If a buyout moved forward, it’d represent a coup for Lyft. Jump was only available in San Francisco when Uber stepped in this April, but Motivate has exclusive deals in NYC, San Francisco and Boston as well as a preferential arrangement in Chicago and Washington, DC.<\/p>\n
That could help Lyft quickly integrate bikes into its transportation network – as\u00a0in Baltimore<\/a>, you could start and stop journeys at bike docks to both save money and the environment. Uber isn’t necessarily shut out, but it’d have to develop its own services in areas where Lyft would have a head start.<\/p>\n However this might shake out, it would reflect an increasing shift\u00a0away from purely car-based services<\/a>\u00a0among ridesharing companies. They’re diversifying in hopes of both cornering additional markets and protecting themselves in the event cars fall out of favor.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Lyft Wants to Dominate Transportation, and That Means Bike Share<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n