Inside Singapore designer Tommy Ong’s sanctuary for cyclists

Inside Singapore designer Tommy Ong’s sanctuary for cyclists
A two-wheeled temple — With his cafe-bike shop Wheeler’s Yard, Tommy Ong is providing a place for like-minded commuters to come together.

Its neighbours include an old folk’s home, a temple and a new condo. Smack in the middle of a neighbourhood more famously known for a 1950s glamour movie lot graced by the likes of John Wayne and Ava Gardner, lies Wheeler’s Yard, a two-year old bike “atelier” and cafe housed in an industrial warehouse.

The floor-to-ceiling blue doors of Wheeler’s – among Singapore’s most popular doors on social media – never open. Instead, patrons walk in via a side entrance into an open concept bike shop. Rows of Wheeler’s own bikes lie in the center, next to two vintage barber chairs – a top draw for selfies and family photos.

But the bike shop is really only part of what’s on offer at Wheeler’s. The cafe attracts Singapore’s growing number of hipsters who come not for the bicycles or accessories, but for the coffee, truffle fries and duck confit. The hipster cafe concept is growing in Singapore, as is cycling.

Singapore Wheelers Yard-Huck-2

“Cycling is becoming a lifestyle,” says Wheeler’s Yard director Tommy Ong, now sixty-two. “I was confident this [bike shop/cafe] concept would take off.” In fact, Tommy was so confident he left the family car trading company he joined in 1978 to embark on his two-wheeled journey.

It paid off. Wheeler’s Yard turned an operating profit almost immediately after opening in October 2012. Wheeler’s own bikes – with parts sourced from Italy and Taiwan – are already being exported. Like its cafe concept, Wheeler’s bikes are old school, costing between SGD600 and SGD3,000 ($450-$2,200), and they’re modelled on bikes from a bygone era.

“Having only bikes is hard to sustain,” says Tommy, the eldest of six boys and three girls. “The cafe culture took off in Singapore four to five years ago… The concept had to be right.” So he merged Singapore’s love for food and its growing love for cycling in Wheeler’s Yard.

Singapore Wheelers Yard-Huck-1

Cycling is booming in tiny Singapore, and not just as a form of leisure or exercise. The government is pushing the biking agenda, and has said it would increase its current “Park Connector” network to 360 km from the current 200 km by 2020. The aim is to get to 700 km of intertwined, car-free (with some cross points) bike-only lanes, reports have said. Not bad for a country with a land mass of 716 square km – a quarter the size of Bali, Indonesia.

Bike shops have sprouted everywhere, but there is none like Wheeler’s Yard. The back entrance to Wheeler’s itself is located right in front of a “Park Connector” path – a route that Tommy takes every weekend to the Marina waterfront area with his family.

The Singapore government, in its 2013 transport master plan, predicts that cycling will pick up as infrastructure does. The Japanese army used bicycles to navigate through Malaya before they came to Singapore during World War II, and that’s when bicycles are believed to have taken off in the state.

You can find The Commuter Journal at select cycling destinations around the world and view the Levi’s® Commuter™ collection, which is dedicated to providing versatility and durability for everyday bike riders, on their website.

Stay tuned for more stories from The Commuter Journal on huckmag.com

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Latest on Huck

Subversive shots of Catholic schoolgirls in ‘80s New York
Culture

Subversive shots of Catholic schoolgirls in ‘80s New York

Catholic Girl — When revisiting her alma mater, Andrea Modica noticed schoolgirls finding forms of self-expression beyond the dress code. Her new photobook documents their intricate styles.

Written by: Isaac Muk

We need to talk about super gonorrhoea
Activism

We need to talk about super gonorrhoea

Test & vaccinate — With infection rates of ‘the clap’ seemingly on the up, as well as a concerning handful of antibiotic resistant cases, Nick Levine examines what can be done to stem the STI’s rise.

Written by: Nick Levine

5 decades ago, Larry Sultan & Mike Mandel redefined photography
Photography

5 decades ago, Larry Sultan & Mike Mandel redefined photography

Evidence — Between 1975 and 1977, the two photographers sifted through thousands of images held by official institutions, condensing them into a game-changing sequence.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Warm portraits of English football fans before the Premier League
Sport

Warm portraits of English football fans before the Premier League

Going to the Match — In the 1991/1992 season, photographer Richard Davis set out to understand how the sport’s supporters were changing, inadvertently capturing the end of an era.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Tbilisi nightclubs to reopen for New Year’s Eve after 40-day strike
Music

Tbilisi nightclubs to reopen for New Year’s Eve after 40-day strike

Dancefloor resistance — Georgian techno havens including BASSIANI and Left Bank have announced parties tonight, having shuttered in solidarity with protests against the country’s government.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Why did 2024 feel so unreal?
Culture

Why did 2024 feel so unreal?

Unrest & Stagnation — With unending mind-boggling news stories, the past 12 months have felt like a spiral into insanity. Is AI to blame or a hangover from the pandemic? Newsletter columnist Emma Garland digests the mess.

Written by: Emma Garland

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now