Reviews
Great shop! The owner is super nice. As a student at Savannah College of Art and Design I needed to buy a bike during my first semester here and so they were super helpful with helping me choose a bike that was good for me and also not too pricey for a college student. I come here all the time to put air in my tires and if you ever have any questions they are always more than happy to assist! Only thing that I wish that they had were stickers ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
5
7 years ago (07-03-2018)
Got a pinch flat by the Georgia Port Authority on my way back to South Carolina. Uber'd to the bike shop and they had me back on the road in 20 minutes at a reasonable rate.
Service was very good. They helped me air up my tires to the desired PSI before leaving. Also let me refill my water at their water cooler.
I would definitely go back here.
5
7 years ago (09-05-2018)
Great place to buy or service a bike. They offer small things like tightening up the chair or bolts or pumping up the tires for free (I believe because I bought a bike from them and was in their system, though it might be for anybody?) For minor repairs like replacing tire tubes, you will probably get the bike back the following day when they will give you a call to let you know it's finished. Pleasure to do business here.
5
8 years ago (03-01-2018)
Slow expensive and awful service. They are more interested in standing around and talking with each other than helping customers. Wont go back! Took my two bikes to someone else to repair.
1
7 years ago (19-05-2018)
THE GROUP RIDES ARE A BUST.
Simply put.
Gather around, cyclists, and let me tell you a little story about how I could have taken a plane home for winter break, I could have taken a bus, but me, the silly velomaniac that I am, decided to hitch a rack up to my car and drive my bikes down. I woke up early, across town, and chugged a protein drink to prepare, excited that I would get to ride for the first time with a group of fellow bike people, in the hometown that I never grew to know on my bike. I didn't want to bring my phone. I wanted to trust the ride.
Before the ride, I spoke with the owner. I told him, I'm not familiar with the roads, I never really road here growing up, and that I'm worried I'll get lost. He told me just to follow him, to stick with him, that everything would be fine. Another shop employee I saw, I quickly asked about what would happen were I to get a flat. He said as a no drop ride, that shouldn't be a problem, and my not having a pump or anything wouldn't be an issue.
I believe that when I dropped my sunglasses we had been going a steady 23-24mph, and as a women's Cat B cyclist, I'm not unaccustomed to that pace within a peloton, but it was far from the advertised pace on the website. As I struggled to bridge the gap, it became more and more clear that this was never a no-drop ride. It was a suckerpunch to the gut, and a swift kick of shame.
I got dropped on a no drop ride because no one care to look, no one had the professionalism to count heads, no one had the courtesy to try to monitor the pace or even bother with friendly conversation. I've been riding competitively and seriously for as long as I've been an adult, and I've never witnessed such a shameful representation of what cycling as a community should stand for.
Please, if you feel equally as alienated by the shady politics of this ride and the way it's actually discouraged me from racing and distanced me from this shop, say something to them so they understand. Otherwise, the integrity of cycling will be lost on their big budget bikes and strange dishonesty.
2
7 years ago (07-03-2018)