And they get a lot of experience building these. From the March Report, generally it's a 5-7 year process to study, budget, design, and construction. 61 km in the design phase. 15 km in the study phase.
Generally, the detailed design phase takes 2 years from procurement to completion (completion of design phase?). Currently, there's 51.5 km in the detailed design phase.
27 km are anticipated to commence construction by 2025.
Personally, it's exciting to see in Detailed Design a 0.9km section of Hwy 7 from Bowes Road to Centre Street. The plan is for a MUP on the south side. It's quite the missing link, between two sections of cycle tracks. There's a railway underbridge, a big chokepoint. The current underbridge configuration is a 7 lane roadway, middle lane is doing nothing, and there might be only
1.5 ft for walking on both sides. So that can possibly be rejiggered to have a MUP on the south side. Past the bridge, the sidewalk is also currently quite unusable for biking, there's 5 industrial driveways, and
no curb cuts.
Some interesting quotes,
Through this report, Council reaffirmed its support of separate pedestrian and cycling facilities to minimize conflicts between people walking and those riding bikes or micro-mobility devices.
The expansion of the City’s recreational trails system is a joint effort between the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA). Most recently the City partnered with TRCA to develop a feasibility study for the 7 km Humber Trail, spanning from Steeles Avenue to the Boyd Conservation Area Trail.
They also talk about winter maintenance and the coordination with the region. Sidewalks are a municipal responsibility. Painted bike lanes on regional roads are under regional jurisdiction. However, MUPs and cycle tracks ownership and maintenance responsibilities are not clearly defined.
On-road painted bike lanes for roadways with operating speeds exceeding 50 km/h are no longer considered best practice. Furthermore, in some locations, limited space available for snow storage between the Regional road and the sidewalk, multi-use pathway or cycle track can create difficulties for winter maintenance. Operations and maintenance practices for multi-use pathways and cycle tracks as well as snow storage requirements within Regional boulevards need to be formalized.
Active Transportation Programs - Fourth Annual Update
https://pub-vaughan.escribemeetings.com/filestream.ashx?DocumentId=167442