By chance, do you know the numbers or is this from observation?
I cycle and live in the neighborhood. The thing with this stretch of Yonge is I don't feel safe as a cyclist, so instinctively I choose Beecroft or Doris. If there was a protected lane, I'd use it and I'm sure many others would as well. The Fed Government Building (both front and back) and library/swim pool bike racks are full of bikes, so I'm sure I'm not the only one that cycles in the area.
With protected bike lanes on Yonge Street, the area gridlock traffic congestion will continue to get worst at a faster rate,... while riding on these protected bike lanes on Yonge Street, you'll be huffing and puffing exhaust fumes!
The vast majority of area cyclist are recreational cyclists,.... not commuter cyclist,... so why is the city considering putting in cycling infrastructure along a commuter route like Yonge Street??? A 2006 city report shows only 0.3-0.4% of Ward23 (Willowdale - North York Centre) residents are commuter cyclist (well below the 8-17% in parts of downtown Toronto and below the 1.1-1.3% city wide average). A more recent city study had Ward23 commuter cycling numbers so low, it wouldn't officially publish them. The majority of Ward23 commuter cyclist don't ride north-south on Yonge Street but actually travel east-west to the subway station on Yonge street,.... Look along Yonge Street between 401 to Steeles,... where do you see bikes locked up along Yonge Street? At subway station entrances,... generally about 10 bikes at Yonge&Poyntz/Annedale, about 20 bikes at SheppardCentre, about 30 NorthYorkCityCentre, about 15 EmpressWalk on Yonge,.... another 15-20 in the rear,.... and the vast majority of these bikes belong to house residents that live about 1km away from Yonge Street and they travel east-west not north-south on Yonge.
Outside of TTC subway entrance on Yonge Street, it would be quite rare to see a bike locked up anywhere else along Yonge Street between 401 to Steeles! Why? Because that stretch of Yonge Street is mostly lined with ethnic stores,... especially Persian, Korean, Chinese, etc,.... those are the largest ethnic demographics in Ward 23, a ward that's full of visible minorities,.... it's very rare to see anyone from these demographic cycling,... whenever you see a cyclist, look at them,... how often are they a visible minority????
The Canada federal building, I see maybe 10-15 out front and another 5 in rear,... NorthYorkCivicCentre and library in back of NorthYorkCityCentre have about 50 bike off Beecroft in the rear,.... likely evenly split between those using those facilities and the other half walking through NorthYorkCityCentre to subway.
Biggest area cycling hub is EarlHaigSecondarySchool with about 150-200 bikes locked up during school,.. but it's school district boundary is Yonge Street, so why would those high school students be riding on Yonge Street????
The city have recently conducted cycling count in Ward 23 arteries including Yonge Street,... but those numbers have not been made public yet. which shows this area has a strong east-west cycling travel (house residents going to subway station),... but relatively low north-south Yonge Street cycling travel.
So if we followed your logic, by judging the volume of cars on Yonge, another car lane is justified. But this is not the direction I want my neighborhood to go!
My logic???,... you`re assuming too much,... and we now what *assume* means,...
But let's go with that,... put it this way, stand anywhere on Yonge Street in North York Centre and count cyclist during rush hour,... you might get 10-20 per hour in each direction. But if the city, by narrowing vehicular traffic lane width and eliminating tree lined centre median & left turn lanes manage to produce the 1.5m bike lanes for each direction (BTW, they're aiming for protected bike lanes so it's closer to 1.8-2m per direction),... You'll have a total of 3-4m width of cycling infrastructure on Yonge Street,.... that's more than the 3.0m minimum road width,... since you mentioned it: it'll be better to put in another Yonge Street vehicular traffic lane (southbound or even bidirectional like what they had on Jarvis) that can handle about 1,000 cars per hour in rush hour,... and service about 1,500 people in cars in rush hour - assuming an average of 1.5 people per car,.... Thus, you're really looking at providing cycling infrastructure service to a low number of cyclist mainly from outside the area that are measured in the tens/hr or providing vehicular road traffic service to a high number of road users that are measured in the thousands/hr,.... in an area that has some of the worst traffic gridlock congestion in North America.
PipolChap, do you actually want your neighbourhood to get rid of the tree lined centre median on Yonge Street? Personally, I'd much rather see the tree lined centre median extended south to Highway 401 and north to the Finch Hydro Corridor & Steeles and beyond,...
PipolChap, since you live and cycle in North York Centre,.... I'm betting you don't live in the condo (mainly within Doris & Beecroft ring roads), since most area cyclist actually live in the houses east of Doris and West of Beecroft.
Why does the approximately 62,000 condo residents in North York Centre NOT cycle? Because they pay a premium to live along Yonge Corridor,... so that basically everything they need (TTC subway station, multiple grocery stores, bank branches, government offices-services, mutliple restaurants, drink places, shopping store, options, etc,..) are all within a 5-10 minute walk,... that's under 1km walk. The sweetspot for cycling is about 1-5km,... if you live at Yonge-Sheppard you might cycle 4km to CanadianTire or Ikea near Sheppard&Leslie,... but you're not likely to cycle 6km to FairviewMall - too far.
City rules specifies that condo developer must provide 1 bike parking space for every 10 condo units; with 2.5 residents per condo unit, that means a maximum of 1 bike for every 25 condo residents. But guess what? At most condo towers, less than half of bike parking spaces are being used (I could show photos of rows and rows of empty bike parking spaces both indoor and out in North York Centre),... so that means 1 bike for every 50-100 condo residents!
I'm not even going to get started on how the new city of Toronto allowed about 60 new condo towers in North York Centre in the last 17 years since amalgamation but the area only got 1 new office tower and now a handful of office condos (1 floor at EmeraldPark, 12 floors at HullmarkCentre plus 3 on podium which are about 20% full),.... North York Centre is a vertical sleeping community! And last year, the area lost over 500 jobs,... so where does the people who live in North York Centre work? Mostly out of North York Centre, mainly downtown,... way too far for commuter cycling!
So it`s not like if you take out rush hour traffic lanes (which you`ll do if you convert parking lanes to bike lanes since those parking lanes currently become rush hour traffic lanes), you`ll convert all those 1,500 people who use it in each direction to cyclists,... you might get another 4.5-6 more cyclist since only 0.3-0.4% of area residents are commuter cyclists.... rest will find other driving routes or take transit,... Yonge subway is already operating beyond capacity going southbound in AM peak time so,.. good luck trying to get on southbound subway in midtown.
Let's make it clear,... I'm not against building cycling infrastructure,.... I'm just in favour of building more useful infrastructure that will benefit more people! The Finch Hydro Corridor is already a Multi-Use Trail for cyclist, roller-bladers, joggers, hikers, walkers, everybody! Extend that multi-use trail south through North York Centre! Currrently Finch Hydro Corridor multi-use trail gaps at Yonge but goes through HendonPark where Beecroft Rd currently ends,... so extend the multi-use trail down west side of Beecroft Rd which has a lengthy long strip of grassy boulevard sidewalk that doesn't service any houses but is primarily used like a multi-use trail anyways since that's the outer part of ring road where residential streets of houses to west doesn't intersect at Beecroft Rd. At Churchill/Church Ave where Beecroft Rd and Doris Ave are closest, the multi-use trail will be on run along south side (Section 37 from future development) and make it's way along east side of Doris where once again we find primarily lengthy long strip of grassy boulevard sidewalk that doesn't service any houses but is primarily used like a multi-use trail anyways since that's the outer part of ring road where residential streets of houses to east doesn't intersect at Doris Ave,.... with future Doris Ave extension south of Sheppard into Avondale Condominium Community the multi-use trail will literally be in the backyard of the vast majority of condo residents in North York Centre,.... and it'll run near about 6-8 area schools,...
Anyways,.... area councillor should have a community meeting on local cycling infrastructure around late October to mid November,... show up and make yourself heard,...