THE EXPERIENCE OF DESIGN


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Most bicycles are still handmade though in truth this has far less to do with quality than with costs.  Bikes coming off assembly lines aim at affordability and, more often than not, they will ride well enough to get us down the road.  In fact, it’s almost impossible to build a bike that’s truly un-ride-able or one that fails to bring a smile.  It is far more challenging to build a bicycle that excels in design, construction, fit, and, ultimately, in riding experience.  This is my commitment, my craft, and my goal everyday in my shop.

More important than whether a bicycle is handmade are the hands that have made it.  When you have apprenticed your craft with exceptionally talented builders and designers, experience then becomes the greatest teacher of all.  Over the course of the past ten years I have built no fewer than 1500 frames and each one advanced my understanding of the process and effort it takes to refine and develop different styles of bicycles.  Expertise in frame building is as much a matter of repetition as it is self-investment.  Having built road race and
all-arounder, mountain and cyclocross, track and tandem frames and also complete-bicycles in the tradition of the constructeurs who conceive frame, fork, and parts as a whole, I have learned, experimented, and tested nearly every technique in bicycle construction.  I’ve studied with the same passion the best work of the past, to see how a particular idea might be re-incorporated into a design or refined to a new level of perfection.   The results have been wonderfully satisfying but also relevant to developing that personal sense of style that makes a Goodrich a bicycle that stands on its own.  Building bicycles is my life’s work.  Designing and building one for you will create something you can be proud to ride and to own for your lifetime.

Each Goodrich Bicycle is designed for its rider and the ride.  A great bike fits in its own optimal way and one bike can serve many purposes.  Still, we can think of bicycles as offering all sorts of fun.  While a road bike can be designed to ride well in a wide variety of conditions, an all-arounder might permit greater clearances for wider tires and perhaps fenders and custom racks.  A bike dedicated to randonneur events or long-distance riding might not require the wide tire clearances and heavier loads we might want to put on an all-arounder but should feel steady and confident at both faster and slower speeds perhaps with fenders, custom fitted lights, and supporting racks that allow long, self-sustaining hours in the saddle.  A rider might also want a single or fixed gear with road geometries for city, commuting, training, and always for fun.  Perhaps you would like a bike well-suited to cyclocrossing that works well for roughstuffing on trails and roads?  All of these things and more are possible when the rider and bicycle are designed to come together, made for each other. 

I’ve five basic categories for the bicycles I build.  These provide a template, a way of thinking about cycling that matches your interests to a design that fulfills them.

Click on each to think more about your interests and to see examples of bicycles I’ve made that reflect my ideas and design values.

Road Bicycles
For all sorts of road riding, from racing to comfortable recreational riding, Goodrich road bikes might use fancy, handcut lugs or simple, minimalist lug designs, short or normal reach caliper brakes, and always a steel fork.  Read more about my ideas about steel forks, fork crowns, and why I think steel forks still provide the optimal ride as well as the best focal point for appropriate design choices.  See our section on tubing, steerer tubes, and fork for more details but suffice it to say that these choices are made on the basis of the rider’s weight, style, and purpose.  Braze-on and eyelets for fenders, racks, pump-peg, or chain-hanger, a Goodrich road bike includes whatever details best suit your style and choices, nothing more or less. 
 

All-Arounder
Built around 700c, 26” mountain-size, or 650B wheels, an all-arounder is just that: a bicycle that doesn’t flinch when the road turns to gravel, dirt, or offers challenges that are better met with wider tires or a lower center of gravity and greater wheel stability.  Think about cantilever, linear, or centerpull brakes that might create more versatility and allow very large tires, over 37c in diameter, to be mounted with fenders.
 

Randonneuse 
While long distance riding and randonneuring is becoming more popular, these bikes are rare and often confused with “touring” bikes.  A full-fledged tourer is designed for heavy loads and camping options with panniers.  A randonneuse is a road bike for long days and perhaps even nights!  This is the bike for all weathers and nearly all road conditions short of racing.  Randonneur efforts are usually self-sustained, meaning that the rider often carries necessities and maybe even a picnic.  The simple goal is too much fun on a bike that will take you nearly anywhere.!  While there are very good reasons for riding with fenders, a handlebar bag front support rack, or a rear saddlebag supporting rack on all sorts of road bikes that aren’t racers, the randonneuse is the bike for all seasons, for nearly all roads, and can be designed for wide-tires that bring it nearly into the range of an all-arounder.  A Goodrich randonneuse can be designed for versatility or with specific parts in mind that are designed into the overall construction of the frame and fork (what the French call “constructeur” designs).  However you choose to ride your randonneuse, a Goodrich will meet the challenge in comfort and style without compromise to handling.
 

City Bikes
Imagine a bike that takes you from your home to the market, to work, across town, or into the countryside with ease, comfort, and a very large dose of fun.  I call these bikes “porteur” in honor of the French builders who may have perfected the concept but left room for so many refinements.  A City Bike can be as simple as a one speed or designed for a hub (such as Shimano or Rohloff); it can use swept back bars and perhaps a sprung Brooks saddle, but however you choose to appoint it, this is a bike for now and later.  Ask me about options because there are so many ways to design and build a great city bike.  If you are looking for a single or fixed gear rider, we can do that either as a City Bike or a Specialty.
 

Specialty Bicycles (Track, Cyclocross)
Sometimes a bike has a particular purpose to which it is best suited.  Most road bikes can be more than just race bikes ---though there is nothing wrong with a dedicated racer!  But most track, mountain, or cyclocross bikes are particularly suited for their tasks though they too can be ridden in all sorts of ways.  Take a Goodrich track bike to the local velodrome, match it with Japanese NJS-approved Keirin parts or in the European style, or mix-and-match.  Bring your lugged steel Goodrich cross bike to the races and ride it to work the next day.  If you want a single speed or fixed gear road bike, a cross bike that can work as a commuter and double as a racer, then a Goodrich Specialty bike will make dreams into adventures (and vice-versa!)
 

PAINT
The finish on your Goodrich should match the quality of the build and design.  All of my frames are painted by JB Bicycle Finishing or J.P. Weigle, two of the premier bicycle painters working today. Cost of basic paint, which includes an offset headtube, is included in the price of frame and fork.  Please ask me about paint extras.  Nearly any sort of detail is possible though these will involve reasonable upcharges.

   Copyright ©2005 Curt Goodrich Bicycles | (612) 788-6812 | info@curtgoodrich.com