Vision:
To transform DublinBikes into a fully electric, data-driven, and integrated urban mobility network by 2030 — supporting Dublin’s climate action goals, improving accessibility, and aligning with the Transport for Ireland (TFI) ecosystem.
1. Strategic Goals
| Objective | Description | Target Year |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Electrify the fleet | Transition to a 100% electric-assist (pedelec) fleet. | 2028 |
| 2. Smart infrastructure | Install charging-enabled, IoT-connected docks. | 2027 |
| 3. Full integration | Integrate with Leap Card and TFI app (one mobility platform). | 2026 |
| 4. Municipal control | Transition from JCDecaux contract to a city-owned operation. | 2029 |
| 5. Open data & analytics | Launch a public mobility data portal. | 2025 |
| 6. Network expansion | Expand coverage to all four Dublin local authorities (DCC, DLR, Fingal, South Dublin). | 2030 |
2. Phased Implementation Plan
Phase 1 – Pilot (2025–2026): “Smart Stations”
- Deploy 10–15 e-bike pilot stations in mixed-terrain areas (e.g., Phibsborough, Rathmines, Ballsbridge, Smithfield).
- Introduce 100–200 electric bikes with swappable batteries or charging docks.
- Integrate with TFI Leap Card system for sign-in/unlock.
- Launch a DublinBikes Live Dashboard (usage data, emissions saved, battery status, etc.).
Funding sources:
EU Green Deal pilot funds, Smart Dublin innovation grants, NTA co-funding.
Phase 2 – Integration & Data (2026–2027): “Connected Mobility”
- Full integration with TFI Go app (ride booking + payment).
- Introduce dynamic pricing (first 30 min free, then per-minute rates).
- Upgrade existing 100+ stations to smart-dock technology with IoT sensors.
- Begin real-time rebalancing algorithm to redistribute bikes efficiently.
Funding sources:
TFI, Department of Transport, Horizon Europe (smart cities program).
Phase 3 – Electrification & Expansion (2027–2029): “Citywide Smart Fleet”
- Transition 50% of bikes to electric-assist models.
- Roll out charging docks citywide (solar-supported in new stations).
- Add 500–700 new e-bikes; expand network to suburban hubs (Tallaght, Blanchardstown, UCD, Dún Laoghaire).
- Establish municipal operations team (Dublin Mobility Agency).
- Pilot cargo e-bikes for business and delivery use.
Funding sources:
- Climate Action Fund (Transport decarbonization pillar)
- Urban Mobility Partnership with NTA
- Corporate sponsorship with sustainability clauses
Phase 4 – Full Transformation (2029–2030): “Smart DublinBikes 2030”
- End JCDecaux operations; transition to Dublin City Council–owned mobility service (possibly under TFI umbrella).
- Operate 100% electric, GPS-enabled fleet with AI-based maintenance and rebalancing.
- Launch Smart Dublin Mobility Dashboard integrating bikes, buses, Luas, and car-sharing.
- Provide open APIs for research and app developers.
Funding sources:
City capital budget, EU structural funds, advertising revenue, user fees.
3. Estimated Budget (2025–2030)
| Component | Estimated Cost (€ million) |
|---|---|
| E-bike procurement (1,500 units @ €2,500 each) | 3.75 |
| Smart dock upgrades (150 stations @ €50,000 each) | 7.5 |
| IT systems & app integration | 2.0 |
| Data analytics & dashboard | 0.5 |
| Operations, maintenance, training | 6.0 |
| Marketing, communications, design | 0.75 |
| Total Estimated Cost (2025–2030) | ~€20.5 million |
Comparable reference:
Madrid’s 2023 BiciMAD upgrade (100% electric conversion, 7,500 bikes, 600 stations) cost approximately €48 million — scaled for Dublin’s smaller size.
4. Expected Benefits
| Area | Impact |
|---|---|
| Climate & emissions | Reduce ~2,000 tonnes CO₂ annually (mode shift from car use). |
| Accessibility | E-bikes make cycling feasible for wider demographics (age, terrain). |
| Mobility integration | Seamless transfers between bus, Luas, DART, and bikes. |
| Data-driven city planning | Real-time demand data improves transport infrastructure decisions. |
| Economic & social value | Increased city centre footfall, reduced congestion, healthier population. |
5. Key Success Factors
- Strong city leadership: Transition to public or hybrid public control (similar to EMT Madrid).
- Cross-agency coordination: Dublin City Council, NTA, TFI, and Smart Dublin collaboration.
- User-focused design: App simplicity, transparent pricing, consistent reliability.
- Phased rollout: Start small, demonstrate success, then scale.
- Public communication: Market as a climate action success story and smart city milestone.
6. Sample Slogan / Branding Concept
“Smart DublinBikes 2030 – Electric. Connected. Dublin.”
A refreshed identity could emphasize sustainability and innovation, aligning with Dublin’s Climate Action Plan 2025–2030 and the EU Mission for 100 Climate-Neutral Cities.
