Skip to main content

Bird app - now with extra bikes

Micromobility group is including local bike-share providers in its app in US and Norway
By Adam Hill September 27, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Bird: 'We must think creatively in ways that support existing transit modes and fill in a city’s mobility gaps' (© Felix Mizioznikov | Dreamstime.com)

Bird has connected its shared scooter platform to local bike-share providers in four US cities and one in Norway.

The move, part of the micromobility firm's Smart Bikeshare Program which was announced in June, means that bike-share services now appear in the Bird app in Austin (Metrobike Austin), Los Angeles (Metro Bike), San Antonio (SA Bikeshare), Milwaukee (Bublr Bikes Milwaukee) and Oslo (Oslo City Bike).

Bird app users will be able to see their nearest public bike stations and bikes available; tapping the relevant icon will take the rider to the local bike-share app.

Bird insists this is "completely cost free to cities and local operators" and will "help encourage multimodal mobility and reduce dependence on ICE vehicles".

The company began partnering with Italian e-moped operator ZigZag on a similar integration in Florence earlier this year, but the five cities are the first places where it is to be introduced at scale.

“This is a forward-thinking programme that underlines the benefits of GBFS data and demonstrates how different micromobility options such as shared scooters and bikes can work together towards the same positive goal,” said Sam Herr, executive director at the North American Bikeshare and Scootershare Association.

“This is an exciting initiative as we all look to increase the usage and access to clean transportation alternatives.”

Zig Zag founder Emanuele Grazioli says the partnership "is helping establish a new industry standard, one that benefits riders, cities and local businesses alike".

Bird suggests that integrating public bikes and shared scooters is "particularly important as many big-city commuters wrestle with returning to the office".

“Cities and riders are best served by transportation services that complement one another,” said Renaud Fages, Bird’s global head of operations.

“To serve all riders, we must think creatively in ways that support existing transit modes and fill in a city’s mobility gaps."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Neuron boosts NZ micromobility options 
    September 22, 2021
    Riders will be able to unlock an e-scooter for NZD$1 and travel at 45 cents per minute
  • Bird enables reports of poorly parked and damaged e-scooters
    November 15, 2018
    Bird is to roll out an app feature which allows people to report poorly parked or damaged electric scooters to the company. It is an attempt to solve one of the biggest bugbears surrounding the deployment of scooters and dockless bikes – the issue of what happens when users abandon or abuse the vehicles. Bird says the app’s new ‘community mode’ will improve parking and safety in the cities where it operates, such as Portland and Salt Lake City. The company will use reports to reposition poorly parked e-
  • Tier Mobility buys Nextbike
    November 17, 2021

    Berlin-based Micromobility group Tier Mobility has bought bike-share specialist Nextbike for an undisclosed sum.

    The company says the acquisition creates the industry's "first truly multimodal platform across bikes, e-bikes, cargo bikes, e-scooters and e-mopeds".

    The addition of Nextbike, based in the east German city of Leipzig, gives a combined total of 250,000 vehicles in 400 cities, Tier adds.

  • Ito World bike-share data comes to Google Maps
    July 21, 2020
    Riders will be able to use Maps to open bike-share apps to book and unlock a bike