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Caffine Fix, Tim Dawson (2010)
Original article first publshed in The Sunday Times on 27 June
2010
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Sitting in a sunny courtyard, sipping espresso and watching Simon Humpheson
mending a puncture, I find it impossible not to wonder why it's taken
so long for the idea of combining a coffee bar with a bike workshop to
take root.
The concept is simple enough. Look
Mum No Hands is a cafe-bar with plenty of secure, off-street cycle
parking and a bike workshop where staff will undertake minor works on
your cycle while you refuel on coffee and cakes. From the ceiling of the
central London premises hang rather nice cycling paraphernalia
wooden sprint rims, a classic Italian frame and some groovy utility bikes
and there is a big screen showing non-stop cycle racing.
Humpheson and his two business partners are all keen cyclists and set
out to create the kind of place that they wanted to hang out in. With
backgrounds in cycle mechanics, restaurant management and finance, they
had good reason for thinking that they could make the formula work.
"I just love the atmosphere here when the big races are on,"
Humpheson says. "We have been getting a bigger and bigger crowd of
regulars in during the Giro d'Italia, so heaven knows what it will be
like for the Tour de France."
Humpheson is not alone similar establishments are popping up
all over the place. Lock 7 in east London
has offered a similar mix for the past couple of years, while, just down
the road, Viewtube in Stratford combines a cafe with cycle hire and a
viewing platform to see the emerging Olympic park.
And it's not just in London that the cafe-workshop has become fashionable.
Mud Dock, in Bristol, combines
an upmarket mountain bike shop and workshop on its dockside ground floor
and a cafe bar upstairs overlooking the city's waterfront. It's been around
for a while but it's now firmly established as a pit stop for any cyclist
in need of rest or repairs, or both. And in Pitlochry, Perthshire, Escape
Route (www.escape-route.biz)
installed an espresso machine almost a decade ago so that customers could
obtain legal stimulation before they took to the surrounding mountains.
It is all a welcome change from the days of hunting around for somewhere
to chain your bike while you sought out a cup of tea.
I can't help but notice that the springing-up of cafeworkshops has happened
at the same time as pubs have been closing and big chains of coffee shops
such as Starbucks have been scaling back the number of branches. Could
it be a reflection of more active lifestyles? Reading the newspapers and
chatting to friends over a coffee is delightful but it's even better if
you know that you've earned a sit-down. And there's plenty of growth potential.
If I were an investor, I would be looking seriously at the opportunities
for opening a chain of cafe-workshopwi-fi hotspots. Of course, I'm slightly
biased.
At these cafes I can file copy to The Sunday Times on my laptop, order
another coffee, get my bike serviced, commune with other "home"
workers and never have to go to the office. My only worry is that the
cakes will get the better of me. It's always a treat to have your bike
tuned up by a professional, but succumb to too many calorific temptations
and mechanical benefits achieved in the workshop will quickly be outweighed
by extra baggage.
TD June 10
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