innsertnamehere
Superstar
Also the Riverdale Park pedestrian bridge.
It's ridiculous that the redevelopment of Regent Park did not require separated bike lanes from River St. to Parliament. That was a once in a lifetime opportunity, since you're tearing up the sidewalks and roads anyway. Gerrard northside is perhaps too tight between streetcar and houses, but Dundas could have easily accommodated separated lanes no problem.Dundas and Gerrard are more interesting, I'm not if the stuctures as they are could support widening for separated bike lanes (cantilever) or whether you'd have to replace the structure.
It's ridiculous that the redevelopment of Regent Park did not require separated bike lanes from River St. to Parliament. That was a once in a lifetime opportunity, since you're tearing up the sidewalks and roads anyway. Gerrard northside is perhaps too tight between streetcar and houses, but Dundas could have easily accommodated separated lanes no problem.
There was no excuse for not putting separated bike lanes on Dundas between River and Parliament. If this city can't include them in such obvious, low-hanging fruit situations such as the total rebuild of a neighbourhood, what chance does the rest of the city have?
Where‘s the crackheads and unintelligible mutterers? Did the artist of the above piece spend anytime on Shuter?Artists Render of proposed Shuter St. Cycle Tracks:
View attachment 224561
I'm mostly fine w/this, but again, some streetscaping efforts would be nice.
Question...
Will the Bloor West Bikeway going under the two railway underpasses be level with the roadway or the sidewalk?
That's space doesn't have the primary purpose of a bike lane. It's a place for wet weather (snow/heavy rain) to accumulate outside of the driving lane.
Bike lanes should be level with the sidewalk but spending ~$50M widening the underpass to make that happen is well outside the bike lane budget at this time.
None of that is relevant to the design of the bike lane for which the rendering exists to visualize, but you just can't help yourself but to spew vitriol toward the have-nots and the least fortunate at every opportunity.Where‘s the crackheads and unintelligible mutterers? Did the artist of the above piece spend anytime on Shuter?
It is relevant. Riding up the Sherbourne lane I've had crazies jump in front of me, junkies with needles in their arms wander Into my path, stopped to give a TPS witness statement after a woman tossed a bottle of "liquid" into a TTC operator's face as I cycled past, and seen too much crazy sh#t on that bike route south of Gerrard that I'd rather risk it elsewhere. I don’t usually consider the Sun and especially SAL worth anything but dunny roll, but only they seem to call out this street for what it is.None of that is relevant to the design of the bike lane for which the rendering exists to visualize, but you just can't help yourself but to spew vitriol toward the have-nots and the least fortunate at every opportunity.
My point? Put any new separated east/west bike lanes south of Bloor where the crazies don't congregate, like Gerrard, Dundas and Queen. If that makes me a vitrol spewer, I'm perfectly fine with that. I may not use today's progressive vocabulary , but I still want supporting housing, shelters and harm reduction for our least fortunate. But that doesn't mean I can't advocate for putting bike lanes in places where there is the least disruption to folks who just want to cycle the city in safety.