We Tried the Water Bike Company That Wants to Disrupt Your Bay Area Commute
Tired of the same-old, same-old commute? This electric-assisted water bike could completely transform your rush hour experience
Chris Preovolos
If I’m being perfectly honest, I was pretty scared to try bicycling around the San Francisco Bay. Not the Bay Area, as in the greater San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose region, but the actual body of water in between those three big cities.
“How do I get on without falling?” I asked Jessica Schiller, founder and CEO of Schiller Bikes, who was taking me out on a test ride at Pier 52, a public dock in San Francisco’s Mission Bay.“You won’t fall,” Schiller assured me as I mounted the surprisingly stable water bike contraption. The top portion of the vehicle looks much like a traditional bicycle; there are handlebars, pedals, and a seat. But instead of wheels, the bike sits atop two pontoons, making it a sort of catamaran.
To propel the water bike you have a couple of options: You can pedal the old-fashioned way or get help from an electric boost. Pedaling without any electronic assist feels like using a standing bike at the gym, with the water acting as natural resistance. If you don’t feel like putting in the work, you can choose from nine levels of electric boosts, which help propel you up to a maximum speed of about 10 miles per hour (depending on the rider’s weight).
Schiller was right. Getting on wasn’t particularly hard. The water bike felt perfectly balanced. But pedaling and steering was another matter. No matter what I did, I felt like I couldn’t navigate the bike perfectly straight. I ebbed and flowed from left to right, trying to stay a safe distance from massive obstacles without wandering too far into the open bay.

Clearly, I was pretty skeptical at first. But as we pedaled around McCovey Cove, past some sea lions sunning themselves in the nearby marina, and under the Bay Bridge, Schiller assuaged many of my anxieties.