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Dutch e-bike maker VanMoof declared bankrupt
by Toby Sterling
July 18, 2023 5:09 PM EDT
AMSTERDAM, July 18 (Reuters) - Dutch e-bike maker VanMoof has been declared bankrupt and administrators are considering whether it can sell assets and restructure to save the business, the company said on Tuesday.
VanMoof, which raised 100 million euros ($112.56 million) to expand internationally as sales boomed during the COVID-19 pandemic, filed for protection from creditors last week.
A company statement said that a judge at the Amsterdam District Court had declared the company’s Dutch operations bankrupt on July 17.
Two administrators named to oversee the company “are continuing to assess the situation at VanMoof”, including whether it can sell assets, reorganise and continue to operate.
VanMoof bikes feature a sleek, simplistic design with the battery built into the frame and have become common on the streets of Amsterdam, where the company was founded in 2009.
Dutch broadcaster NOS reported that the company, which sold bikes for more than 2,000 euros ($2,250) each, suffered from high costs to maintain and repair bikes while they were under warranty. About 200,000 have been sold worldwide.
Amsterdam police on Tuesday said their telephone lines were being flooded with customers complaining of “theft” because they paid for bikes that have not been delivered or because they have bikes being repaired at the company’s stores, which are now closed.
“The police cannot do anything for customers, regardless of how distressing this may be,” a police statement said.
“A bankruptcy is a civil dispute and not a criminal issue.”
The VanMoof statement noted that the company’s international subsidiaries are not part of the bankruptcy. The company declined to comment further.
NOS reported that brothers Taco and Ties Carlier, VanMoof’s founders, had thanked the company’s workers in an internal email sent to its 700 employees.
“We are sad, but above all we feel proud of what we accomplished,” the email was reported as saying.
($1 = 0.8890 euros)
Reporting by Toby Sterling Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman, Louise Heavens and David Goodman
Standardized doesn’t mean open source. But you know maybe you’re right let’s throw out the SAE and CENELEC and the standards for all the other stuff we use and see how that goes.
Tell me this, when you buy tires for your bicycle, do you go to the bicycle manufacturer and get the tire for your bike model? Or do you go to any bike shop and tell them the size of the tire you need?
Standardised bike parts is nothing new. In fact, custom bike parts are the new phenomenon. Rims, spokes, bottom brackets, hubs, seat posts, seats, handle bars, forks, chains, chain rings, pedals, valves, tires, tubes and cables are all standardised. At least they were at one point before we allowed manufactures by voting with our pockets. The situation will continue to be worse if we stay complacent to whatever custom change Trek or whoever implements. Seat post broke? too bad, the one for your bike is 500 USD. And in the VanMoof case, do you want to unlock the bike? Too bad, because we are going bankrupt.
Also standardised and open-sourced are two completely different things. For example, a big brand might come out with a carbon fibre hub with a secretive curing process. As long as the dimensions are standard, it’s a standard part. Even though it’s NOT open source (secretive curing process in this example).