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Baseball cap-style folding cycle helmet designed by ex-SpaceX engineers smashes crowdfunding target (+ video)

Park & Diamond have exceeded $50,000 goal more than 13 times over – though we’re not sure about their casualty stats they cite

Park & Diamond have exceeded $50,000 goal more than 12 times over – though we’re not sure about their injury stats

A folding baseball cap style cycle helmet launched by a US start-up founded by two former SpaceX engineers has exceeded its $50,000 crowdfunding target more than 12 times over – although we’re not convinced by the stats the people behind it cite in their campaign.

So far, Brooklyn, New York-based Park & Diamond has received pledges totalling almost $650,000 on the crowdfunding website.

The name of the business – set up by two former SpaceX engineers – is derived from the intersection where the sister of Dave Hall, one of the co-founders was injured in a hit-and-run incident and sustained head injuries that led to her spending four months in a coma.

Thankfully, she has since recovered, but the assertion on the campaign page that she was “one of 85,000 Americans to suffer a traumatic brain injury from cycling-related accidents that year.”

We have no idea where that statistic comes from – it isn’t sourced – ibut n 2015 there were an estimated 45,000 cyclists injured in total in the United States, up around 2 per cent from a decade earlier.

Likewise, towards the top of the Indiegogo page, a photo of a bare-headed cyclist is accompanied by a caption that reads, “Recent stats show that 97 per cent of cyclists who died in accidents were not wearing a helmet.”

Now that one is sourced, to a New York City Department of Transportation study analysing statistics from 1996-2005, so “recent” is perhaps stretching it a bit.

One inference from that caption, however, is that those deaths were all attributable to head injuries sustained while not wearing a cycle helmet – something not borne out by looking more closely at the study.

But the study also highlights that just one cyclist fatality during that decade happened in a designated bike lane – indeed since then, the casualty rates of bike riders in New York City have tumbled as more dedicated infrastructure has been built.

That highlights something that Chris Boardman has repeatedly said – that making cyclists wear helmets is not even among the top 10 things that can be done to increase their safety.

Questions over statistics and the helmet debate aside, the Park & Diamond Foldable Bike Helmet is proving a huge hit on Indiegogo – it’s now two thirds of the way to hitting the million-dollar mark in backing with three weeks of its campaign left.

Find out more here.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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65 comments

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hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
10 likes

I'm just glad they made it portable: I'm so sick of those non-portable bike helmets.

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
12 likes

I have no reason not to believe that 85000 Americans could be mistaken as being brain damaged.

As for the helmet, BTBS is going to love the figures spin in the advert. Especially the one of about 97% of cycling fatalities occur when the rider is not wearing a helmet. If the figures aren't just made up that is.

Oh and one last thing - it looks shit.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
7 likes

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

As for the helmet, BTBS is going to love the figures spin in the advert. Especially the one of about 97% of cycling fatalities occur when the rider is not wearing a helmet. If the figures aren't just made up that is.

I can't wait for BTBS to come home from work - this one is going to be Epic yes

(I think it looks rubbish too, and the stats are the worst kind of "massaging-figures-to-prove-the-point-I-already-believe-and-make-people-buy-my-sh!t").

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
9 likes

brooksby wrote:

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

As for the helmet, BTBS is going to love the figures spin in the advert. Especially the one of about 97% of cycling fatalities occur when the rider is not wearing a helmet. If the figures aren't just made up that is.

I can't wait for BTBS to come home from work - this one is going to be Epic yes

(I think it looks rubbish too, and the stats are the worst kind of "massaging-figures-to-prove-the-point-I-already-believe-and-make-people-buy-my-sh!t").

Did you say work, who has time for that!

Pointless trying to shake these liars down from their tree.

https://www.citylab.com/transportation/2015/11/the-latest-evidence-that-...
http://www.waba.org/blog/2013/06/feds-withdraw-claim-that-bike-helmets-a...
818 bicyclists died on US roads in 2015, an increase of 12.2 per cent and the highest number since 1995. Despite increases in helmet wearing this has not improved matters in the US, in Canada, in any country you want to name.

And oh look, child cyclists deaths have not gone down in the US despite helmet laws/massive increases in wearing, and at the same time child deaths in motors increasing, they should focus on helmets for children in motors first but again despite helmet laws for children it's done diddly squat in lives saved!

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
0 likes

double post

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