The gas engine kits mostly aren't very refined.
First thing you should do is find out if its legal in your area or not. Some people have built them only to find out from police that there's no way to legally ride it on public streets at all....
Second, the China 2-stroke engines are the cheapest, but also the worst in reliability. Look around on motoredbikes.com or motorbicycling.com forums to see the issues; it is not so bothersome if you know what to fix in advance (for one example, one engine had the problem of the head studs breaking within a few hours of use. They didn't cost much to replace with better studs, but it's not the kind of surprise you pleasantly recall). ...The name-brand engine kits using Tanaka, Honda or Robin-Subaru cost a lot more and don't look the same, but have
much fewer engine issues. Often no engine issues at all.
I built one a few years back using a Golden Eagle motor kit. Fun for a while but the engine vibrated a lot and had no torque at all (couldn't run up hills much, or even get started rolling into a stiff headwind). I tried to do it vintage-style (using some real-actual dimensions of a vintage motorcycle) and it rode
horribly.... I eventually junked most of that bike. I'd like to do another one but would probably use a China moped/gearbox setup & moped rear hub, just to get useful gearing. (Trying to run motor torque through any kind of bicycle multi-gear rear wheel will quickly grenade the wheel, it is way more torque than they are built for)
The best-functioning motorbikes use custom-welded frames and moped engines+transmissions, like the 4-speed 90cc and 110cc's sold here:
http://www.hooperimports.com/dept.aspx?dept_id=02
You must use a MOPED rear hub + spokes with these though, because the low gears on these engines will generate WAY more torque than any bicycle hub + spokes can withstand for long.
The "bicycle" frame also needs to be built with full-suspension, and VERY heavy-duty..... Figure that a moped with these engines would weigh about 150 lbs, and the engines weigh ~50 lbs, so your 'bicycle' should make up the rest of that weight if you want it to be durable.