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Bikeoff :: Designing Out Crime Case Study
Design can be used not only to reduce the risk of products being stolen, it can also be a way of encouraging more people to use a product if they think it is secure. This case study shows how the design process has made bike stands more secure because it involved watching how people used bike stands, how criminals abused bike stands and how secure locking practices could be made easier.
Know your enemy: Abuser-centred design
First, the team talked to police specialists in bike crime to identify common bike theft perpetrator techniques, which are:
* Lifting: If your bike is chained to a sign post, thieves can lift it and the chain up and over the top of the post.
* Levering: Thieves can insert tools between the bike, lock and stand to lever the lock apart. Or they may use the bike itself as a lever by rotating it against the stand. If it breaks before the lock, what do they care? It’s not their bike.
* Striking: If your lock rests on the ground thieves can strike against it with a hammer or chisel.
* Cutting: Bolt cutters of hack saws can cut through bike chains or locks.
* Unbolting: If you lock your bike by the wheel alone it can be unbolted from the rest of the frame.
* Picking: Locks can be broken open
read more from Design Council
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