Want a Bike Repair Pop-up at your office?
Fettle | Wednesday 16th September 2020 9:46am
fettle was set up with the ambition to provide city-wide networks of bike servicing locations across the whole of the UK. Our mission is to offer a convenient place for your bike to be serviced and repaired. Now, as London's fastest growing bike-repair network, we're certainly on our way to fulfilling that ambition.
Handlebars (now fettle) launches 'donate-a-bike' crowdfunding campaign for NHS key workers
Fettle | Wednesday 8th April 2020 11:47am
Handlebars (now fettle) launches new Bike Collection and Return service
Fettle | Tuesday 24th March 2020 11:47am
Handlebars (Fettle) is offering a new bike collection and return service.
COVID-19: What fettle is doing
Fettle | Thursday 20th February 2020 11:47am
in light of the increasing threat of COVID-19, at fettle we recognise that it is important we all take steps to minimise the risk of transmission of the virus amongst our staff and our customers. Here are a series of internal and external directives we have implemented to help keep everyone safe and cycling.
Featured Articles
The 10-Minute Check That Could Save Your Commute
Tuesday 24th February 2026
Most bike problems don’t happen suddenly. They build up quietly — until one morning your gears won’t shift, your tyre’s flat, or your brakes feel wrong halfway through traffic. The good news? A simple 10-minute check once a week can prevent most of it. If your bike is part of your daily routine, a quick once-over is the difference between riding confidently and walking home pushing it. Here’s what to look at.
How E-Bikes Are Making Cycling More Inclusive For Everyone
Tuesday 20th January 2026
Cycling used to come with assumptions. You had to be fit enough. Fast enough. Confident enough. Live close enough. For a long time, that quietly excluded a lot of people. E-bikes have changed that. Not by replacing traditional cycling, but by widening the door. They’ve made cycling more practical, more forgiving, and more realistic for everyday life — and that’s why they’re becoming such a permanent part of urban transport.







