• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Travel
    With Us
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Air & Space
    magazine

Smithsonian.com

  • Subscribe
  • History & Archaeology
  • Science
  • Ideas & Innovations
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel & Food
  • At the Smithsonian
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Games
  • Shop
  • Human Behavior
  • Mind & Body
  • Our Planet
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Wildlife
  • Art Meets Science
  • Science & Nature

Turning Bamboo Into a Bicycle

A cycling entrepreneur has turned to the durable plant as a low-tech and affordable option for building bikes

| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email |
  • By Jeff Greenwald
  • Smithsonian.com, June 29, 2011, Subscribe
View More Photos »
Craig Calfee
Legendary bicycle builder Craig Calfee working on a handmade bamboo bicycle. (Jeff Greenwald)

Photo Gallery (1/6)

Bamboo bike frames

Explore more photos from the story

More from Smithsonian.com

  • The Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa
  • Fred Birchmore’s Amazing Bicycle Trip Around the World

Bicycle designer Craig Calfee likes to talk about the time a film crew tried to stress-test one of his bamboo bike frames. Three men—each weighing about 200 pounds—piled onto one of the two-wheelers in his California showroom, and off they went. The ride didn’t last very long.

“The bamboo frame held up just fine,” Calfee recalls with a grin. “But the wheels collapsed.“ For the next test, Calfee supplemented the wheels’ metal spokes with bamboo struts: Problem solved.

Calfee, 49, grew up in Cape Cod. He worked as a bike messenger while attending the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, and helped fabricate Olympic-class kayaks in the mid-1980s. Those two experiences synergized into designing and building carbon fiber bicycle frames. In 1991, with the support of three-time champion Greg LeMond, he built the first all-carbon bicycles to compete in the Tour de France.

Dressed in a casual black jacket and aviator shades, Calfee looks more like a biker than a bicycle builder. Today, his workshop in La Selva Beach assembles some of the most advanced carbon fiber racing bicycles in the world. But Calfee also focuses his attention on a lower-tech material: bamboo.

Bamboo: Stronger Than You Might Think

“One afternoon, in 1995, my dog Luna and I started playing with a bamboo stick. I was sure it would break, or splinter—but it didn’t. I’d never realized how strong bamboo was. It inspired me, and I built my first bamboo bike as a gimmick for a trade show.”

“Where is it now?”

“At my house,” Calfee says. “I’m riding it still.”

Bamboo is not just strong; it’s also durable, attractive and sustainable. In recent years, the widely adaptable plant—actually a fast-growing member of the grass family (Poaceae)—has provided the raw material for everything from fishing poles to bedsheets. Bicycle frames, traditionally made of welded metal tubes, are an innovative use for this plentiful resource (though not exactly new: the first bamboo bike was built in England, in 1894).

Bamboo’s secret lies in its woody fiber. Microscopic tubes in the culm (stem), called vascular bundles, give the plant a strength comparable to light steel. Weight-wise (at the same stiffness) it’s also similar to steel—though considerably heavier than carbon.

Bamboo bike frames are assembled in two steps. First, the heat-treated poles are measured, cut and mitered together. Then—since welding isn’t possible—the joints are wrapped with fiber. Calfee uses hemp, or other natural fibers, soaked in epoxy. When the epoxy sets, the joints are virtually indestructible.

“What a bamboo frame has that all other bicycle frame materials lack,” Calfee observes, “is vibration damping. Bamboo wins heads and shoulders above everything else for smoothness and absorbing vibration—both of which contribute to a comfortable ride.”

A ride along the coastal bluffs bears this out. The path is packed dirt, rutted by the recent rains. But the ride never feels stiff or jarring. A hundred yards west, the Pacific Ocean froths with whitecaps. I feel at one with the bamboo frame beneath me: a comfortable blend of state-of-the-art and Flintstones technology.

Along with their artisan appeal, the availability of bamboo makes these bikes an ideal cottage industry for the developing world. Calfee is tapping into this potential. His signature bikes, made in California, run upwards of $3,500. But he also directs a project called Bamboosero, based in Ghana and Uganda.

“During the early 1980s I traveled across Africa and had a bit of experience with the continent. Years later, Columbia University’s Earth Institute approached me to do a bamboo bike project. Ghana kept coming up as a place that had a lot of village bicycle projects, designed to train local mechanics.”

Though Calfee eventually parted ways with the Institute—he prefers smaller operations, while they plan a large-scale bike factory—Bamboosero continues to thrive. The assembled frames, shipped back to California for inspection and hardware, sell for around $700.


Bicycle designer Craig Calfee likes to talk about the time a film crew tried to stress-test one of his bamboo bike frames. Three men—each weighing about 200 pounds—piled onto one of the two-wheelers in his California showroom, and off they went. The ride didn’t last very long.

“The bamboo frame held up just fine,” Calfee recalls with a grin. “But the wheels collapsed.“ For the next test, Calfee supplemented the wheels’ metal spokes with bamboo struts: Problem solved.

Calfee, 49, grew up in Cape Cod. He worked as a bike messenger while attending the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, and helped fabricate Olympic-class kayaks in the mid-1980s. Those two experiences synergized into designing and building carbon fiber bicycle frames. In 1991, with the support of three-time champion Greg LeMond, he built the first all-carbon bicycles to compete in the Tour de France.

Dressed in a casual black jacket and aviator shades, Calfee looks more like a biker than a bicycle builder. Today, his workshop in La Selva Beach assembles some of the most advanced carbon fiber racing bicycles in the world. But Calfee also focuses his attention on a lower-tech material: bamboo.

Bamboo: Stronger Than You Might Think

“One afternoon, in 1995, my dog Luna and I started playing with a bamboo stick. I was sure it would break, or splinter—but it didn’t. I’d never realized how strong bamboo was. It inspired me, and I built my first bamboo bike as a gimmick for a trade show.”

“Where is it now?”

“At my house,” Calfee says. “I’m riding it still.”

Bamboo is not just strong; it’s also durable, attractive and sustainable. In recent years, the widely adaptable plant—actually a fast-growing member of the grass family (Poaceae)—has provided the raw material for everything from fishing poles to bedsheets. Bicycle frames, traditionally made of welded metal tubes, are an innovative use for this plentiful resource (though not exactly new: the first bamboo bike was built in England, in 1894).

Bamboo’s secret lies in its woody fiber. Microscopic tubes in the culm (stem), called vascular bundles, give the plant a strength comparable to light steel. Weight-wise (at the same stiffness) it’s also similar to steel—though considerably heavier than carbon.

Bamboo bike frames are assembled in two steps. First, the heat-treated poles are measured, cut and mitered together. Then—since welding isn’t possible—the joints are wrapped with fiber. Calfee uses hemp, or other natural fibers, soaked in epoxy. When the epoxy sets, the joints are virtually indestructible.

“What a bamboo frame has that all other bicycle frame materials lack,” Calfee observes, “is vibration damping. Bamboo wins heads and shoulders above everything else for smoothness and absorbing vibration—both of which contribute to a comfortable ride.”

A ride along the coastal bluffs bears this out. The path is packed dirt, rutted by the recent rains. But the ride never feels stiff or jarring. A hundred yards west, the Pacific Ocean froths with whitecaps. I feel at one with the bamboo frame beneath me: a comfortable blend of state-of-the-art and Flintstones technology.

Along with their artisan appeal, the availability of bamboo makes these bikes an ideal cottage industry for the developing world. Calfee is tapping into this potential. His signature bikes, made in California, run upwards of $3,500. But he also directs a project called Bamboosero, based in Ghana and Uganda.

“During the early 1980s I traveled across Africa and had a bit of experience with the continent. Years later, Columbia University’s Earth Institute approached me to do a bamboo bike project. Ghana kept coming up as a place that had a lot of village bicycle projects, designed to train local mechanics.”

Though Calfee eventually parted ways with the Institute—he prefers smaller operations, while they plan a large-scale bike factory—Bamboosero continues to thrive. The assembled frames, shipped back to California for inspection and hardware, sell for around $700.

Do It Yourself Bike Building

Building with bamboo presents daunting challenges. Unlike steel or carbon, you can’t just order tubes to precise specifications.

“It’s inconsistent in shape, size, thickness and diameter,” notes Lars Jacobsen, a co-founder of Stalk Bicycles in Oakland, California. “And dependability. If you’re building these things, you can’t just jump in headlong. It takes a lot of experience with the material to see what’s going to work and what’s not.”

Jacobsen, 25, is at the point where he uses these quirks to his advantage. When I visit the Stalk workshop, Lars is building a bike for his brother. The frame bars look a bit wavy, but Lars reassures me. “Bamboo grows wobbly,” he reminds me. “And it’s just as strong as when it grows straight. One day, I’ll build the perfect Dr. Seuss bike.”

Stalk handcrafts some 72 bamboo bikes a year, all built to order. And while Calfee and Bamboosero source their bamboo from Taiwan and Africa, Stalk buys mainly within California.

“Right now,” Jacobsen admits, “it’s a niche. But we hope that as sustainability becomes more desirable, bamboo bikes will become more appealing. I’ve sold most of our bikes just by taking mine on public transit. I’m not riding up and down the train car; people approach me. ‘Is that really bamboo? Is it strong? How much does it weigh?’ It really helps us win the perception battle—where we face preconceptions about bamboo being ‘weak’ or ‘primitive.’”

Right now, Stalk charges about $1,500 for a complete, single-speed bicycle. “But we’d like to get that down below $1,000,” says Jacobsen. “Our goal is to make these affordable to more people.”

There are now about half a dozen artisans building bamboo bikes in the United States, including Organic Bikes in Wisconsin, Erba Cycles in Boston, and Renovo in Portland (a wood and bamboo blend). But the cheapest way to get one may be to build it yourself.

The Bamboo Bike Studio, with workshops in Brooklyn and San Francisco, offers hands-on classes where people with no bike-building experience at all can sign up and—for as little as $700—walk out three days later with a completed bamboo bicycle.

“After one woman finished her bike and rode it for the first time, she wept,” recalls co-founder Justin Aguinaldo. “She was amazed to learn she could do something like that.”

“We’ll soon be opening Bamboo Bike Studios in Toronto and Alabama,” says Aguinaldo, whose enthusiasm for the craft is contagious. “We’re also planning a tour, and taking the workshop on the road. There are lots of people who want to build bikes; they just can’t get to a studio. So we want to get to them.”

Also active in Africa, the Bamboo Bike Studio picked up where Calfee left off. Allied with the Earth Institute, it’s helping to launch a factory in Kumasi, Ghana. “If people can buy bikes made locally,” Aguinaldo observes, “they can avoid the higher cost of importing bikes from China.” Their ambitious goal is to turn out some 5,000 each year. The cost? About $75 a bike.

Catching Up on the Industry Leader

In 1991, Craig Calfee predicted that every bicycle in the Tour de France would be made of carbon fiber (they are). Though he doesn’t have the same aspiration for bamboo, he’d like to see the bikes gain wider traction— but that would mean rigorous field testing and quality control. Some early carbon-frame bikes had serious design and construction flaws, which hobbled their acceptance. He hopes bamboo can avoid that pitfall.

“A lot of people think bamboo bikes are easy to make, so there’s quite a few people making them,” Calfee says. “But bikes in general are difficult to build. When you design a structure that can hold a 200 lb. person rolling down a mountain at 40 miles per hour, there’s a lot of risk involved.

“Bamboo bikes are at the early stage of market acceptance, and there have been no disasters yet. But poorly-made bikes will lead to accidents, and the reputation of all bamboo bikes will suffer. I went through that with carbon fiber,” Calfee says, shaking his head. “I don’t want to go through it again.”


Single Page 1 2 Next »

    Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.


Related topics: Design Cycling California


| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email |
 

Add New Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Comments (12)

ALasse, We use metal sleeves for the bottom bracket shell, and the head tube shell, to press the bearings in. The dropouts are also metal. The main frame construction is bamboo poles. I hope you've had a chance to ride one!

Posted by phil webb on April 27,2012 | 01:16 PM

Building a bamboo bike is not too hard. Free, detailed instructions from Bamboo Bike Studio are available at: www.bamboo bikestudio.com . Note that Calfee's Bamboosero project is outsourcing: he uses cheap labor in developing nations to sell bikes at a huge margin in developed nations. Bamboo Bike Project (full disclosure: I worked on that team) helped open (on a strictly volunteer basis) Bamboo Bikes Limited, a Ghanian-owned and operated company which sells bicycles to the people in Ghana, a developing nation with need for cheap, reliable, quality transportation.

Posted by sean murray on March 7,2012 | 11:36 PM

I saw a bamboo bicycle in a museum last week, a really lovely piece of work. I think it was form the early 1900s. it is in the Welsh National Museum of Bicycles, Llandindrod Wells.

Posted by Lane Ashfeldt on December 1,2011 | 02:45 PM

Kudos to these guys for doing something that is new and innovative to 98% of us! The article points out that the first bamboo bicycle was constructed in 1894, but people around Oakland (and Boston, Portland, and somewhere in Wisconsin, apparently) are lucky to have them. And I suspect the metal tubes are merely a frame upon which the bicycle is constructed. Way to go, guys! You are one of the many reasons people love to call Oakland and the East Bay home.

Posted by RealtorTodd on October 19,2011 | 02:51 PM

I really like the ideal but what is the weight limit you know for us heavier people

Posted by monty on October 16,2011 | 05:02 PM

I hate to spoil the worship of this modern bike maker ... but Bamboo bikes were around and doing well in the 1890s.
He has not invented anything or discovered anything new.

Another point - there was a 1890s racer who had a steel bike which weighed 11 lb 11 ounces. This was 1893. It was a fixed gear (saving the weight of brakes, gearing, etc).

Posted by Pennyfarthing on October 8,2011 | 11:57 AM

great. lol not to spoil the enthusiasm, but I believe I see some metal cylinders inside the bamboo tubes?

Posted by Lasse on August 30,2011 | 12:20 PM

What an awesome article! Who knew there were so many people building these things... and how different they all look! Awesome.

Posted by David Larson on August 24,2011 | 10:45 PM

My friend Ray Baughn, who last week started a bicycle trip that will never end, would have loved to read about the bamboobike. He was well aware of the English bamboo bikes of the early 1900s.

Posted by Oscar Romo on August 23,2011 | 01:12 AM

Are there any step by step instructional dvd or videos dedicated to building bamboo bicycles? If there are, I would be interested in how to acquire a copy.

Posted by Darrell Hendren on August 5,2011 | 10:48 PM

I knew how strong bamboo was when I visited Hong Kong with my father in the 1970s. I saw construction scaffolding built out of bamboo poles, tied together with jute or other natural fiber--scaffolding rising story after story of a high-rise being built. The workmen scampered from one floor to another. The Chinese can make "anything" out of bamboo. I loved reading about this bamboo bicycle!

Posted by Sheila Morris on August 3,2011 | 05:29 PM

Wow, $75 for a fully outfitted bicycle! Awesome. I remember the infancy of carbon frames where joints would fail. Most frames were carbon tubes attached to aluminum lugs (joints at the head, seat, and bottom bracket) and the bonds would just give way. This led to developing one-piece/monocoque frames and technologies such as Trek's OCLV to reduce voids in the structure which could lead to failure, and larger diameter bottom bracket shells that could withstand hundreds of pounds of force with minimal deflection. Currently, carbon frames are still being enhanced with variable sized tubing diameters and stronger drive side chainstays, again, to reduce flexion. Consequently, this has also driven the standards for titanium, aluminum, mmc, steel, and other frames way up as well. You can get an aluminum bicycle that weighs no more than 15 lbs for around $500-600, the technology is that good.

Posted by Bruce Leesa on July 18,2011 | 03:26 PM



Advertisement


Most Popular

  • Viewed
  • Emailed
  • Commented
  1. The Scariest Monsters of the Deep Sea
  2. 16 Photographs That Capture the Best and Worst of 1970s America
  3. The Ten Most Disturbing Scientific Discoveries
  4. Ten Inventions Inspired by Science Fiction
  5. Microbes: The Trillions of Creatures Governing Your Health

  6. Jack Andraka, the Teen Prodigy of Pancreatic Cancer
  7. What is Causing Iran’s Spike in MS Cases?

  8. How Titanoboa, the 40-Foot-Long Snake, Was Found
  9. The Pros to Being a Psychopath
  10. Photos of the World’s Oldest Living Things
  1. Why Procrastination is Good for You
  2. Microbes: The Trillions of Creatures Governing Your Health

  1. What the Discovery of Hundreds of New Planets Means for Astronomy—and Philosophy
  2. Fantastic Photos of our Solar System
  3. The Ten Most Disturbing Scientific Discoveries
  4. The Great Midwest Earthquake of 1811
  5. Gem Gawking
  6. On the Case
  7. The Fight to Save the Tiger
  8. Why Procrastination is Good for You
  9. Barrow, Alaska: Ground Zero for Climate Change
  10. Do Humans Have a Biological Stopwatch?

View All Most Popular »

Advertisement

Follow Us

Smithsonian Magazine
@SmithsonianMag
Follow Smithsonian Magazine on Twitter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

In The Magazine

May 2013

  • Patriot Games
  • The Next Revolution
  • Blowing Up The Art World
  • The Body Eclectic
  • Microbe Hunters

View Table of Contents »






First Name
Last Name
Address 1
Address 2
City
State   Zip
Email


Travel with Smithsonian




Smithsonian Store

Stars and Stripes Throw

Our exclusive Stars and Stripes Throw is a three-layer adaption of the 1861 “Stars and Stripes” quilt... $65



View full archiveRecent Issues


  • May 2013


  • Apr 2013


  • Mar 2013

Newsletter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

Subscribe Now

About Us

Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

Explore our Brands

  • goSmithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
  • Smithsonian Student Travel
  • Smithsonian Catalogue
  • Smithsonian Journeys
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • About Smithsonian
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscribe
  • RSS
  • Topics
  • Member Services
  • Copyright
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ad Choices

Smithsonian Institution