For the upcoming
Bloor bike lane options --
I prefer Bloor Option C which appears to be chosen -- parking-protected bike lanes, but it's totally an alien concept in Canada (at the moment).
Hamilton, Ontario gained one of GTHA's first parking-protected bike lanes on Herkimer/Charlton this summer, and it still feels a little weird to motorists to park in the middle of the road.
City of Hamilton (July 2016), from
HamiltonByBike blog
It feels a lot safer for cyclists and cheap:
-- safer, fewer collisions
-- more distance between bikes in motion & cars in motion
-- road taming effects (forces drivers to drive more slowly)
-- much cheaper than barricaded cycle tracks
-- increases car parking compliance (less likely for them to be parked in bike lane)
New York City has had these for quite a while now
But it feels weird to many, like a driver using a complex roundabout for the first-ever time.
New York City "Parking Protected Bike Lane", from
streetsblog
The point being is, it's becoming an increasingly common enhancement in other countries -- as a cheaper enhancement than building barried cycleways, but drivers will scream blasphemy, just like this tweet:
Heads up Toronto -- parking protected bike lanes are WEIRD (like your first time in a roundabout) but they feel natural once you get used to them. You've been warned Toronto -- they are great but they do definitely feel weird to drivers at first.
The good news though... I've noticed parking compliance with parking-protected bike lanes (After initial familiarization period) is higher than the situation on Richmond/Adelaide. At least for the green-painted bike lane infrastructure. Could be a good lesson for Richmond/Adelade to solve the parked-car epidemic in bike lanes.
This will be very, very new to Toronto. But it will feel VERY weird at first.
But hey, fewer injuries (even for car drivers too!) and fewer deaths, I'm for it!