Zagster was founded in 2007 by
Drexel University graduates Timothy Ericson and Jason Meinzer as "CityRyde". CityRyde initially sought to operate a bike-sharing program in the Philadelphia region, but later established itself as a
software provider and
consultant in the industry. In September 2009,
CityRyde launched
Spark, the world’s first off-the-shelf bike-sharing
fleet management software, at the
University of Chicago. Spark's features included electronic user registration, automated rental processes, integration with automated locking mechanisms, a customized reporting dashboard, and the ability to integrate with existing systems. Spark was implemented at 10 universities, including the
University of Chicago,
Cornell University,
University of Colorado at Boulder and
Drexel University. In July 2011, CityRyde received
Verified Carbon Standard validation of its software. In 2012 CityRyde was renamed Zagster and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts to join the
TechStars startup accelerator program. Zagster was also selected as a finalist for the
MassChallenge startup competition in 2012. The company raised a $1M funding round in fall 2012 led by LaunchCapital, which also included Fontinalis Partners, Jean Hammond, John Landry, and
Semyon Dukach. Zagster launched bike sharing programs for
General Motors,
Duke University, and
Cleveland, Ohio in the summer of 2014. In 2015, the company launched bike sharing programs for
Workday, Inc.,
Intuitive Surgical,
Purdue University, and
Samsung in California. On December 12, 2018, Zagster began operating under the name "Pace" in the city of Santa Clarita, CA. In January 2019, Zagster started performing fleet management services for scooter and e-bike companies with Spin being their first client. This model expanded during 2019 with Zagster partnering with multiple
micromobility companies on fleet management. The bicycle program was suspended in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and then the company terminated all operations in June 2020. Boston-based micromobility startup Superpedestrian acquired Zagster's e-scooter operations and launched a shared electric scooter-sharing service called Link. == Technology & operating model ==