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Aende

By Joe Hall • 2nd November 2011 05:59pm • Posted in Art & Design

All photos by Neutal WA  

You may have stumbled across these images before: treasures from Flickr taken in the workshop of Aende during the 1980s. Aende is one of the more obscure brands of British framebuilding but has developed a cult status due to the story of its creator, Alan Braitwaite, and seems relevant today as we see the resurgence of handmade frame-craft in the UK.

Having trained as a bricklayer Braithwaite or “Pongo” to many cut his bike-building teeth at Carlton-Raleigh in his native Nottingham. He then built frames for A & C Sports, namely Paramount frames. This eventually led him to set up his own frame marque, Aende.

A decent time-trialler for his club North Notts Olympic Road Club, which he became president of, Pongo’s frames were regularly built for time-trialists. Top British testers such as Mick Bradshaw, Tom Mullins, Noel Lilley, Dave Beaumont and Mick Gadsby rode his TT frames by choice.

He also built various other types of rigs such as track frames (noted for their tight clearances and straight forks), touring steeds and low-pro beasts with materials such as Reynolds 653, 531, Columbus SL and SLX, Nervex lugs, Campagnolo drop outs and so on. These East Midlands machines are now well sought after.

He regularly had a three-month waiting list even though he never moved beyond one workshop, first a shed and then the backroom of his house in Nottingham. By all accounts it seems Pongo was a thoroughly nice man and clearly loved his craft and the world of road cycling. Pongo moved to the Philippines in the 90s and is sadly no longer with us.

See more images here »  

Comments

James Fairbank

2nd November 2011 06:28pm

Lovely.

Andrew Russell

2nd November 2011 10:57pm

Great photo set. Brought back a few memories. I was a member of the VC Slough in the early-mid '80s when Aende were the frame of choice for our club members (we had an 'arrangement' with Pongo) including Noel Lilley, Dave 'Smithy' Smith, Dave Creese and Adrian Briars. I think Bas Clark may have also ridden one at some point too. I remember Aende building early lo-pros/'funny bikes' for Noel and Smithy for the start of the start of the 1983 season.

Mike Owen

3rd November 2011 02:43am

Fantastic.

Arco Visser

3rd November 2011 09:26am

Awesome. It's always nice to see and read about such great framebuilders from the past.

Jack Saunders

3rd November 2011 12:51pm

Nice find Joe. The flickr set has some great images.

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