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Rediscovering the Handcart


in reply to alyaza [they/she]

Rotterdam, the Netherlands


Yeah ... I think it makes more sense in somewhere very flat.

But in somewhere with hills and elevation changes, moving heavy things with a hand cart will become quite a chore ... and maybe even dangerous, if the handcart doesn't have adequate brakes for the weight on a steep hill.

in reply to OwOarchist

Yeah, I live in Seattle. This would not work here as built. Disc brakes and an electric motor for hills would probably be a minimum requirement. That adds a lot of expense and engineering, and also means an e-bike and trailer are probably cheaper.
in reply to alyaza [they/she]

People in Germany use personal shopping trolleys, bike carts and kindergarten carts (hand-carried with seats for children inside) a lot.
in reply to alyaza [they/she]

I am using a handcart too for some years. It can be converted to a bike trailer in a few seconds. You can mount a box with straps or drill holes for custom mods. It has a max. load of 80kg. Possibly one of my most useful purchases in the last years.

I admire the dutch.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to alyaza [they/she]

Yeh. Don’t mind it but have to agree handcarts do still exist and are used in many forms. This article kinda ignores that. I’d like to see more on how people have evolved the product rather than pushing a new design.

The photos drive me crazy. The artistic styling or tone of voice of imagery loses a lot of the detail. Design is the bling…message is the king.

It feels like an art assignment rather than an article.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)