Some craftsmen show how you can get by in the city without a delivery truck. Your cargo bikes not only have a clean ecological balance, but also cause less trouble when looking for a parking space.
From
Andrew Schubert
The thing looks like a future version of the Ape, the famous cargo tricycle that has been used in Italy for decades by greengrocers, bakers and craftsmen for transport. But unlike the Ape – which translates to bee – the tricycle that the Höflinger Müller bakery chain uses to deliver to two of its branches has neither a pretty name nor a classic engine. The “Rytle MovR3” is a cargo bike that can reach 25 kilometers per hour with the support of two electric motors. And because it’s legally considered a bicycle, it’s allowed to ride on bike lanes and park on sidewalks.