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Center for Appropriate Transport

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The Center for Appropriate Transport (CAT) is an non-profit community center dedicated to bicycles and alternative transport located in Eugene, Oregon, United States.[1]

CAT holds publicly funded educational workshops for teaching youth from ages 12 to 21. Within the 8,000-square-foot (740 m2) facility there is a public bicycle repair workspace and a bike machine-shop for the design and manufacture of special-purpose bikes, particularly cargo bikes and recumbents. There is also a bike museum on site, a bike rack-building workshop, a sewing facility and the publishing offices of Oregon's only cycling magazine, Oregon Cycling. CAT is also home to Pedaler's Express, a pioneering workbike-based delivery service.[2]

History

CAT was founded in 1992.[2]

To create the center, Jan VanderTuin gathered the founding core group, which included bicycle retailer and activist Kurt Jensen, writer and racer Jason Moore, Bowerman, and Rain Magazine editors Greg Bryant and Danielle Janes. Bryant was instrumental in bringing Oregon Cycling into CAT, and obtaining non-profit status. CAT opened on November 20, 1992.[3]

Within a few years CAT and Rain Magazine were no longer partners, and by 1995 the emphasis turned to youth education when CAT began contracting with local school districts to work with youth in need of a hands-on education. CAT is an alternative education program registered with the Oregon Department of Education and as such is one of the few publicly funded bicycle schools in the United States.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Turning Wheels". Eugene Weekly. June 29, 2000.
  2. ^ a b Nagata, Yoshiyuki (2006). Center for Appropriate Transport. Springer Verlag. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-4020-4985-9. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ Moore, Jason (1993). "CAT". Rain.