North Carolinian Kai Kaapro aims to roll out Ann Arbor’s first human-powered drinking spot this month. The roofed, open-air “Trolley Pub” sports a trained driver (who stays sober), while up to ten people pedal bicycle-style around town enjoying drinks and food; four more can freeload on a bench seat. The bike is street legal, meaning you might see it on Main, State, or any other street where the speed limit is twenty-five mph or less.

Kaapro started his trolley pub company while still in law school. He graduated, passed the bar, and got hired by a firm in Texas–but with business taking off, decided to concentrate on his party bikes. Like other similar entrepreneurs, he’s expecting a boost from Michigan’s new law that lets party-bike riders bring their own beer and wine on board.

Negotiating with city officials, Kaapro discovered that no specific license is required to run a party bike–they “fall through the cracks” of the legal system, he says. But if you book a ride at annarbor.trolleypub. com, don’t look for Kaapro himself at the wheel of the Ann Arbor Trolley Pub. He’s busy running party bikes in five other cities through trolleypub.com and hopping on planes to scout new locations. Besides Ann Arbor, he’s currently rolling out new Trolley Pubs in Wilmington, North Carolina, and St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.