Bent Basket: The Fixed-Gear of Cargo-Carrying

Is it me, or are bike racks and baskets getting hotter and hotter? The latest example is the made-to-order Bent Basket by San Francisco designer Faris Elmasu. The plywood, nylon and aluminum construction sits over the front wheel where you can gaze upon its lovely curves as you ride.

In practical terms, the Bent Basket looks to be top-notch. You may not be able to toss in small items and ride away, but the open design with those stretchy straps is more versatile than either a tall basket or a narrow rack. Strapping a MacBook Pro straight onto it when it is mounted on a bike with skinny hard tires and no suspension may not be the best idea, though, despite the picture showing this dubious practice on the product site.

The maximum load is listed as a “12-pack of beer” and it is designed for the wheel-size of a 700c road bike, which pretty much means carrying Pabst Blue Ribbon on a fixed-gear bike. If you have a more utilitarian bicycle, there are less fancy-looking cargo-platforms available, for undoubtedly less cash.

Talking of price, you’ll need to get in touch with Elmasu to work something out, as each “basket” is hand-built. So beautifully simple is the design, though, that a quick trip to your local kitchenware emporium (for the tray) followed by a stop at the hardware store (everything else) should equip you to make your own, something I’m now planning to do. If you do make one, post images to the Gadget Lab Flickr Group, or just mail them in.

Bent Basket product page [Bent Basket via Design Boom]

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Bike Porter Handlebars With Built-In Basket

Bike Porter Handlebars With Built-In Basket

Baskets on bikes are very useful, and so are handlebars. Unlike handlebars, baskets are pretty easy to steal. The Bike Porter from Danish designer Goodmorning Technology mashes the two together into something that looks like it could be used for mobile cage-fights. Between very small opponents.

The concept is a good one the basket is built into the handlebars themselves, making stealing it hard even on the brakeless fixie in the photo, which has no cables to deter thieves. Being metal, its also tough. Sure, small things will fall through the gaps but for slinging shopping bags in there and carrying them home this would be ideal.

It also has another advantage for the aesthetically-minded fixed-gear rider. As this is technically just a fancy handlebar, you can add it to your bike safe in the knowledge that you havent corrupted the clean, spare, simple lines of your ride.

Product page [Goodmorning via Noquedanblogs]

Posted under Gadget Reviews

This post was written by publisher on April 28, 2009

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