One person leans over a bicycle placed upside down in a shop. Another person crouches nearby, holding a tire tube and gesturing while explaining something.
With guidance from program coordinator Aiden Armstrong (right), 23, Edmund Swender, 15, works on his bike May 23, 2025, during a graduation ceremony at the Freewheelin' facility at New Circle Church in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

Eighth grader Lillian Robinson earned her new bike.

But first, she learned all the parts of a bike and what they’re for. She learned to fix a flat tire and how to ride safely on the road. She also learned how to deal with frustration and stay calm during tense moments.

Lillian is one of dozens of Indianapolis kids who have participated in a bicycle program at Freewheelin’ Community Bikes in Mapleton-Fall Creek since the nonprofit bike shop opened in 2008. The program fosters interest in bike mechanics and cycling, and promotes key science, technology, engineering and math skills known as STEM.

“My first day, everyone was so happy for me to be there,” said Lillian, now in her second year. “It was so welcoming, and all my nerves went away. The first time I entered through the door, it was so much fun.”

A group of kids and teens ride bikes on a residential street, as an adult rides behind them holding out an arm to signal a turn.
Freewheelin’ Community Bikes program director Noah Norris (left), 23, signals a right turn as he and students go for a group ride before their graduation ceremony May 23, 2025, in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

The program is for 10- to 18-year-olds. For a $35 registration fee, the bike shop gives participants mechanical training, life skills, a bike of their own — and a community. Apprentices can even earn a paycheck. And now, the shop is focused on expanding and improving through a partnership with Orr Fellowship.

Freewheelin’ is unique in Indianapolis. It’s the city’s only full-service nonprofit bike shop that provides hands-on education, according to Executive Director LaNisha Clark.

“What I like about the work that we do is that it’s very unique,” Clark said. “And so I tell the story all the time, but we are the only full-service nonprofit bike shop for miles and miles and miles and miles.”

How it works

Freewheelin’ is split into two spaces.

The front offers retail services where some participants work with customers. But it’s in the back where the nonprofit truly makes a difference. There, students learn about road safety, how to repair bicycles and life skills.

Freewheelin’ structures its programs similarly to martial arts, but students earn aprons instead of belts.

A kid holds up his arms as an instructor ties on a green apron and other kids look on.
Cedar Hargitt (center), 10, receives his green apron from program director Aiden Armstrong (right), 23, as fellow program director Noah Norris (left) looks on during a graduation ceremony May 23, 2025, at New Circle Church in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

The aprons start at green, which is the earn-a-bike program, then go to red, purple and black, as they learn more advanced bike mechanics.

During the green apron they learn basics like road safety, fixing a flat and bike parts. When students advance all the way to the black apron, they can take a bike apart and put it back together.

“We just graduated a group of nine students, and that is what they did. We showed them a beautiful bike, and they were like, OK, take it apart, and then put it back together again,” Clark said.

Three people sit around an upside-down bike, working on the mechanics.
Freewheelin’ Community Bikes program coordinator Aiden Armstrong (left), 23, assists Frederick Swender, 12, with final adjustments on his bike as Mildred Swender, 14, looks on, May 23, 2025, at New Circle Church in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

In the next few years, Freewheelin’ hopes to double the number of students from 150 to over 300 benefiting from their programs, Clark said.

One way they plan to accomplish that growth is by using the findings from a recent feasibility study done through a partnership with another nonprofit called Orr Fellowship.

Freewheelin’s road to growth

The Orr Fellowship is an early-career development program in Indiana that helps high-achieving recent college graduates learn skills to help them excel in the work place while also helping Indiana businesses grow.

The Orr program pairs the graduates with nonprofits. At Freewheelin’, 22-year-old Orr fellow Benjamin Johnson led a team to conduct a feasibility study on how to help the nonprofit grow and thrive.

A recent Purdue University graduate, Johnson conducted a study that ultimately advised Freewheelin’ to move to a more visible and accessible location and to do more marketing to potential customers.

“It was just a lot of searching and talking to people with different knowledge and seeing how I can pull it all together,” Johnson said. “So I felt like it was definitely a thrilling experience.”

Clark says she is using the statistics Johnson and his team found to search for a new location in Marion County. She has a better idea, from the data, why certain neighborhoods would work better than others to reach customers.

“We were fortunate recently to bring on an amazing real estate firm. So we have Realtors now that are working through that plan,” Clark said, “and so passing that along to that team that is focused solely on relocating our mission has been very, very helpful as well.”

Johnson’s team also suggested ways to improve marketing. They include reaching out to local schools to set up information booths and marketing the bike shop at local amateur races.

Johnson says he feels blessed for the opportunity to work with Freewheelin’ and to learn the networking and professionalism skills it provided.

“Just coming away from this, I feel I’ve gained a sense of confidence in myself, professionally and personally, and I’m just super grateful for our fellowship, my team, and anyone else who helped with the project,” Johnson said.

A kid uses a air pump to fill up a bicycle's tires in a workshop.
Mildred Swender, 14, airs up the tires on her bike May 23, 2025, during the Green Apron program graduation at the Freewheelin’ Community Bikes facility at New Circle Church in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

Shop could move next year

Clark wants to use the information to relocate in 2026 and immediately start outreach to more schools around the city.

“Long term, I always tell people, I would love for every student in Marion County to at least have some type of access point to Freewheelin’ and with a low barrier to entry,” Clark said.

As for Lillian, she learned of the program through her older sisters, who both now work for Freewheelin’ and “hyped it up” to her. Now one of her sisters is an upperclassman in high school, and the other just graduated from IU Indianapolis.

A kid stands on a bike wearing a bright yellow helmet, as a teen in a brown UPS hoodie points out something on the handlebars.
Lillian Robinson (left), 14, shows Cedar Hargitt, 10, how to shift gears before students go for a group ride before their graduation ceremony May 23, 2025, at the Freewheelin’ Community Bikes facility at New Circle Church in Indianapolis. Credit: Richard Sitler for Mirror Indy

Before Lillian’s first day, her sister gave her the run down and helped ease some nerves. They went away quickly, though, once she started working in the program.

Now, Lillian has a red apron as an apprentice. She has started to work with customers in the front of the shop, and the family and community she has built is something she wanted to be a part of from the first day.

“When I was doing green apron, I could see all of the people teaching me were working together, they were just so close and I was like, ‘I want to be a part of that. That would be so amazing,’ ” Lillian said.

To learn more

Freewheelin’ Community Bikes, 3355 N. Central Ave., is open from noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday to Friday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday.

Contact the shop at info@freewheelinbikes.org or 317-926-5440.

Mirror Indy, a nonprofit newsroom, is funded through grants and donations from individuals, foundations and organizations.

Garrett Simms is a Mirror Indy freelance contributor. You can reach him at garrettsimm22@gmail.com.

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