works’ Earn-a-Bike Education Cause has been selected as one of 100 finalists in the Cause an Effect program on Facebook and has a chance to win one of the $25,000 grants being awarded by State Farm through the program. From April 27 through May 17, any Facebook user can vote up to 10 times per day for Earn-a-Bike Education on the State Farm Facebook page.

The 40 Causes that receive the most votes will be announced on May 22, and a $25,000 grant will be awarded to the winners.

Neighborhood Bike Works has been headquartered in the basement of St. Mary’s Church on 40th and Locust for the past 13 years. The organization seeks to increase opportunities for urban youth in underserved neighborhoods in greater Philadelphia by offering educational, recreational, and career-building opportunities through bicycling. Neighborhood Bike Works also promotes cycling as a healthy, affordable, environment-friendly form of transportation.

If funded, “Earn-a-Bike Education” would allow Neighborhood Bike Works to offer five 8-week after-school Earn-a-Bike classes in the area, providing a total of 60 youth with free, enriching programming.

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Reader reports brazen bike theft near 44th and Baltimore

Posted on 12 January 2012 by WPL

Reader Vanessa has just emailed us with this information:

“Some time within the last 24 hours, a bike was stolen from 4413 Baltimore Ave. I’m writing in because the thief actually cut through a wrought-iron fence (!!) to take it. Pretty brazen, and kind of scary. It was in the back garden of the building, which is also brazen because the bike wasn’t at all visible from the street (or even from the front of the building).

It’s a brand new Specialized Vita with a black frame and adorable hot-pink handlebars. It was a really special Christmas present, so there’s some sentimental value… It has a Keswick Cycles sticker on the frame.

It was properly locked with two locks. If anyone sees this bike, or if anyone asks you for advice on cutting a Kryptonite New York chain lock, please let me know! I’m offering a $200 reward (and undying gratitude) for its return, no questions asked.

I’d also like to know if other people have had their bikes/parts stolen recently. The details of this theft make me think that whoever took it was a “professional.””

If you have any information about Vanessa’s bike (pictured below), please email her at: vhamer[at]gmail.com

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Firehouse Bicycles opens a second location in West Philly

Posted on 14 December 2011 by WPL

Firehouse Bicycles has just expanded into a second location in West Philadelphia after purchasing the legendary Wolff Cycles at 4311 Lancaster Ave. Wolff Cycles has been in operation since the 1930s and is possibly the oldest continuously operating bicycle shop in Philadelphia.

The shop has been re-named “Wolf Cycles” – the new owners decided to drop one “f” to make a fresh start, but also to preserve some of the legacy of the old shop. Firehouse Bicycles at 50th and Baltimore continues to operate. Their current staff has been divided to serve customers in two locations.

Wolf Cycles has on tap the same new and used bikes, gear and services that Firehouse offers. The store hours are Tuesday-Saturday 10 – 6 p.m. For more information or if you have questions please call 215-222-2171.

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Residents and police talk crime in West Philly

Posted on 15 September 2011 by Mike Lyons

About 100 West Philadelphia residents packed the basement of the Calvary Center tonight to talk to police and University City District (UCD) officials about how to curb crime in the neighborhoods west of 40th Street.

The regular monthly meeting, which usually attracts less than a dozen people, was standing-room-only tonight as residents questioned police about topics ranging from the effectiveness of plain-clothes officers to the funding of a campaign for more porch lights. Police and UCD officials called on residents to help keep neighborhoods safe by requesting more walking escorts and calling police when they see suspicious activity.

Neighborhood organization was a consistent theme of the meeting.

“We have to organize as a community,” said resident Karen Allen. “Otherwise we will be picked off one by one.”

The increased attendance at the monthly meeting with police was in response to the rape and robbery on Tuesday night near 48th Street and Springfield Avenue.

Many residents who attended the meeting wanted to talk about specific issues. Several were concerned about the area near 48th and Baltimore. A woman who lives at 800 S. St. Bernard St., a small side street near 49th and Baltimore, said she has seen an increase in criminal activity on her street, including three robberies earlier this week.

“It feels like a battle zone with kids running up and down our street with guns,” she said.

Lt. Brian McBride, who heads the Philadelphia Police Department’s University City unit, said that officers have been active in the neighborhood and made arrests in those cases.

“It’s been a battle over there,” he said. You’re right. We’re working very hard on it.”

McBride said that the department has employed a strategy that includes several plain clothes police officers in areas beyond 40th Street.

But several residents were concerned that there were no longer enough uniformed UCD bike patrols further out in the neighborhood.

“The change I see is that at night they are concentrated around 40th and Walnut,” said one person at the meeting. “It’s like if you sneeze in that neighborhood then, boom, you’re done.”

Matt Bergheiser, UCD’s executive director, said more patrols have been stationed near 40th and Walnut to help combat the rash of flash mobs last month. That area, intelligence showed, was a possible target, he said.

Bergheiser said that UCD has performed target policing before, including a crackdown near the 46th and Market El stop, which had seen an increase in crime earlier this year. Police targeted a wall near a residential area bordering the El stop and deployed more plain clothes officers. They have taken a similar approach to the increased crime below Baltimore Avenue.

“I know it’s not as visible,” Bergheiser said. “But it’s out there.”

That deployment is part of an ongoing strategy to address crime, he said “We look at every single crime every single week to try to stay ahead of the trends,” said Bergheiser.

One resident was concerned that the area south of Baltimore Avenue near 48th Street was targeted because it was on the border of police districts – that there was an “escape route” where police from different districts would not overlap. McBride said police nearby, regardless of the district, would respond to an emergency.

“In an emergency, all bets are off,” he said. “Any police can go anywhere.”

McBride advised residents at the meeting to report suspicious activity. Some people at the meeting said that in a diverse neighborhood suspicious activity was often hard to pinpoint. One person raised a specific example: He was on a trolley when he overheard a group of teens talking about the best way to rob someone at night. McBride advised him to call it in.

“On the off chance that it was a threat,” he said, “I would step off the trolley and call 911 and someone would be dispatched.”

What became clear in the meeting, though, is that people in the neighborhoods have been reluctant to report “suspicious activity.” There are likely several reasons for that. Many people are new to the neighborhood and so are still getting accustomed to what is “normal.” Also, “suspicious” is to judge.

But McBride, Bergheiser and the other speakers offered some concrete advice:

• Keep your porch light on if you have one. It costs about $3 a year to keep a 100-watt bulb on from dusk until dawn.

• Trim big bushes back. It sounds trivial, but police have noticed that in West Philly would-be robbers hide in overgrown bushes.

• Walk confidently. Beware that ear buds and headphones make you vulnerable, as does carrying lots of stuff.

• Look for light. As we know, light is our friend.

• Don’t be afraid to call the UCD ambassadors. Yes, those folks on bikes with the yellow shirts will walk you places at night. One of the folks at the meeting said that there are 12,000 calls for them near the Penn campus and “not so many” past 40th Street. They patrol out to 50th Street and usually arrive within 5 minutes. They will introduce themselves and be friendly. Call them. The number is 215-387-3942.

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Keswick Cycle opens on Locust Street near Penn

Posted on 04 September 2011 by Mike Lyons

Keswick

West Philly’s newest bike shop, a branch of the Glenside-based Keswick Cycle, opened this weekend just in time for the return of students to the area. The shop occupies about half of the first floor in the building that formerly housed the Strikes Bowling Lounge at 4040 Locust St. Workers were still moving in bikes and other merchandise Saturday afternoon, but customers were invited in to have a look around.

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Large, full-service bike shop to open in August near 40th and Locust

Posted on 20 July 2011 by Mike Lyons

One of the area’s best-known bicycle shops will open a location at the former Strikes Bowling Lounge (and an original Urban Outfitters store) at 4040 Locust St. later this summer.

Keswick Cycle will reportedly open the 4,000-square-foot store in late August, just as students start to return to the area en masse. The store, which will include bike and clothing sales and maintenance, will likely be the largest bike shop in West Philly.

The store will also include a studio to help elite riders and triathletes get fitted for bikes.

Keswick Cycle has been a neighborhood fixture in the Montgomery County suburb of Glenside since the 1930s and also operates a store in Cherry Hill, N.J.

 

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