First Mile Cycle Works to Open in Lafayette

The bike showroom and maintenance center will also offer snacks, drinks, and cold beer.
First Mile Cycle Works to Open Small Cafe Inside Shop
Photo: Official

Lafayette’s First Mile Cycle Works, a direct-to-consumer bike showroom and maintenance center, is currently finishing its build-out, complete with a small cafe, at 3566 Mt Diablo Blvd.

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“We’re in a unique position as a bike shop,” says co-founder Carey Platto. “We’re provide customers with the opportunity to see the direct-to-consumer bikes they want to buy before they buy them, which is not typical in the bike industry.”

First Mile has partnered with bike brands like Commencal, Marin, and Blackheart (Fall 2021) to give cyclists the chance to see these bikes in the (metal) flesh at their shop before committing.

As for the cafe, Platto says it will have a mid-century, lounge-like feel, with comfortable armchairs, a TV, and a fridge for cold drinks. There will also be some seating outside, and they plan to build a fuller patio sometime down the road. Specializing in small bites and drinks (including canned beer), the cafe will offer customers a place to sit and relax while shopping or waiting for a bicycle tune-up.

First Mile has a soft opening planned for next week, so if you’re in the market for a bike tune-up and a snack, you know where to go.

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.
Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.

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