Kathmandu’s new motorbike museum

A first of its kind motorcycle gallery in Nepal is an ode to the two-wheeler work horses

Photos: MONIKA DEUPALA

Saurabh Jyoti has had a lifelong infatuation with motorcycles, and a hobby collecting superhero figures. At age 47 he has decided to combine these two interests in Nepal’s first motorcycle museum with a caped crusader theme.

Scion of a family that has been the authorised distributor for Honda motorcycles in Nepal, he grew up with bikes as much as he did with his siblings.

This bond is reflected in his latest venture, a personal passion project: a first-of-its-kind motorcycle gallery in Kathmandu called SJ Moto that pays tribute to the transportation of choice of most Nepalis.

At age 16, Saurabh Jyoti was so fascniated by a Honda NX250 Dominator in the Syakar showroom that he could not take his eyes off the blue Japanese dual-purpose bike.

“I had my nose stuck to the showroom window for a week. My parents refused to buy it but my grandfather gifted it to me,” he recalls. This kick-started Jyoti’s obsession with motorcycle, and he has not look back since (not even in the rear-view mirror).

After coming back to Nepal from Bangalore, he used to visit garages for old rundown machines and restore them. Over the years, he had a sizeable collection of vintage as well as superbikes, which were all sitting in a warehouse until he decided to put them all in a museum.

SJ Moto is divided into a blue retail corner which has reconditioned as well as some of the latest superbikes from Ducati to Hayabusa that are for sale and can cost up to Rs6 million. The display-only red corner has classic bikes that Jyoti collected over the last 25 years.

A 1969 Honda Dac 70cc holds a special place in Jyoti’s heart and at the gallery. “My Dad used to ride this to Padma Kanya to see my mother,” he recalls. “But while I was in college, he sold it to one of the engineers. I bought the bike back and restored it.”

His other nostalgic favourite is an Indian Rajdoot, a two-stroke Yamaha motorcycle that he rode during his time in Bangalore. “This is my pride and joy, I regretted selling it before coming back to Nepal. Since then I always wanted to buy it but couldn’t find it anywhere,” he recounts.

After a lot of inquiries, Jyoti located a Rajdoot in a garage in Pokhara and immediately flew to cargo it back to Kathmandu. He order spare parts from Ludhiana, and restored the bike to perfect running condition.

The Honda CBR1100 is Jyoti’s pet superbike, but the more expensive two-wheelers are not popular in Nepal, selling only a dozen a year.

“Because we do not have a proper mass transit system in the country, motorcycles serve as the main mode of transport, and they are better suited for the poor road conditions,” Jyoti says.

Read also: Designed and made in Nepal, Shusma Barali

The gallery’s motorcycle displays are interspersed with superhero themes from Jyoti’s collection: Black Panther helmets, a bike painted in Spiderman web, even a life-size Deadpool figure, Transformer autobots and characters, Ironman’s heart and Batmobiles.

The gallery’s cafe is also comic character-inspired: Wonder chocolate and Superman muffins. There are also Newa delicacies like lakha mari and hawa mari, and the coffee is an exquisite blend of Nepali beans.

“SJ Moto is a free gallery where I share my enjoyment of bikes, a happy place to inspire people to dream big while maintaining the inner child. The only thing mandatory here is a mask and a smile,” says Jyoti with a wide smile.

Read also: Motorcycle grandma, Gopal Gartoula

Next in line for SJ Moto is to be an authorised Marvel and DC merchandise and collectables distributor. SJ Moto will change its displays every month and include unique bikes from other enthusiasts, like a soon-to-be-added vintage German NSU Fox.

Meanwhile, Jyoti is on his mission to complete bike rides to Nepal’s remotest areas with his wife. Some of them can be quite hairy, like a near vertical section on the Manang trail. Next on his bucket list are Lo Manthang and Rara.

Sonia Awale

writer

Sonia Awale is Executive Editor of Nepali Times where she also serves as the health, science and environment correspondent. She has extensively covered the climate crisis, disaster preparedness, development and public health -- looking at their political and economic interlinkages. Sonia is a graduate of public health, and has a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong.

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