Enterprise Car Club

Enterprise Car Club (formerly City Car Club) is a British car club operator. Established as CityCarClub in 2000, it was acquired by Enterprise Rent-A-Car in 2015 and renamed as Enterprise Car Club in 2016.[1][2]

Enterprise Car Club Limited
TypeLimited company
IndustryCar hire
PredecessorsWhizzgo, City Car Club
Founded2000 (2000)
Headquarters,
Area served
United Kingdom
Websitewww.enterprisecarclub.co.uk

History

A City Car Club Fiat 500

City Car Club was established in 2000 in London and Edinburgh.

By 2007, it was using online booking with smartcard access to the cars the company worked in partnership with communities to reduce the need for conventional car ownership.[3] In 2009, it acquired WhizzGo, thereby creating the UK's largest network of hourly rental cars. This marked the first major consolidation within the UK car club industry and secured City Car Club's leading position - with 500 cars in 13 cities and a membership base of 20,000. City Car Club withdrew the WhizzGo service in Liverpool in December 2009, when the existing contract with Liverpool City Council expired. The company was acquired by Enterprise Rent-A-Car in 2015, and renamed in 2016.[1][2]

Membership

Upon joining, members are issued with a membership number, and four-digit PIN. They can then log on to the Car Club website to browse vehicle locations and book vehicles. Alternatively members may call the 'Clubhouse' to book over the phone. Users then unlock and lock the vehicles by tapping their membership or other nominated RFID card on the windscreen-mounted card reader, or by using the app standing beside the vehicle. Members can extend their booking while it is under way using the on-board computer located in the glovebox, provided the vehicle is available for the time specified. When the fuel gauge reaches 1/4, members are asked to fill the tank using the fuel card supplied in an information folder with each vehicle. Members are charged per mile, rather than the fuel or electricity purchase price.

References

  1. Armstrong, Ashley (1 April 2015). "Enterprise drives off with City Car Club". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  2. "City Car Club becomes Enterprise Car Club". Fleet Industry News. 4 May 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  3. "Reducing car ownership and use - understanding people and places". CTS. Archived from the original on 2009-09-10. Retrieved 2007-07-08.
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