Slow Bicycle Restoration con amore

Monday, February 22nd, 2010
Slow Bicycle Restoration con amore Slow Bicycle Restoration con amore Slow Bicycle Restoration con amore

Being the founder of the Cycle Chic movement, Copenhagenize and The Slow Bicycle Movement takes me to a lot of interesting places to meet a lot of interesting people. Which is brilliant and humbling in so many ways. Of all the warm and fuzzy experiences, some are warmer and fuzzier than others and this one is prime for The Slow Life philosophy.

Whilst in London I cycled out of my way to visit Sargent & Co. The shop was closed but Rob Sargent, the owner, was kind enough to open the door and let me inside for a look. It was time for a tea break, anyway.

Rob opened up the shop about a year and a half ago after settling on a bicycle shop as a ‘lifestyle change’. It’s more of a workshop than a bicycle shop proper as Rob gently restores vintage racers at the most relaxing, aesthetic pace.

At right, that’s Rob making the tea in the background and Eric Deeks in the foreground. Eric is teaching Rob the tricks of the framebuilding trade. He used to build frames for Paris Cycles back in the day.

I don’t know what it is about the shop but I keep returning to it in my head. The atmosphere was calm, the air scented with the unmistakeable sweetness of oil and vintage. Buzzing gently below the surface was that unique passion for bicycles, like the sound of a distant bumble bee at the bottom of the garden.

The most remarkable thing about this bicycle shop is that you feel as though it has occupied the premises since, I don’t know… 1948… and that Rob’s dad and grampy had puttered around inside throughout the decades before handing it down. You don’t quite believe the Established 2008 sign outside and are quite convinced that the old walls have strained under the weight of hanging frames and wheels. Indeed, that they were built solely for this purpose.

Speaking to Rob you are seduced by his quiet manner and gentle voice. Just hearing the way he speaks and you know how he handles the old frames and bicycles that are wheeled into the shop. Gently, lovingly, passionately. Ah, yes. And Slowly.

Business is fine, apparently. Too fine, you sense. Meaning less time for the quiet pleasures of restoring old bicycles to former glory and building new frames.

Eric used to build Paris bicycles not that far from the shop. His prescence in the place is one of quiet authority. Hands grey with grease as he sips his tea you can’t help thinking of what it was like building bicycles in the 1950′s and you secretly wish you were there to experience it.

Now that the fixie fad is waning, the Next Big Thing is vintage racers. So Rob’s lifestyle change to Slow Bicycle Restoration was visionary as well as necessary.

If you’re in London, be sure to meander past. Even if the shop is closed, peer through the windows. It’s enough, somehow.

Sargent & Co is at:
74 Mountgrove Road
Finsbury Park, London
www.sargentandco.com/

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Mikael
Mikael
Mikael Colville-Andersen is a filmmaker and photographer who is also Denmark's bicycle ambassador. His blogs about Copenhagen's bicycle culture - Copenhagen Cycle Chic, Copenhagenize.com and The Slow Bicycle Movement - have relaunched the bicycle globally as not only a fashion trend but also as a respected, accepted and feasible transport form. He travels around the world giving lectures about Copenhagen's bicycle life and works as a mobility planner with focus on bicycle infrastructure and positive marketing of the bicycle.
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