We offer mechanical training, as well as volunteer opportunities to practice and reinforce what you learn. We know that practice makes perfect, which is why we have plenty of bikes that don't belong to anyone ready to be your learning tool.
In addition to our mechanical training we also offer riding classes. While most people know how to balance and pedal, we teach what people need to know to be safe, be prepared and comfortable to start commuting. Regardless if the last time you rode was yesterday or yesteryear, we have a class to fit your needs.
We even help people learning to ride for the first time, young and old. The process is fairly simple: lower the seat so your feet are flat on the ground, take off the pedals, and then kick and coast around a parking lot for a few hours. This separates the balance from the pedaling, once someone can coast as far as they can kick -- they are ready for to put the pedals back on.
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Interested in improving your wrenching skills or starting from scratch? The Salt Lake City location offers FREE instruction from the Park Tool School from 6-7:30 each Monday Volunteer Night at the SLC Community Bike Shop. Each week we will pick a different chapter (schedule below), and provide you with bikes to practice on, so don't bring your own. We will have the textbook, Park Tool's Big Blue Book of Bicycle Repair, for sale during the classes. Please bring paper and pen or pencil to write notes. While it would be beneficial to attend all the lessons, feel free to pick and choose since each class topic is taught independently of the others.
 
2012 Salt Lake City Dates (Subject to Change)
Winter Classes
- January 9th @ 6pm sharp: Overview of suspension systems (Basic)
- January 16th NO CLASS (Martin Luther King Day)
- January 23rd @ 6pm sharp: Tires & Tubes
- January 30th @ 6pm sharp: Hubs & Rear Sprockets
- February 6th @ 6pm sharp: Wheel Truing
- February 13th @ 6pm sharp: Pedal, Cranks & Bottom Brackets
- February 20th NO CLASS (President’s Day)
- February 27th @ 6pm sharp: Chains
- March 5th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 1
- March 12th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 2
- March 19th @ 6pm sharp: Rim Caliper Brake Systems
- March 26th @ 6pm sharp: Disc Caliper Brake Systems
- April 2nd @ 6pm sharp: Headsets
- April 9th NO CLASS
Spring Classes
- April 16th @ 6pm sharp: Tires & Tubes
- April 23rd @ 6pm sharp: Hubs & Rear Sprockets
- April 30th @ 6pm sharp: Wheel Truing
- May 7th @ 6pm sharp: Pedals, Cranks & Bottom Brackets
- May 14th @ 6pm sharp: Chains
- May 21st @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 1
- May 28th NO CLASS (Memorial Day)
- June 4th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 2
- June 11th @ 6pm sharp: Rim Caliper Brake Systems
- June 18th @ 6pm sharp: Disc Caliper Brake Systems
- June 25th @ 6pm sharp: Headsets
- July 2nd NO CLASS
Summer Classes
- July 9th @ 6pm sharp: Tires & Tubes
- July 16th @ 6pm sharp: Hubs & Rear Sprockets
- July 23rd @ 6pm sharp: Wheel Truing
- July 30th @ 6pm sharp: Pedals, Cranks & Bottom Brackets
- August 6th @ 6pm sharp: Chains
- August 13th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 1
- August 20nd @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 2
- August 27th @ 6pm sharp: Rim Caliper Brake Systems
- September 3rd NO CLASS (Labor Day)
- September 10th @ 6pm sharp: Disc Caliper Brake Systems
- September 17th @ 6pm Sharp: Headsets
- September 24th NO CLASS
Fall Classes
- October 1st @ 6pm sharp: Tubes & Tires
- October 8th NO CLASS (Columbus Day)
- October 15th @ 6pm sharp: Hubs & Rear Sprockets
- October 22nd @ 6pm sharp: Wheel Truing
- October 29th @ 6pm sharp: Pedals, Cranks & Bottom Brackets
- November 5th @ 6pm sharp: Chains
- November 12th No Class (Vetrans Day)
- November 19th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 1
- November 26th @ 6pm sharp: Shifting Systems Part 2
- December 3rd @ 6pm sharp: Rim Caliper Brake Systems
- December 10th @ 6pm sharp: Disc Caliper Brake Systems
- December 17th @ 6pm sharp: Headsets
If you really get into it, inquire about volunteering your new-found knowledge during our Do-It-Yourself Nights (we really need confident women for Women's Night), or as a Youth Instructor in our Earn-a-Bike classes. We can teach people to be technical, but we can't teach them to be personable, so if you like people, we can turn you into a great mechanic.
If you have any questions contact our Shop Manager.
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Date: Saturday mornings: April 17, 24; May 15, 22, 29
Time: 8:30-11:30 am
Location: SLC Bicycle Collective 2312 S. West Temple, SLC, UT 84115
Instructor: Doug Openshaw 25 year commuter, Cycling Instructor-League of American Bicyclists
Tuition: $15
Preregistration encouraged - contact instructor
Description:
This three-hour class will explore all aspects of bicycle commuting with emphasis on proper lane positioning, principles of traffic flow, minimizing risk, and maximizing enjoyment. The same core concepts will be presented at each class, with discussion time available to address specific questions. Tuition payment entitles you to attend one or all of the class sessions. The course is designed to teach the concepts, give you time to practice your technique during the week, then come back and talk about your experience with fellow enthusiasts. We all benefit by sharing what works. Come see what bike commuting is all about, then bring your questions and your friends to the next class!
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Tim Bochnowski, founder of Mountain Velo LLC, will be offering a FREE Intro to Bike Fit class as part of our Monday Night Park Tool School on June 21st. Answer the age old questions of, does my bike fit? What can I do to make it fit better? What bike is right for my body type?
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A little about Tim:
Starting at a Schwinn & Trek store in 1986, Tim has raced, repaired, fit, sold and lived bicycles for over 25 years. Completing his first triathlon in 1986, Tim went on to become an accomplished cyclist, competing in many triathlon, road, mtb and track races. Today, in conjunction with a busy family lifestyle, he has dedicated himself to providing his clients with the very best in bicycle brands, services and fit solutions.
The "Bicycle. Body. Community." mantra defines Mountain Velo...
This really isn't a formal class, but we get enough requests for this that we thought we would share the easiest and fastest way to teach someone (even yourself) how to ride a bike -- for kids AND adults.
- Lower the seat so they can sit and put their feet flat on the ground. If they teeter todder from side to side, or they are on their tippy toes -- this will not work and you need to find a smaller bike before going to the next step.
- Take off the pedals using a 15mm open wrench, or bring the bike to the Community Bike Shop and we can show you how.
- Just like a scooter, have them kick and coast around a flat parking lot. When they get to the point where they can coast as far as they can kick, you are ready for the next step.
- Put on the pedals, and let them ride away.
As opposed to the sink or swim down deadman's hill approach that most of us learned by. This new method separates the Power from the Balance. Few people can figure out both at first, so mastering Balance and then adding Power back in works magically.
In partnership with the Granite Peaks Lifelong Learning and frame builder Bogart McAvoy, you can build your own bicycle!
Want to learn more about bike repair? The Lifelong Learning Continuing Ed program at the University of Utah offers two non-credit courses in bike maintenance and repair. Classes are held in the evenings at the Salt Lake Bicycle Collective. With instruction on basic skills such as fixing a flat to more involved projects as overhauling hubs, the hands-on classes gives students an opportunity to learn about bicycle repair while tuning up their own bike. For a schedule of up coming classes and registration information, contact: Lifelong Learning - (801) 587-5433 or http://continue.utah.edu/lifelong/index.php
By teaching the necessary skills to ride with traffic and avoid accidents, the Collective hopes to increase safety for existing bicyclists and encourage more people to go by bicycle. This project involves hosting seminars to train instructors, hiring staff to organize, advertise, and teach the courses, and creating educational resources in print and website media. Bike Ed is a collection of course curriculums developed by the League of American Bicyclists (LAB), more info can be found at www.bikeleague.org. The LAB has developed courses that teach basic and advanced safety skills to children, their parents, adult recreational bicyclists, and commuters. LAB's proven curricula will allow us to offer consistent, accurate information that has been designed to meet the basic safety needs of all cyclists. Courses are currently free, thanks to a 2-year sponsorship by the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT).
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Want to feel safer and more comfortable riding in traffic, are you interested in learning critical bike maintenance techniques, or are you interested in becoming an League Cycling Instructor (LCI)? Road I gives cyclists the confidence they need to ride safely and legally in traffic or on the trail. The course also covers bicycle safety checks, fixing a flat, on-bike skills and crash avoidance techniques and includes a student manual. Recommended for adults and children above age fourteen, this fast-paced, nine-hour course prepares cyclists for a full understanding of vehicular cycling. This course is also the pre-requisite to becoming an LCI.
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Thinking of bike commuting to work or school? Commuting is a 3-hour Road I follow-up nails topics such as route selection, bicycle choice, dealing with cargo and clothing, bike parking, lighting, reflection, and foul weather riding.
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Kids I is a nationally recognized curriculum created by the League of American Bicyclists (LAB) and taught by our League Certified Instructors (LCIs). Kids I can be taught as a on-hour course specifically for parents or a three-hour course for parents and children. Either way the concentration is on the parents, as they (you!) have the greatest impact in their child's safety.
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Kids II is a nationally recognized curriculum created by the League of American Bicyclists (LAB) and taught by our League Certified Instructors (LCIs).
This 7-hour class for 5th and 6th graders covers the same topics as Road I, including on-bike skills as well as choosing safe routes for riding.
While we can be flexible, Bike Ed Kids II is normally constructed as ten (10) lessons each lasting approximately 45 minutes. Actual instruction time with the children is approximately 30 minutes per lesson.
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