London cyclists will soon have a way of earning money while they ride – by attaching digital advertising frames to their bicycles.
The initiative comes from Lacuna Digital, which claims it is “the world’s first 100 per cent carbon neutral digital ad platform” – pedal power is all that’s needed – and is looking for “early adopters” to sign up ahead of the launch on 1 June.
Here’s a short video in which founder Dan Roberts explains how it works.
The company says:
Lacuna Digital was born from an idea to create more sustainable, smart cities around the world.
Our development of the Lacuna eBoard 1 had its challenges but resulted in the World's first totally carbon neutral digital advertising platform - not even mobile can claim that.
From this innovation comes an exciting opportunity as we pay cyclists per mile for travelling green.
We then sell this space to brands based on the eBoard 1's geo-location giving the following benefits:
- Targeted marketing to varying demographics across London
- Uniform advertising across an area
- Use of live data streams to update information in real time.
Head here to sign up.
Roberts is already an award-winning entrepreneur, having won a Shell LiveWIRE Sustainability Award in 2014 and a Shell LiveWIRE Smarter Future Award in 2015 for BananaBerry, a social enterprise which uses fruit and vegetables that would otherwise go to waste to create smoothies.
In January, his latest venture was the Featured Business of the Month on the Shell LiveWIRE website.
He said: "My interest since the early university years was in finding commercial ways to build green, sustainable businesses.
"After a talk with a close friend who looked at paying cyclists to carry a ‘Santander Cycles’ type mudguard for his dissertation, I felt the need to take advantage of the commercial opportunity (there are up to 500,000 bicycle journeys every day in London alone) as it fits so well into the sustainable city category.
"We have since partnered with a tech firm that specialises in smart city technology, so this is also a growing interest."
He added: "For this venture our product development has been our biggest achievement as we went in with ambitious plans that many (engineers included) believed couldn’t be achieved (power consumption etc).
"We are immensely proud to get through this without having to compromise on the proposition."
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9 comments
Ah, the eternal sunshine of the spotless mind.
FWIW some people have managed to get paid-for ads stuck to the side of their velomobiles, but the head-turning factor helps here !
This just seems twatish.
I hate the 'progress' of ever more ambient advertising. Here's a tale of commercial greed trouncing social improvement
Our local village roundabout has 4 trees on it. 2 years ago they were yarn-bombed and looked great - stripey trunks really lifted the village. Two weeks later Sefton Council removed them saying they had received 2 complaints from local drivers who found the yarn 'distracting'.
Yet two weeks after the yarn was removed signs appeared on the roundabout. 'Advertise your business here!' Sefton Council had decided that although local spirit in the form of yarn-bombing was wrong - money making sponsored advertising boards weren't distracting at all!
You couldn't make it up.
On the becton flyover on the A13 (the main, very busy arterial road from east london to essex) there's a giant advertising screen designed solely to distract drivers from the road to look at whatever crap they're selling.
In the dark especially it'll suddenly go from a dark picture to super bright and you're instantly thinking wtf while you look up at it...it's stunning how there things are allowed - by their very definition they're not suitable for roadside use surely?!?!
One of those has recently been installed next to the M25 by Heathrow. Ugly stupid things.
It won't be long until it's like the US over here with rows of advertising hoardings as you approach any town or city...
Great, now motorists can busy themselves looking at adverts instead of paying attention to the road and the people on it.
Yep, really dislike illuminated screens on the road. Very hypocritical for a goverment to hand out safety advice about using hiviz, whilst allow big flickering distracting screens to be attached to vehicles. Along with these stupid things (extra dangerous because they're at my eye level) I'd rather see them regulated into oblivion.