Skip to main content

A thousand yellow 'ofo' bikes are yours to use in Seattle

ofo bike sharing seattle
ofo
Bike-sharing schemes are riding into cities around the world with increasing frequency, offering locals and visitors another way to get around town.

Marking its arrival in the U.S. market, Chinese bike-share giant Ofo has just launched in Seattle with 1,000 yellow bicycles dotted around the city.

Unlike Pronto, a similar service that used docking stations before it closed down earlier this year, Ofo lets you leave the bike anywhere you like. Within Seattle, it goes up against Spin and LimeBike , both of which started serving riders last month.

To use Seattle’s latest bike-sharing service, you need a smartphone with the Ofo app (iOS and Android) and a credit or debit card, with $1 getting you an hour of riding time. At the time of writing, that’s double what you get with Spin and LimeBike.

You can find available bikes by checking the map on the app. Once you locate one, simply scan the bar code on the bike to unlock the back wheel, hop on, and ride off. When you reach your destination, reset the lock manually and go about your day.

Naturally, these bike services — as well as the good people of Seattle — really don’t want you to leave the bike in any ol’ place when you’re done with it. Riders needs to ensure the two-wheelers are left well clear of things like crosswalks and loading zones. Bike racks are ideal, but if you have no choice but to leave it on a sidewalk, there needs to be at least six feet of walking space beside it.

Challenges

With Pronto ending its service in Seattle after less than three years, it will be interesting to see how Ofo and its competitors fare in the coming months. Pronto is thought to have struggled because Seattle is considered by many to be a challenging place to bike, its hilly terrain and rainy weather prompting people to find other forms of transport. Or walk.

A local law also requires you to wear a helmet when cycling in Seattle, though many ignore the rule. The current bike-share services in the city don’t offer helmets with the bikes, either, which may deter some from pedaling off.

The services also need to ensure that — without docking stations providing some order — the bikes don’t end up blocking the streets in popular parts of town, creating an ugly and disruptive “bicycle graveyard” that has to be cleared by either the company or the authorities. Finally, there’s the risk of theft — one startup in China recently had to close down just six months in after 90 percent of its 1,200 bicycles went missing.

Despite the challenges, Dai Wei, Ofo’s 26-year-old CEO, thinks his company can make a success of it in Seattle.

Wei launched Ofo in Beijing in 2014, and gave his company that name because the word resembles the shape of a bicycle. It now has more than three million of its yellow bikes in around 50 Chinese cities. Besides Seattle, Ofo’s only operation outside of China is in the British city of Cambridge where it offers a small number of bikes, although it’s looking to launch in as many as 20 countries before the end of 2017, including France, Germany, and Japan.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Goodbye, coolers. The EcoFlow Glacier doesn’t need ice — it makes it
The EcoFlow Glacier is a fridge shaped like a cooler with its own battery,

Every cooler operates on borrowed time. It leaves for your camping trip brimming over with crisp produce and ice-encrusted beer that looks straight out of a Super Bowl commercial, and returns with a soggy block of foil-wrapped cheddar cheese floating in a pool of mustard water. Mother Nature always wins.

Perhaps that’s why I was so enamored when I saw the EcoFlow Glacier at CES 2023. Less a cooler than a mobile battery-powered fridge on wheels, the sleek electric Glacier not only obviated the need for ice, it would make ice for me in 18 minutes. My home fridge can’t even do that, and I didn’t even know I wanted it to until just now. When EcoFlow offered to let me try the Glacier, I envisioned sipping a perspiring glass of whiskey in the tropics and accepted the occupational hazards of my job.

Read more
I was wrong. E-bikes are so practical, they’re a transit cheat code
An Aventon Level 2 ebike sits outside a grocery store.

Confession: Despite loving both bikes and gadgets, e-bikes never excited me. Compared to my bicycle, e-bikes seemed unfair. Compared to my motorcycle, they seemed slow. Compared to my car, they seemed impractical.

But with $1,500 federal e-bike rebates potentially on the horizon at part of E-Bike Act, I decided it was past time to reconsider. Not just because 30% off would make them way more accessible, but because the entire idea that e-bikes could be worthy of a rebate changed the way I looked at them: less as toys, more as transit. Had I written off an entire way of getting around because I was looking at it the wrong way?

Read more
Upway launches one of the best marketplaces for certified e-bikes, new or not
Man holding ebike from Upway in a field, lifestyle image.

This content was produced in partnership with Upway.
It wasn't too long ago that e-bikes were a rare sight, but all of that has changed, and rightfully so. Electric bikes are all over the road these days, and there are many brands either venturing into the technology, to launch their own versions of the sustainable transportation option or reiterating existing and traditional designs. From Aventon to Schwinn, or RadPower to Momentum, with so many opportunities, the prevailing question is, where do you go to find the best deals and the best information about these brands and their e-bike models? The answer is Upway, the number one certified electric bike provider and an official partner to many of the aforementioned brands.

What is Upway, exactly? It's a marketplace, specializing in e-bikes, featuring an inventory that's sourced from some of the best brands in the world. There are American brands -- like Specialized, Cannondale, and RadPower -- and European brands -- like Riese, Muller, and VanMoof. The best part is the discounts, offering up to 60% off retail, for a plethora of brands. Upway is on a mission to make sustainable mobility affordable for everyone. It's also one of the best places to go for a new or pre-owned e-bike, and here's why:

Read more