A Brooklyn Chabad yeshiva student has made it his mission to make sure every Jewish New Yorker gets a chance to be inside a sukkah this Sukkot.

Levi Duchman, 21, invented the pedi-sukkah, a rickshaw bicycle with a mobile sukkah attached to the back. Each sukkah meets halachic requirements, small as they may be. During the days before Sukkot and throughout Chol Hamoed, Duchman says bikes on the pedi-sukkah for around Brooklyn and Manhattan to let people come inside and to say a bracha.

“It’s the best thing to see people’s reactions, and to give people in New York the opportunity to get involved with the holiday,” Duchman said. “We get a lot of smiles and pictures, and lot of positivity, even from the police.”

He even obliges people for short rides in the pedi-sukkah.

Five years ago, Duchman built his first pedi-sukkah when he rented a pedicab and worked all night with his younger brother to build a sukkah that would stay put on the back of the bike and today, 50 of his bikes can be seen rolling around 15 states and more than five countries.

Duchman now works with a manufacturer to streamline the building of the pedi-sukkah with an easy-to-assemble process. Duchman created a “menorah cycle” for Chanukah and a “mitzvah cycle” for people to lay tefillin and light Shabbat candles as well.

Each pedi-sukkah costs approximately $2,000. But Duchman doesn’t make a profit.
“It’s not a business,” he said. “It’s a way to spread awareness. Baruch Hashem.”