Hennepin Crawler
If a camel is a horse designed by committee, then
what is the Hennepin Crawler?
It looks like a jalopy, but it’s really a big bike,
designed by Krank-Boom-Clank, four Santa Rosa,
Calif., artists who wanted to build something that
moves as gracefully along railroad tracks as it
maneuvers around the playa at Burning Man.
Two of the members, Clifford Hill and Skye
Barnett, had built an art car for Burning Man in
2007. For the Crawler, they drew in fellow welders
David Farish and Dan Kirby.
Photograph by Clifford Hill
“It was a very organic process,” says Barnett.
“The only thing we had set was that it would be
pedal-powered and that it had four seats — since
there are four of us.”
They also got involved in planning a local event, the
Great West End & Railroad Square Handcar Regatta,
which aimed to raise awareness for transportation
beyond the car, including bikes and commuter rail.
So they designed the Crawler (Farish was fond of
the antique-sounding Tom Waits song “9th and
Hennepin”) to ride the rails, too.
Found materials helped dictate the design:
Barnett returned from one dump run with a $15
metal hammock holder. It eventually became the
centerpiece of the Crawler’s curvy chassis.
“I refer to it as improv, because we were using
metal like Play-Doh,” says Hill. “We would try something, break it if it didn’t work, try something else.”
They got together once a week — “Our Thursday
night TV watching got all screwed up,” says Kirby —
and cranked into the night to get it finished.
Now they pedal it out to community events,
where it draws a lot of interest. “People ask who
designed it,” says Hill. “Everybody pulled their
weight. People can’t handle that.”
Hill says their goal is to “plug this notion of art and
celebration in a public context, inspiring more people
to do creative things with bikes, especially kids.”
“Kids see it, they find out there’s bike parts in it,
and then they realize they can make something like
that,” says Farish. —Dave Sims
>> Hennepin Crawler: krankboomclank.com
Make: 21