By Andrew Tangel 

Working in suburbia comes with sedentary drawbacks.

There is the long drive to work, followed by sitting at a desk for hours, then plopping down in a car again for the ride home.

Now a suburban office park in Whippany, N.J., about an hour's drive from Manhattan, is offering its denizens a perk more associated with city life: shared bicycles to run errands, fetch lunch or exercise outdoors. The cost is $2 an hour.

"Sitting at your desk all day is not very healthy," 52-year-old Gary Kocsis of Bethlehem, Pa., said as he parked one of the six blue bikes into a newly installed gray docking station following a 20-minute jaunt around the Crossings at Jefferson Park.

Riders such as Mr. Kocsis, who works in the information technology department at a bank, can check out bicycles with a membership or credit card.

Rudy Cesnek, 58, said he often brings his own folding bike to ride during the lunch hour, but now might start using the office park's shared bikes. They may have benefits beyond recreation, he added.

"It's good for the heart," Mr. Cesnek said. "The healthier the employees, the less you pay for insurance."

The office park's owner, Vision Real Estate Partners, is competing with other property owners trying to attract employers drawn to urban centers, which increasingly offer short-term bicycle rental programs such as Citi Bike in New York City.

The landlord is among a number of businesses across the country rolling out shared bicycles for their employees. Companies, universities and apartment buildings are offering shared bikes not available for the public as a means of transit.

Shared bikes have been a fixture of other office complexes, such as Google Inc.'s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.

In New York City, financial giant American Express Co. plans to offer 20 bikes for employees, giving them another way to travel between its Manhattan headquarters on Vesey Street and its offices on Hudson Street, a spokeswoman said.

The company's "Point2Ppoint" program is slated to launch this fall. "We wanted to promote new opportunities for our employees to get out and be active during the workday," an American Express spokeswoman said in an email.

Even auto maker General Motors Co. is warming up to the car's two-wheeled nemesis. The company on Tuesday launched a system of 50 bikes on its sprawling 330-acre campus in Warren, Mich.

The 19,000 employees and contractors who work in its 61 buildings are often hard-pressed to find a parking that is close by, a spokeswoman said. And its shuttle buses don't stop at all the buildings, often forcing employees to walk long distances.

GM hopes the program will help it understand the increasing appeal of cycling to consumers who eschew driving for other means of transportation.

"We have to understand that to remain viable," the spokeswoman said.

GM rents the bikes from Zagster Inc., a Cambridge, Mass.-based provider. Riders can punch in a code to open boxes on the bikes holding keys to locks that secure them to racks.

Riders can find Zagster bikes at apartment buildings owned by the New York real estate giant Related Cos. Related has been in advance talks to acquire a controlling stake in Alta Bicycle Share Inc., the Portland, Ore., company that operates Citi Bike and some of the largest public bike-shares elsewhere in the country.

San Francisco's airport offers shared bikes for its employees. So does health-care giant Humana Inc. at its campus in downtown Louisville, Ky.

Bikes have long been used as a way to get around in blue-collar settings as workers move from place to place in a sprawling factory, for example.

Worksman Trading Corp., a bike manufacturer based in Queens, has been selling bicycles and tricycles for use at companies' factories or industrial sites since at least the 1940s, said president and co-owner Wayne Sosin.

"Bike-share is really just a new term for an old concept," he said.

Nick Pinto contributed to this article.

Write to Andrew Tangel at Andrew.Tangel@wsj.com

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