If you'd like to see a map of the different routes, I cobbled together a quick one here: www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1qvAO1pu0SEjgWOcAkG62DVqTJxpoRCk&usp=sharing
@@russellgeisthardt9828 This reminds me of NJB talking about Riverdale in Toronto having inflated prices because of walkability, transit, etc. I'm eying the Blatchford development in Edmonton because of these things, but a 40 acre development doesn't make up for an entire city being trash. Everyone is gonna try to cram into it.
@@thekevmeister77 There are a couple "trails" that have a concrete path under a bridge or over a road but not nearly enough to be truly useful getting from home to work easily on them
We have some arterial multi-use paths here in DC. Great to be away from cars, but honestly kind of dangerous for pedestrians. On the other hand, I used one of our cycle tracks yesterday and encountered not one but two cars that had managed to wedge their way in between the barriers. One actually drove on the track for a good 25-50 feet before turning back in to the street. The real problem with side streets is that they're always the last to be repaved, and I'm admittedly more ruthless than many cyclist, but I'll happily share the road with cars to keep the blisters off my keister. For my money, I'll take freshly paved streets with a few hundred more "sharrows" and "Cyclist may use whole lane" signage over pretty much any other cycling infrastructure. That and some traffic calming measures + reduced speed limits would make me a very happy bike commuter.
@@willkoper If you're young, strong and an aggressive rider, there are advantages to sharrows. The problem with sharrows is that any lane which is for both cars and bicycles is a lane for cars. Bikes take their chances. If you're trying to encourage people to start riding bikes, sharrows are the worst. The people who would ride there are the ones who already ride. If you want to bring in people who don't like the roads because they feel dangerous, you need routes that don't mix bicycles with 3 ton juggernauts busty updating their Facebook status.
Go another step farther: every major road should be dedicated to bikes and transit. Car drivers should have to use the "side streets" since they are the ones that endanger everyone else.
@@WolfSeril107 FYI, you have your terminology backwards! "Roads" are actually point-to-point passages (think highways) which are supposed to have a few turn-off points, and those turn-off points become "streets", which are places with buildings on each side, such as businesses, homes, etc. So vehicles should really be delegated to roads, so streets (which is where most people congregate, walk, and cycle) can exist in those spaces safely. This is also where the term "stroad" comes from - a weird combination of a road and a street, which just ends up being a horrible experience for every mode of transport. Vehicles have to constantly stop to wait for people turning into business parks, pedestrians usually have little or no sidewalk infrastructure, and people on bikes usually don't have anything but painted bike gutters.
I don't think I agree with that. In my town these are almost everywhere and it makes for a unpleasant trip. Instead traffic should be calmed around points of interest. Nobody wants to sit and drink a coffee on the side of the street. There should be a network of multi use pathways wich connects points of interest creating spaces where people actually want to spend time.
12:20 Another point is the multi-use pathways allow cities to disingenuously claim they have bike infrastructure even when they have very little catering to commuters or ppl cycling for transportation rather than recreation. They can still proudly claim they have X km of bike infrastructure.
My Town is a prime example of this. Claims we have tonnes of km of bike infrastructure. Reality is that we have 3x painted bike gutters which all run east/west only and not a single one of them connects to another. And none of them go to grocery stores or other useful locations.
My city did this originally. Paved some multi-use paths on unusable land under the elevated metro and put up a bunch of green "bikeway" signs on the most out of the way neighborhood streets. Looked great on paper but that was about it. Over time more painted routes have been added, bike controlled traffic lights, a few separated lanes. It's getting better but slowly, and it's still the same story for the new routes downtown. The streets with least amount to do have the bike lanes, the streets with shopping don't.
That's my town in a gist. It's getting better, but the nearby park is filled with bike lanes that take you nowhere. Fun to ride but literally just for leisure.
My city put one in a couple of years ago. Kind of pleasant if no one's walking on it. It's kind of a little taste of Netherlands. It might be pleasant for a nice little walk, but you can leisurely cycle from one end of it to the other in 2 minutes. And it's not even a help because it runs parallel to one of the quietest streets in the downtown area, a street I have never felt unsafe biking on.
They are all great. In my area voters established an agency for building trails and funded it with a sales tax. While the first several trails were multi-use paths that were mainly recreational. More and more are being built as “cycle tracks” that will connect actual destination and also integrate with our existing transit system.
That’s sort of what I would expect, too, for any city that’s responsive to its citizens or whose citizens are active in pointing the direction they want their city to go in. It seems logical when first being able to justify those multi-use paths that you’d build recreational ones that are away from roads and busy areas - that seems intuitive to me. But as you actually do that, I think it would be pretty common that more people would use them and after more people start using them, it’s going to start to become more obvious what their shortcomings are and how practical cycling can be as more of a utilitarian activity rather than recreational or sport activity. In essence, to me it seems like the recreational paths are where most “beginners” would start, but they would soon learn what they didn’t know that they didn’t know because they opened the door to something no one else really knew either before the door was opened.
The cycle track is great, but missing two things. One, bike-priority traffic signals. Two, the path dips down to street level at intersections, while the better design would be for the street to raise up to meet the cycle track level. The reason being that raising the road level forces cars to slow down (increasing safety), and also signals to cars that they are not the priority. That in turn makes it easier for people to justify getting onto a bike instead of into their car- if bikes are the priority in a community, people are far more likely to use them than if they are shoehorned in alongside cars and still defer to cars at intersections.
I was going to say this exact thing! It is great design that the bike lane is raised above street level, something they seem to never manage here in Australia, but they need to stay raised when crossing streets. Particular T-intersections where cars should be travelling more slowly and generally don't have right of way!
Absolutely, those things would help. As a Calgarian though, I'm just impressed that there is any investment at all into this sort of infrastructure. Calgary is essentially the gasoline capital of Canada so it has always had car-first policies. It is also situated in the great plains, so a lot of early city development was 'wide' so there was no emphasis on building the city tall and making it commuter friendly. Not to mention the deeply embedded mindset here that it is too cold in the winter to cycle. There is still a long ways to go but I see far more cyclists now than I did five years ago.
Particularly with the parking next to the cycle lane - I'm always worried about getting right-hooked by a car trying to make a quick turn with that setup
The thing I don't like about bike tracks and side streets is the government subsidized parking on the road. I have had to do many an emergency stop when people get out of their cars. They might tend to look more on the driver's side, but passenger side egress will not be so observant. Not many driveways at least. A lot of bike accidents are on sidewalks where the cyclist feels 'safe' and motorists don't look or don't notice the bicycle. They turn intro an offstreet parking lot crossing the sidewalk. All I can advise is make yourself as visible as possible with lights and bright colored clothing. Be very aware of hazards.
The interesting thing about the bikelanes in the last route is that near intersections it's sending you towards the cars. In the Netherlands the exact opposite happens, you might be cycling on the road, but near intersections you will be separated from car traffic. I wonder why the engineers chose to direct the cyclists "into" traffic. That said, that last route looks fantastic, it's not at the level of the Netherlands, but probably better than most other European countries.
Yes, cycle lanes "giving up" on the approach to junctions is the norm here in the UK. That's usually where I'll jump off my bike and walk it along the pavement (sidewalk) to the other side of the junction before jumping back on again.
One interesting part about the time you rode was the recent rain showing how much effort is put into keeping roads dry compared to how little is done for (some parts) of the bike track.
Multi-use paths in my town are made of gravel! So bad for many reasons: you get horribly dirty any time it rains (as does your bike and drivetrain!), traction, undermining/damage/holes, vegetation growing in it. They're very popular with recreation cyclists and pedestrians, but they're horrible.
In one of our suburbs they have a long, flat, multi-use path along the water and the gravel they used has this fine white powder that works it's way in around your tires and valve stem. We both got slow leaks and had flat tires the next day. I wonder why no one bikes? ;)
I didn't really notice while watching the videos, but were there any bike parking racks? This would make the complete streets even more complete IMO. There was a some lost space in front of the ice cream shop that would have been perfect for that. I kinda hate getting somewhere and have to search for a parking or having the lock my bike on an unsafe object, like a sign.
I'd argue it depends a lot on urban design what makes these work. Perhaps the best example of a multi-use pathway is the Metropolitan Branch Trail in Washington, DC. It acts as a grade-separated bypass to many bike-unfriendly roads and also connects residential and commercial areas, such as restaurants, movie theatres, grocery stores, etc. So not all places have bad multi-use pathways. Oddly enough in that pathway, there are now a lot of breweries that popped up along that route as there is a side benefit to drinking establishments that are transit accessible and people don't have to interact with cars.
Your comment reminds me of the NJB video on Oulu, Finland. Where the trails serve as a fully fledged transport network accross the entire city, with loads of grade-separation from large roads.
The Atlanta Beltline is another excellent multiuse pathway. It gets super crowded, so sport cyclists don't like it, and the east side would probably benefit at this point from some cyclist-pedestrian separation, but it definitely feels very much like a complete street (with lots of trailside, trail-facing businesses as well as dense residential developments), but no cars.
@@slaterpenna2797It's certainly a good component of a cycle network. But it's still a work in progress. Fortunately, there's a lot of community support here.
Totally agree. There can be good uses of multiuse pathways, and perhaps the best part of them is that they are usually completely separate from automobile traffic. But the approach to planning them needs to be different than what we typically see here.
Thanks for the great video. At 13:33 you see a problematic situation that could be planned much safer. Just do not show green lights at the same time for right turning cars and bikes (and pedestrians). Here in Germany we have a lot of accidents when cars just turn right without checking for bikes going straight ahead. I think in the Netherlands they would never plan it this way. Here in Cologne they also started to forbid right turns for cars in several places that were dangerous. Cycling to work I often decide to take the longer but greener way along parcs and on side roads to arrive with a low stress level. If I am not in a hurry pleasure beats time :) Though the cycle track is a save and fast ride I think I would decide for side streets to go to the ice cream shop because I do not like noisy cars next to me.
This is a good point. Both right and left turning vehicles can be a problem in situations like this. I left-turning vehicle almost turned into me yesterday
Often times the shortest way is also not the fastest one, the greener way is often faster since the path is uninterrupted by streets and traffic lights, allowing you to go faster.
Two major collisions have happened like this in recent weeks in British Colombia. In one case the vehicle was filmed turning right on red where explicitly disallowed. I think I'm more scared of getting left-hooked; the close calls I've had were cars trying to make a quick turn against oncoming traffic.
Netherlands here. We always have separated signals for bikes and cars. There is however another 'trick' we use. If the signal is a "round light" it means that other traffic could cross your path (pedestrians or cyclists). If it's just an "arrow light" it means no other traffic will cross your path and you can turn right without checking. We have the traffic rule that the one turning will always have to give way to traffic going straight ahead. This goes for all types of traffic.
That reason is essentially why I consider raised/separated bike lanes so dangerous here in Boston. Cars become less aware of your presence and are more likely to cut you off when turning off the road.
One of the issues with "side streets" is that in many North American cities, the zoning prevents there from being destinations along the side streets. This does not have to be the case. (But proper cycling infra is still better).
Living in Florence (Italy), I have to say that separate and well defined bike lanes are by far the best options; in fact, giving the huge cultural interest of the city, you almost always find tourists occupiyng the entire width of the multiuse pathways having no clue of the fact that they are supposed to share it with bicycles. Just wanted to share my experience commuting in Florence, love your videos, keep it up!
Some people don't see cycling as utility of getting from point A to B. They can't fathom cycling three miles to the grocery store when they can continue to gain weight driving to buy their junk food.
i think a lot of people dont even realize that you can attach lots of big cargo bags to your bike in order to haul lots of groceries and what-not. my mom looked at me crazy when i tried describing panniers to her.
Great video! Really helps paint the picture to those typical responses you see from people that just look at cycling as a recreational hobby. Absolutely those paths are great, we need them, they are pretty and accessible for lots of people. But just look at how much more efficient that separated bike lane for marginal impact to already wide right of ways. Great job Calgary and great video idea.
This largely is similar to my experience in my city EXCEPT that my home town Atlanta, Georgia has a multi-use pathway that effectively is a mainstreet with tons of destinations not a solely recreational path. We have various separated bike trails (the terminology gives away that they're solely aimed at recreation), that are nice and I've even found occasional routes they're useful for in getting to destinations for, but they're mostly like the trail you showed. Very windy, beautiful scenery but not the most practical routes most of the time. However there is one huge exception known as the Atlanta Beltline. This is a multi-use pathway that cuts right through tons of great destinations in the city. It's also an old rail route but one where tons of businesses, homes, and parks lie along it and the eventual goal is to link up the various sections to form a ring around the inner city. It's generally a straight path with only slight inclines/declines, it's pretty wide with well maintained grass on both sides, but then just entrances to places like Ponce City Market, a big shopping/eating area, grocery stores, apartments, townhomes, and other assorted places. And everytime I go on it, the place is PACKED. It actually gets so crowded it's basically impossible to go max speed on a regular, non-ebike most of the time because it's such a popular destination and route. And it is quite easy to get there from our transit system. Trains and buses allow you to take bikes on and there's short bike-friendly routes from multiple train stations onto the Beltline. My only complaint is there could be a better set of connections to downtown from there as there are few separated bike lanes and those that exist stop short at not great places, but it's one of the best examples I've seen in North America of how a LONG (it'll be 33 miles once completed) 100% car free legit street can work. For pure riding pleasantness, the trails with their lower foot traffic levels and natural scenery are the best. But for practical travel and destinations, the Beltline beats the pants off of complete streets. We need complete streets don't get me wrong, most of the city can't be completely car free. But if I'm comparing the complete streets I have encountered (mostly in the Atlanta suburb Decatur that is a very bike friendly city for the US) to the Beltline, it's no competition. Separated bike lanes are great, but having a direct, you can't even see or hear cars 90% of the time, route that is designed to take folks to real destinations? Absolutely unbeatable.
@@Shifter_Cycling What type of bike is that? E bike? What is the fastest speed do you get to? Im trying to decide on if I want a ebike or a normal bike, I have a few hills here and there and want to drive it out far sometimes
The Beltline project sounds fantastic. I often bike on the multi-use pathways near me here in San Francisco. They now exist in several sections of Golden Gate Park. The biggest and most recently created is JFK Drive, which appeared in 2020 - it is an entire car street blocked off and converted to multi-use, and it's become a huge recreational destination as well as a major corridor for east-west travel, and one of the subjects of a political battle to bring back the cars. The Panhandle, east of JFK, continues the corridor, but it's really a bit too narrow for the amount of traffic it's getting. It has two paths, and only one is designated multi-use, but while cycling you have to pass a lot of pedestrians because they'll take either one. All of them are useful to the extent that the park lets you exit to the neighborhoods. So the Panhandle's path is very useful because it's right on the grid and gets you to the commercial corridors, but other sections of the park are blocked off by destinations and won't exit for 10 blocks. This is not really as big an issue as the fact that once you exit, you go straight through busy intersections into painted lanes and a sea of parked cars. The streets need a complete-street redesign to make the network really work for the last mile, and it's become more pressing as pedestrian deaths have risen despite an official "Vision Zero" policy; just this past week, for example, a speeding car exiting the park turned into another car, plowing it into a bus shelter and hospitalizing four pedestrians waiting there.
Yes, I would have scored them very differently. The multi use pathways took roughly a third more time than side streets and you rated them higher for liveability. Those side streets remind me of my hometown and they are quite fine to cycle down, and lead to way more useful places than the multi use pathways. I would never choose the pathways over side streets to get to that ice cream shop. Also, two criteria’s that are subjective basically take anything objective out of it. Pleasure is a weird criteria. This cycle track is useless for commuting, but hey it’s nice! The Sunday drive rating feels out of place on an urban transportation channel. You found driving on the side of a major street inhaling exhaust fumes more pleasurable that a quiet side street? That did not compute with me either. (Although that cycle track is quite Ace and I am jealous.) What would that track need to get a 10? I have a major highway through town with no sidewalks on the side with businesses and no bike lanes. If I got that it would be an 11, not a 9.
It was perfect! I do however think the main road doesn't have much shade and as someone who lives in a hot place it doesn't seem so nice to ride it. But definitely more "fun" looking than the other roads. Awsome video! :)
I absolutely agree getting turned around should count for the time. I’ve had to backtrack when a sidewalk/path just ends into a busy street that is not safe to bike through. Definitely a problem near office parks, almost like the infrastructure is designed to keep non car owners out of the area.
This reminds me about how badly Victoria bungled some of its bike routes. It was obvious to put the cycle tracks right through the commercial "villages" in the city, take people direct to their destinations right? But instead business lobbied to tuck the bikes a block or two away from all the destinations on side streets because bikes should be out of sight tucked away on a residential side street. All in the name of preserving street parking that accounts for like 2% of their customers.
This is NIMBYism at it's worst. Victoria (I'm a resident) is actually comprised of 13 separate municipalities; with 13 distinct town councils, 13 individual mayors, etc. One can easily imagine the bureaucratic nightmare with proposing anything like cycling infrastructure that spans beyond these individual municipal borders. This is also why the federal government forced Victoria into building a sewage treatment facility after years of inaction--all 13 municipalities perpetually refused to house the required treatment plant until one was forced to. Also, how is it that the business owners don't see new commuting infrastructure for bikes as a supplementary vector literally delivering customers to their businesses? Similarly, I despise arriving at a destination, grocery store for example, only to discover the designated bike lock up area is adjacent to, or doubles as the staff/public smoking area.
Montreal built dedicated bike routes on commercial streets. The businesses were against the idea since in would reduce the number of customers able to park. In turns out that their sales sales in general have gone up and new businesses have opened. Another myth erased « bike lanes are bad for business »
What a missed opportunity! Businesses are just beginning to clue in to the hard data that sales actually INCREASE with bike lanes or pedestrians only zones. I am reminded of Bloomberg in NYC to Sadik kahn "In God we trust, everyone else brings data!" Toronto gripedf or years about bike lanes on Bloor or King St but now they love the increased business. Cars not whizzing by or parked out front monopolizing space means slow roll/stroll traffic that notices shops and stops and BUYS!
I loved this comparison. Thank you, Tom. I recently rode through Calgary on my cross Canada tour and used the multi use path network to get out of the city. I was impressed how far the network reached, not only in city centre but well outside of it.
This is usually the channel I recommend to people who want to start cycling more, it's so nice to have this resource I can refer people to that's focused on bikes as transportation. Especially since you're also in Canada, which negates a lot of the "oh cycling isn't a viable alternative to cars here because bla bla bla".
Great test. While you didn't call it out, it's pretty apparent where geography plays a role in the usefulness (livability) of the infrastructure. The bridge, in particular, becomes the only way across the river. I've lived in the Puget Sound area since 1997 and made use of all the various kinds of bicycle infrastructure. I used to live on the west side of the lakes and work on the east side. For nearly 10 years I rode a multitude recreational trails system around the north end of the lake because the bridge didn't have an option. This added 30 miles onto my otherwise 10-ish mile commute one-way. While it was an enjoyable ride, I really wanted a bike lane on the 520 bridge, because it would take me where I was going .
In Minneapolis, the Midtown Greenway was built along a largely grade-separated railroad track. As a cycle route AND a land redevelopment incentive, the Midtown Greenway has been a major success, during a neglected part of the city into a fashionable redeveloped area.
A good tip as a city commuter, use repetitive hand gestures. Ensuring there are vehicles a safe distance away: -To make a left turn, signal with your left arm that you're going left. -To make a right turn, signal with your right arm that you're going right. -To merge point downward and diagonally (still outward from the body) to the lane you'd like to switch to. Proceed when safe, and make repetitive motions with all so everyone knows what you're doing and apply this to all
A separated bike route through a neighbourhood shopping area is a great amenity. It often seems you can get to a shopping street safely by bike, but once there if you want to make several stops you may be dealing with faster through-traffic & parked cars. One thing that struck me was the number of puddles on some of the bike-specific lanes after the rain...I could almost hear Pekka Tahkola saying 'Drainage!'. :-) Those puddles could easily turn to ice several months a year.
Nice video! There is also another item into consideration, that would be the purpose of the ride, like if you´re commuting I guess Cycle tracks would be the best option, but in case your going with a friend or family or kids to the ice cream shop, there’s always the social ride that’s also fun, riding side by side, and the best option in this case would be the pathways.
We have a Bishop Grandin Greenway here in Winnipeg, and it's a gorgeous 2-way seperated mixed-use path that I love taking. The problem, is that i need to bike for 15min on residential side streets, stroads, and cross 8 lanes of stroad (in 15sec) just to get there. It pains me that this is basically one of few "unicorn" paths in Winnipeg. If your stroad is lucky enough to have ANY bike infrastructure, you can bet your ass it's going to be a painted bicycle gutter.
I think for major intersections there should always be bike-accessible over- or under-passes -- like the overpass between Sandstone and Hidden Valley, or the underpass under Stoney connecting Evanston and Hidden Valley. There was a time not too long ago we were burying the underpasses and knocking down the overpasses.
Thanks, Tom! Just got back from a bicycle tour in Friesland, Netherlands to Northern Kentucky. Wow. Where do we start? And - through an initiative of Catholic Social Services, we are collecting/repairing (& teaching repair) and giving/selling bikes to those who can't afford a car. The demand is huge. Can't help but wonder at the idea that action in this sector might drive bicycle infrastructure.
Thank you for the support, and this sounds like a great program. Grassroots initiatives like this are super important to get people on bikes in the first place.
Thanks for the video. Alastair is a good friend of mine, so it was a very pleasant surprise to hear his name when I stumbled upon this video. I sent him a thank you as well. ^_^
My city here in germany has a gigantic mulit use pathway, which makes a nearly continous circle around the whole city, which is actually quite nice. But... If you have to go into the city, you still have to ride on roads, shared with cars. Yes, you can access a lot of the city with it, but unless its directly on route, you always have to leave the protected, well build path and start struggeling again. Just want to say it, your city looks really nice :) the separated bicycle path, with the pedestrian walkway, separated by trees, awesome!! If that is on both sides of the street, I am jealous :D
Great video! They put those same cycle tracks on 24th avenue nw which is a major part of my commute to work at the UofC - and honestly one of the the major reasons I started biking to work.
We have a Greenway to Nowhere (which is a nice ride) but if you want to get to a place you have to ride on sidewalks and/or risk getting ran over on a Strode.
Where i live there are separated cycle paths by the side of most of the main roads. The cycle paths function like there own roads with a footpath at the side and 2 lanes for cycling traffic. Generally, rather than crossing roads you go on under them so there is little interaction with traffic but as they follow main roads, they still go everywhere you want. I think they are great, I can get everywhere I want. However they would be difficult to fit in after everything been built - my town was built with them.
Keep going, I'm learning how to start getting involved in making my city a better place to cycle from you. I'm reading Frostbike too, finally someone gets the challenge of ice and chinooks!
Amazing, thank you! I think every city has its unique winter challenges, and ours is ice and chinooks! Thanks for the support, and good luck in making your city better!
Thanks for identifying these 3 distinct types of bike infrastructure. I'm just getting into urbanism and I was trying to articulate my frustration with most bike infrastructure in New England being relegated to only the multiuse/recreational trails. Still, even these are beneficial because of how dense my area is, but I think the key is integrating these types of bike infrastructure together; as you pointed out, it's annoying to have to adjust going from bike-friendly to bike hostile on your route
Definitely would like to see more of that, for sure. I will also say that I'd like to see more creative use of the multiuse pathways. One of my favorite things on the (relatively short) Katy Trail in Dallas, TX was The tavern that backed up against it (the trail follows the power right of way through an area I'd call midtown in Atlanta's nomenclature). They basically made an "entrance" on the trail and ergo there was an amenity on the trail without even having to navigate the parking lot. That's not easy to do, I realize, but I do think that connections from the recreational trail to the city streets (with bike infrastructure) would greatly enhance the total experience. For example, we (Atlanta) have a "Greenway" that runs along a river and is very much recreational. But it parallels a street that is fully retail. And yet the access is minimal and supported by *no* infrastructure, which I find mind boggling. There's 10 miles of trail, completely away from roads, including crossing, that runs past neighborhoods whose tenants could ride down and shop there. Or get to work in other cases (my office is not far from the trail, but, again, incomplete infrastructure). Atlanta is linking trails in greater numbers now, but an equal focus on navigation, as you say, would be a boon to all.
My dad lives in Bowness and whenever I visit YYC, I either bring my folding Brompton, or I borrow a bike - so I know that multiuse pathway well! The seperated cycle track along Bowness road was an absolute game changer! if only it extended west all the way to Bowness Park, and it took you across Shaganappi and continued down Parkdale Blvd and through kensingtom! - but sadly, you need to switch back to the multiuse just a bit beyond that ice cream shop. Also.. I have to say, particularly as i'm a woman, that multiuse pathway is a bit too isolated in parts at night - and I feel safer with known danger of the giant trucks and busses on the main road, than on the isolated parts of the bow river path.
I will say in bigger cities having separated streets intended for higher bike use and others for car use between high demand areas is certainly good and is part of the reason Dutch biking is so good. ( those "side streets" become bike highways and have more economical connection to destinations than the car routes too over there.)
Thank you for the comparison! I think that it depends on where you need to go, and depends on what is surrounding the route. If you are surrounded by fences, then most options are good.
I use to cycle around my community, and taking transit everywhere outside my community up until I was 27. That’s when I got my drivers license. I would have kept it up, but biking infrastructure and transit here on Long Island, NY, absolutely sucks.
The separated path in Bowness appears to be a better design than the one in Capital Hill along 24th Avenue parallel to Confederation Golf Course. Last week I did see a car parked on the sidewalk / bike path. The bike path and sidewalk are not well separated. In fact the only difference is the colour, one part is black and one part is grey. I do appreciate when bike paths and cycle tracks are properly separated. Thanks Tom for all the great ideas and updates.
The new bike track was a welcome surprise the last time I biked over to that area. I frequently recreationally bike over to that area (coming from downtown it's nice to hop along the path and ride either east or west) so having an option to interact with the community is welcomed.
While you were riding the cycle track I noticed you passed a bus stop. In my commuting experience during morning rush hour in the Denver, Colorado, metro area, the cycle track would have been completely blocked by people standing while they waited for the bus. They would all be looking in my direction as I approached but not a single person would step off the path to let me by. Thereafter, whenever I got to this location I would take to the street so I wouldn’t have to deal with the blocked path.
The best cycle paths are highspeed cyclepaths. I use the F270 daily to go to school or to most places in the city. They are straight, extremely smooth and seperated from cars except for some streets with very little car traffic. But on these streets cyclists always have priority and at junctions cyclists also always have priority except for places that would be dangerous like say a junction next to a rail crossing. These cyclepaths are amazing so if you are ever in the Netherlands i recommend you try some of these out, my absolute favorite is the RijnWaalpad which goes From Nijmegen to Arnhem.
Here in SW Florida we have nothing but main roads or side streets. It sounds like you've got more choices. Also, a run to an ice cream shop doesn't seem like a need for a designated cycle path. Hell, we're just happy not to get run over. Include miles in addition to kilometers for us Yankees.
This is my first comment on YT. So thank you for the video, I'm from Cologne, Germany and probably have a very different experience. I would say it depends on what kind of transport you do. Short distance or long distance. At the moment I'm planning an overnighter from Cologne to Amsterdam in the Netherlands. I also can choose between different routes and all your criteria are relevant. A lot of the trio is along a "bigger" street/road that connects cities. It's probably ahh the rank you would call a highway, but it's not an Autobahn and mostly only one line per direction as is normal over here. There is a separated bikelane along that road, so it probably would best fit your third kind of infrastructure. But it's boring. And loud. And stinky. So I'm partly switching the route away from that road at infrastructure more of the second kind. Along a canal, through fields or through woods. Most of these are part of hope routes and and not single trail or the like. At other places I switch onto less boring side streets with old houses from the middle ages and cure shops. Instead of sticking the big road that over here often avoids the real centre of a town. Same for daily commuting or tasks. I use a lot of parks and side streets over here in Cologne. As they are often less stressful, less noisy and sometimes even more direct. But we have a nice network of parks that are also intended for transport. Even some school routes him through them. As yes, there are kids taking the bike to school. Even as when I was younger it was more usual. I'm actually not sure about the new bike track you got. Yes, going along main streets is something you want to be able to do. And you want those streets either be closed to cars or dedicated bike infrastructure. But over here in Cologne we had those higher level, separated tracks. And we fought a long fight to get them removed and to get a (currently painted) bike line on the street instead. Actually at a lot of big streets now a former Caroline is dedicated to bikes, now. This is done for safety reasons. As if you are away from cars, the drivers don't realise you being there which can cause accidents as the crossings. And there is also an issue with getting doored if the bike line passes parked as closely as yours did. As somebody else said. In Cologne we are not the Netherlands. But we currently have some programs and evaluations about accidents and how to reduce them. Like removing bad left and right turns for cars, putting the bikes beside the cars. Or to confer some network of side streets to bike streets or the like. We still have a long way to go. But we already seem to have a lot more sensible options for biking well enough, and less stupid separation of shops and houses and park and destinations, that my answer over here would be different. My trip to my favoured ice shop is through side streets. Usually on foot. As it's part of my neighbourhood. So the answer is: you just need more infrastructure when there is not "the best" but the one matching your planned activity and it's probably an easy mix of all three types that interconnect with each other. You don't need bike-stroads. Putting bike lanes only at car stroads would lead to that. You want sensible long distance away from car bike-roads with few interceptions and few red lights. But you also want bike-streets, where it's easy to get to destinations. Both could be bike infrastructure alongside car infrastructure but they also could be something different.
At the last route I noticed the bikelane was curved towards the road at the intersections, In the netherlands it would constructed away from the road, less car speed, and so much saver.
Amazing timing. I went on a long ride last night and had this same experience. I wanted a chill ride so I took a long loop, basically a triangle of multi-use paths joined by a cycling route which ended up being a side street with some signs. It was "pleasant" for most of the distance but after 12k I was getting hungry and had to leave the route to ride in traffic to go somewhere with stores and restaurants. The old way of city planning here is to put all the cars on the street with all the restaurants, breweries, cafes and patios and the bikes 1 or 2 streets over where there is nothing to do. In the few places that bike routes are where restaurants and patios are located it's great. Easy to get there and you can chill with a drink without 4 lanes of traffic speeding by.
thanks I'm living in the North of England near the seafront and there are multiple ways to get to certain zones and destinations. our council has just proposed more cycling routes to be made to encourage a greener environment
In my community, we have a fairly comprehensive coverage with painted one-way bike lanes. I have found that I can get where I need in reasonable safety, except when the lane is co-opted for road work signs, tree trimmers and the occasional break down. We have a way to go yet.
"Massage parlours" lol, that tops ice cream, which really raises the issue of a need to use the bike for more important issues than ice cream (or perhaps massage parlours). Like shopping. I'm in Montreal and we have a dedicated dense bike way grid with many of them completely separate from cars and the main ones salted and cleared through winter. Clearly Calgary's municipal politicians are behind the times: no surprise as the city is as car-centric as Los Angeles... albeit on a smaller scale. It's more like Amsterdam here in Montreal at this point and that includes the critical issue of "car driver mentality". Every season more and more separated dedicated bikeways are being built. I honestly almost never have to actually drive on a road with cars near me here. And that's for shopping and essentials, not "ice cream." Cheers.
The comparison is excellent food for thought. I'd enjoy riding all three routes. What I pay most attention to are: 1. Dangerous parts (fast, close traffic) 2. No connections. Bike routes that just end. 3. Confusing or unmarked routes.
Great video! In my city (Budapest, Hungary) I can appreciate that I have separated bike lane from home to work, because it’s along busy roads. You always say in your videos that you don’t like painted bike lanes. I think it depends on how busy the road is. In some areas of the city like suburban streets I think they can be completely fine. For me multi-use pathways are more problematic. Pedestrian always pay less attention than car drivers, often you can’t overtake them safely, they don’t even recognise that they aren’t on a simple sidewalk and sometimes yell on cyclist. A good example is a multi-use pathway in the city along the river Danube (Duna in Hungarian), many tourist are walking in every direction, very narrow in some places, hate to ride there.
This is a really good experiment. I guessed correctly which was the best, so I guess I wasn't surprised by it, but I find that it illustrates really well what the problem is without any drama. That's really important when you're trying to present information to people who aren't convinced by the whole urban cycling thing yet.
Hi Tom, I'm really loving all the videos brother. I also live in calgary, and you have inspired me to take up bike commuting. Hope to catch up with you one day.
The main point in favour of "cycle tracks" is that you can follow the established main transit routes. You don't have to relearn several different routes for a few destinations just because the side street pattern is not always aligned with the main roads. That said, in most European cities and towns, the side streets can be a very "liveable" experience, too, especially in vibrant neighbourhoods. You might just discover the shop or restaurant that no car driver ever will.
Separate bike lanes are definitely the best. Outside of downtown Denver (CO), there aren't very many separate bike lanes. However, the Platt river goes in several directions, so the recreational paths that follow the river have become my most effective of way of running non-downtown errands by bike. Works great for businesses near the river, but others, not so much.
Cycle tracks are a pretty common sight in the denser parts of Copenhagen, Denmark. When I visited a few years ago I was both shocked and impressed with the bike infrastructure. Definitely way ahead of anything we have here in the US
I have similar experiences with the side streets in st. louis that I usually don't take because we have the highest stop sign density in the whole country. deadass that's one of the main reasons why I'll take a freeway over a side street, even in that one in a million situation where the side street is more direct
I typically plan my route to use tertiary roads as much as possible, unless there is a suitable bike path or mup (far too seldom). Generally not much traffic. Usually adds 15 to 20% to the overall distance, but far less stress.
Great video! Although the problem with all of these types of routes, if you live in the US, they are very disjointed, very short and not maintained very well in many places. You’ll be riding along and anything designated for bike or even pedestrians will just end, or become blocked often by cars parking in them, or my favorite, paved over without being redesigned. Even cycle tracks, will have maintenance vehicles parked in them, sometimes on a regular basis.
Another big factor with those shared pathways is that their location can leave them very vulnerable to extreme weather events. Because they're often in low-lying areas adjacent to rivers, if there's a flood, they can end up seriously damaged and inaccessible for much longer than merely the length of time the flood lasted.
the separated bikeway had one major problem you didn't seem to notice: very little space between the bikeway & the parked cars. the opportunities for getting doored & for negative interactions with people at their cars are too high. these kinds of infrastructures are necessary, but they still have to be built with an awareness of all the hazards that are faced.
Great video Tom! Here in Hamilton Ontario, we have a few core city east west and north south protected bike lanes that work for commuting and getting you where you want to go with dedicated signals. There are 'bike routes' through side streets but they have the problems you outlined. Unfortunately, we are killing pedestrians and cyclists at a record rate on the 1950s 5 lane one way dragstrips the call Main and King streets!! The result ispeople are beginning to talk about redesign for safe streets. There are also great rail trails but they are just for recreation. Great rating scale and test design. Thanks to Alistair too!
On the topic of wheter to have cycle track on both sides, I think I like having track on one side but in both directions. What happens otherwise (at least around here) is that both are too narrow and you can't pass safely (maybe we shouldnt?) And you cant fit a bike trailer through. Around here we have a protected contra-flow bike lane that is 2 bike widths wide and a striped-yellow-line, so it's easy to fit a trailer through and if nobody is using the other direction you can use it to pass. I think that's my favorite kind of bike lane.
An annoyance with the side-street approach is that a lot of communities discourage use of their side streets as alternatives to the main route during rush hour by interrupting the continuity of the parallel side streets every few blocks.
I would measure 2 more metrics I find very important. The Danger Factor. Along each route there are dangerous and safe portions. Use a map to add up the % distance on unprotected high speed or congested areas that you feel are dangerous. Secondly, the Number of Traffic Lights. I hate sitting at badly timed lights in my city. So I will choose my route to avoid them and save wasted time.
Multi use pathways are the best by far if they take you towards your destination, sure you need bike lanes to feed into them from main roads but there's no comparison when it comes to enjoyability and safety imo. I'm lucky that I live a couple blocks from my city's main trail and it takes you through both area downtowns, a couple of the smaller entertainment districts, one of the areas bigger shopping districts and Michigan State's campus. It obviously isn't possible to have off-grade trails everywhere but I think anywhere you have an available right-of-way cutting through a city be it a river or stream, a drain, a power line or a railway; you should take that opportunity to put in a pathway.
In my city, Christchurch NZ, the separated cycleways tend to go down back streets which is good for quiet, less cars, access to schools, but bad for access to shops, businesses, other destinations. The main road has painted bike lanes on a 60kmph road so not very safe but it takes you past places you wanna go and is more direct. So it more depends on the route than the type of infrastructure imo. The direct route to destinations will always be the most convenient, but not necessarily the safest or most pleasant.
Hi Tom that's a great sounding bicycle bell. I've been trying to find a quality bell. Yours is really crisp tone almost musical instrument quality. That translates to bike use in that it resonates further. Nice in noisy urban traffic. But finding one whew, not as easy as you might think! Do you have name of manufacturer please? 🛎
Agreed with your points, this is similar in Denver. Side streets are lovely until you need to cross an obstacle like a river, highway, or railroad with limited bridges, then you have to switch to an unpleasant/unsafe busy street to cross it and maybe awkwardly ride the sidewalk. They can involve lots of zig zagging and turns which lengthen the route, make it less convenient and easy to screw up a turn. Trails are typically recreation focused, and only sometimes work well as transportation routes by accident. Safe protected bike lanes with safe intersections on traffic-heavy major through streets with destinations must be the key backbone of the system. Side streets ARE still important to fill in the gaps between those backbones, provide short-distance neighborhood routes, and also provide a secondary option for anyone who doesn't want to be on the street with lots of cars. To make the side streets safe/comfortable they need frequent modal filters to keep out car through traffic, and they should have easy connections to protected infrastructure to get across bridges. My city calls these neighborhood bikeways, and so far they are doing a poor job designing them because they won't install enough (if any) modal filters, and they are trying to use some of them as a zig zaggy replacement for protected bike lanes rather than a complement, because they are too cowardly to remove parking on through streets. BOTH are needed. Parks and recreational trails should be taken advantage of as much as possible to double as transportation routes and links.
The Toronto area is chopped into isolated islands by highways and railways. Our Ministry of Transportation absolutely refuses to build safe crossings. Near me there is a railway bridge over a road that is the only through route, with bike tracks on both sides of the bridge. The teeny tiny problem is that the entire space under the bidge is used by road pavement, from pier to pier. You can't even cycle in the gutter because your shoulder would be hitting concrete on the sides!
Loved the video, the progress in bike routes and the concept of complete streets! Small point of feedback: Please do point out where even these "bike tracks" are falling short, so politicians looking at this are also aware. I.e. Having bike go up and down at every (small) crossing, instead of having the crossing cars go up and down is a minus point. I also get that some streets have width limitations, but the cycling path is just a little too narrow to let cyclists past, which stresses out slower cyclists, especially in this age of e-bikes. Pluspoints for the space between the cars and the bike path though!
Boy you are a lucky to live in such a nice city with multiple choices for routes. I have visited Calgaray a few times but only in the winter to go skiing. I was always impressed with the bike lanes and parks downtown. Saut Ste Marie is making progress with a city circling multi use trail and some painted bike lanes. They have only done traffic calming on one street so far but it's come a long way from nothing. Hmmm... three trips to the ice cream shop and one trip to the cannabis shop. Nice choice of routes!!!
@@Shifter_Cycling Yup it's still the Soo. Nothing much changes here except for the increasing number of potholes. Unfortunately both the Soo and Timmins ont, have the lowest population density to number of streets in North America so it's really spread out and although we are relatively small
Side Routes: One method that I see used is to be putting up a barrier gate that can only be unlocked by emergency vehicles. Bicycles and Pedestrians can still go around the barrier and prevents cars from using it as a shortcut for car traffic. Multi-use pathways. The main multi-use pathway in my area is mainly Pedestrian driven. There is no bicycle infrastructure at the trailheads for it, they even put up signage saying that bicycles yield to pedestrians. There are also numerous areas where they don't drop down the curb for roadway crossings. Agreed on nothing to do, I can't use the playgrounds put on the pathway. I've shyed away from using my main one because it isn't equipped for bicycles and their speed. Navigations, both of these methods screw up navigations so you are right on that front. But this isn't usually a problem if you know how to navigation it without the use of a navigation device. Separated bicycle lanes: Don't have experience with it yet. Okay well one time but that was a special case when I was over 10 miles away from home and was only on it for like 500 feet. At least the navigation seemed to handle this one really well.
If you'd like to see a map of the different routes, I cobbled together a quick one here: www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1qvAO1pu0SEjgWOcAkG62DVqTJxpoRCk&usp=sharing
What app are you using here on the phone and what did you do for the route? :D
Hey! Glad you did this. Happy I could help out in my own small way 😌
Thank you. The map geek in me has been appeased, lol.
Side routes are great until you need to cross a major road or a freeway or a tollway and then it's ridiculous
Side routes are great until you live in a city that is only culs du sac and the only through routes are on the major roads
@@russellgeisthardt9828 This reminds me of NJB talking about Riverdale in Toronto having inflated prices because of walkability, transit, etc. I'm eying the Blatchford development in Edmonton because of these things, but a 40 acre development doesn't make up for an entire city being trash. Everyone is gonna try to cram into it.
In my town the bike routes have tunnels underneath intersections. Annoying to go up them but it's better than the alternative 😂
@@thekevmeister77 There are a couple "trails" that have a concrete path under a bridge or over a road but not nearly enough to be truly useful getting from home to work easily on them
Side routes are also great until no they're not dear god
Agreed on the Multi-use Pathways or "trails", they are great until you want to go somewhere and there isn't an exit to where you need to go.
We have some arterial multi-use paths here in DC. Great to be away from cars, but honestly kind of dangerous for pedestrians. On the other hand, I used one of our cycle tracks yesterday and encountered not one but two cars that had managed to wedge their way in between the barriers. One actually drove on the track for a good 25-50 feet before turning back in to the street.
The real problem with side streets is that they're always the last to be repaved, and I'm admittedly more ruthless than many cyclist, but I'll happily share the road with cars to keep the blisters off my keister.
For my money, I'll take freshly paved streets with a few hundred more "sharrows" and "Cyclist may use whole lane" signage over pretty much any other cycling infrastructure. That and some traffic calming measures + reduced speed limits would make me a very happy bike commuter.
@@willkoper
If you're young, strong and an aggressive rider, there are advantages to sharrows.
The problem with sharrows is that any lane which is for both cars and bicycles is a lane for cars. Bikes take their chances.
If you're trying to encourage people to start riding bikes, sharrows are the worst. The people who would ride there are the ones who already ride.
If you want to bring in people who don't like the roads because they feel dangerous, you need routes that don't mix bicycles with 3 ton juggernauts busty updating their Facebook status.
Every major road should have a dedicated bike track on each side of it.
Go another step farther: every major road should be dedicated to bikes and transit. Car drivers should have to use the "side streets" since they are the ones that endanger everyone else.
@@WolfSeril107 FYI, you have your terminology backwards! "Roads" are actually point-to-point passages (think highways) which are supposed to have a few turn-off points, and those turn-off points become "streets", which are places with buildings on each side, such as businesses, homes, etc. So vehicles should really be delegated to roads, so streets (which is where most people congregate, walk, and cycle) can exist in those spaces safely. This is also where the term "stroad" comes from - a weird combination of a road and a street, which just ends up being a horrible experience for every mode of transport. Vehicles have to constantly stop to wait for people turning into business parks, pedestrians usually have little or no sidewalk infrastructure, and people on bikes usually don't have anything but painted bike gutters.
Delivery vehicles should be exceptions, of course.
I don't think I agree with that. In my town these are almost everywhere and it makes for a unpleasant trip. Instead traffic should be calmed around points of interest. Nobody wants to sit and drink a coffee on the side of the street.
There should be a network of multi use pathways wich connects points of interest creating spaces where people actually want to spend time.
@@Lennard222 how is it unpleasant?
12:20 Another point is the multi-use pathways allow cities to disingenuously claim they have bike infrastructure even when they have very little catering to commuters or ppl cycling for transportation rather than recreation. They can still proudly claim they have X km of bike infrastructure.
My Town is a prime example of this. Claims we have tonnes of km of bike infrastructure. Reality is that we have 3x painted bike gutters which all run east/west only and not a single one of them connects to another. And none of them go to grocery stores or other useful locations.
My city did this originally. Paved some multi-use paths on unusable land under the elevated metro and put up a bunch of green "bikeway" signs on the most out of the way neighborhood streets. Looked great on paper but that was about it. Over time more painted routes have been added, bike controlled traffic lights, a few separated lanes. It's getting better but slowly, and it's still the same story for the new routes downtown. The streets with least amount to do have the bike lanes, the streets with shopping don't.
And politicians claim they ‘cycle and understand cyclists’ - but in reality they use these recreational paths once or twice a year, and that’s it.
That's my town in a gist. It's getting better, but the nearby park is filled with bike lanes that take you nowhere. Fun to ride but literally just for leisure.
My city put one in a couple of years ago. Kind of pleasant if no one's walking on it. It's kind of a little taste of Netherlands. It might be pleasant for a nice little walk, but you can leisurely cycle from one end of it to the other in 2 minutes. And it's not even a help because it runs parallel to one of the quietest streets in the downtown area, a street I have never felt unsafe biking on.
They are all great. In my area voters established an agency for building trails and funded it with a sales tax. While the first several trails were multi-use paths that were mainly recreational. More and more are being built as “cycle tracks” that will connect actual destination and also integrate with our existing transit system.
That’s sort of what I would expect, too, for any city that’s responsive to its citizens or whose citizens are active in pointing the direction they want their city to go in. It seems logical when first being able to justify those multi-use paths that you’d build recreational ones that are away from roads and busy areas - that seems intuitive to me. But as you actually do that, I think it would be pretty common that more people would use them and after more people start using them, it’s going to start to become more obvious what their shortcomings are and how practical cycling can be as more of a utilitarian activity rather than recreational or sport activity.
In essence, to me it seems like the recreational paths are where most “beginners” would start, but they would soon learn what they didn’t know that they didn’t know because they opened the door to something no one else really knew either before the door was opened.
Wait where is this
The cycle track is great, but missing two things. One, bike-priority traffic signals. Two, the path dips down to street level at intersections, while the better design would be for the street to raise up to meet the cycle track level. The reason being that raising the road level forces cars to slow down (increasing safety), and also signals to cars that they are not the priority. That in turn makes it easier for people to justify getting onto a bike instead of into their car- if bikes are the priority in a community, people are far more likely to use them than if they are shoehorned in alongside cars and still defer to cars at intersections.
I was going to say this exact thing! It is great design that the bike lane is raised above street level, something they seem to never manage here in Australia, but they need to stay raised when crossing streets. Particular T-intersections where cars should be travelling more slowly and generally don't have right of way!
I think raised crosswalks are the wave of the future! New York City is putting them in.
Absolutely, those things would help. As a Calgarian though, I'm just impressed that there is any investment at all into this sort of infrastructure. Calgary is essentially the gasoline capital of Canada so it has always had car-first policies. It is also situated in the great plains, so a lot of early city development was 'wide' so there was no emphasis on building the city tall and making it commuter friendly. Not to mention the deeply embedded mindset here that it is too cold in the winter to cycle.
There is still a long ways to go but I see far more cyclists now than I did five years ago.
Particularly with the parking next to the cycle lane - I'm always worried about getting right-hooked by a car trying to make a quick turn with that setup
The thing I don't like about bike tracks and side streets is the government subsidized parking on the road. I have had to do many an emergency stop when people get out of their cars. They might tend to look more on the driver's side, but passenger side egress will not be so observant. Not many driveways at least. A lot of bike accidents are on sidewalks where the cyclist feels 'safe' and motorists don't look or don't notice the bicycle. They turn intro an offstreet parking lot crossing the sidewalk. All I can advise is make yourself as visible as possible with lights and bright colored clothing. Be very aware of hazards.
The interesting thing about the bikelanes in the last route is that near intersections it's sending you towards the cars. In the Netherlands the exact opposite happens, you might be cycling on the road, but near intersections you will be separated from car traffic. I wonder why the engineers chose to direct the cyclists "into" traffic.
That said, that last route looks fantastic, it's not at the level of the Netherlands, but probably better than most other European countries.
Yes, we have a lot to learn about safe intersections. Thanks for sharing this insight.
Yes, cycle lanes "giving up" on the approach to junctions is the norm here in the UK. That's usually where I'll jump off my bike and walk it along the pavement (sidewalk) to the other side of the junction before jumping back on again.
One interesting part about the time you rode was the recent rain showing how much effort is put into keeping roads dry compared to how little is done for (some parts) of the bike track.
Asphalt paving is a disaster and almost immediately starts unevenly sinking, creating puddles, and pot holes.
Multi-use paths in my town are made of gravel! So bad for many reasons: you get horribly dirty any time it rains (as does your bike and drivetrain!), traction, undermining/damage/holes, vegetation growing in it. They're very popular with recreation cyclists and pedestrians, but they're horrible.
There are also parts of the mutli-use pathway network that are like that in Calgary so don't feel too bad.
In one of our suburbs they have a long, flat, multi-use path along the water and the gravel they used has this fine white powder that works it's way in around your tires and valve stem. We both got slow leaks and had flat tires the next day. I wonder why no one bikes? ;)
@@fallenshallrise Thanks for pointing this out, I'll make sure to keep an eye for that. Which city are you referring to, if you don't mind?
Sounds like a great big middle finger to people in wheelchairs as well.
Canada: "There's different types of bicycle infrastructure."
Me in Florida: "You guys have infrastructure!?"
Florida could get it done if the project was spearheaded as a multi use path for golf carts that bicyclists can also use.
I didn't really notice while watching the videos, but were there any bike parking racks? This would make the complete streets even more complete IMO. There was a some lost space in front of the ice cream shop that would have been perfect for that. I kinda hate getting somewhere and have to search for a parking or having the lock my bike on an unsafe object, like a sign.
Bike racks? But where will we put the car parking????
I'd argue it depends a lot on urban design what makes these work. Perhaps the best example of a multi-use pathway is the Metropolitan Branch Trail in Washington, DC. It acts as a grade-separated bypass to many bike-unfriendly roads and also connects residential and commercial areas, such as restaurants, movie theatres, grocery stores, etc. So not all places have bad multi-use pathways. Oddly enough in that pathway, there are now a lot of breweries that popped up along that route as there is a side benefit to drinking establishments that are transit accessible and people don't have to interact with cars.
Your comment reminds me of the NJB video on Oulu, Finland. Where the trails serve as a fully fledged transport network accross the entire city, with loads of grade-separation from large roads.
The Atlanta Beltline is another excellent multiuse pathway. It gets super crowded, so sport cyclists don't like it, and the east side would probably benefit at this point from some cyclist-pedestrian separation, but it definitely feels very much like a complete street (with lots of trailside, trail-facing businesses as well as dense residential developments), but no cars.
@@slaterpenna2797It's certainly a good component of a cycle network. But it's still a work in progress. Fortunately, there's a lot of community support here.
Totally agree. There can be good uses of multiuse pathways, and perhaps the best part of them is that they are usually completely separate from automobile traffic. But the approach to planning them needs to be different than what we typically see here.
Thanks for the great video. At 13:33 you see a problematic situation that could be planned much safer. Just do not show green lights at the same time for right turning cars and bikes (and pedestrians). Here in Germany we have a lot of accidents when cars just turn right without checking for bikes going straight ahead. I think in the Netherlands they would never plan it this way. Here in Cologne they also started to forbid right turns for cars in several places that were dangerous.
Cycling to work I often decide to take the longer but greener way along parcs and on side roads to arrive with a low stress level. If I am not in a hurry pleasure beats time :) Though the cycle track is a save and fast ride I think I would decide for side streets to go to the ice cream shop because I do not like noisy cars next to me.
This is a good point. Both right and left turning vehicles can be a problem in situations like this. I left-turning vehicle almost turned into me yesterday
Often times the shortest way is also not the fastest one, the greener way is often faster since the path is uninterrupted by streets and traffic lights, allowing you to go faster.
Two major collisions have happened like this in recent weeks in British Colombia. In one case the vehicle was filmed turning right on red where explicitly disallowed.
I think I'm more scared of getting left-hooked; the close calls I've had were cars trying to make a quick turn against oncoming traffic.
Netherlands here. We always have separated signals for bikes and cars.
There is however another 'trick' we use. If the signal is a "round light" it means that other traffic could cross your path (pedestrians or cyclists).
If it's just an "arrow light" it means no other traffic will cross your path and you can turn right without checking.
We have the traffic rule that the one turning will always have to give way to traffic going straight ahead. This goes for all types of traffic.
That reason is essentially why I consider raised/separated bike lanes so dangerous here in Boston. Cars become less aware of your presence and are more likely to cut you off when turning off the road.
One of the issues with "side streets" is that in many North American cities, the zoning prevents there from being destinations along the side streets.
This does not have to be the case. (But proper cycling infra is still better).
This is a great point. It's actually illegal to put things on many of these roads that people might actually want to ride a bike to.
@@Shifter_Cycling Of course! You don't want to have traffic or worse THOSE PEOPLE walking in front of your house!!!!!
Living in Florence (Italy), I have to say that separate and well defined bike lanes are by far the best options; in fact, giving the huge cultural interest of the city, you almost always find tourists occupiyng the entire width of the multiuse pathways having no clue of the fact that they are supposed to share it with bicycles. Just wanted to share my experience commuting in Florence, love your videos, keep it up!
Some people don't see cycling as utility of getting from point A to B. They can't fathom cycling three miles to the grocery store when they can continue to gain weight driving to buy their junk food.
i think a lot of people dont even realize that you can attach lots of big cargo bags to your bike in order to haul lots of groceries and what-not. my mom looked at me crazy when i tried describing panniers to her.
Great video! Really helps paint the picture to those typical responses you see from people that just look at cycling as a recreational hobby. Absolutely those paths are great, we need them, they are pretty and accessible for lots of people. But just look at how much more efficient that separated bike lane for marginal impact to already wide right of ways. Great job Calgary and great video idea.
Thanks Kevin. I think it's so helpful for people to see these routes rather than just talk about them.
This largely is similar to my experience in my city EXCEPT that my home town Atlanta, Georgia has a multi-use pathway that effectively is a mainstreet with tons of destinations not a solely recreational path.
We have various separated bike trails (the terminology gives away that they're solely aimed at recreation), that are nice and I've even found occasional routes they're useful for in getting to destinations for, but they're mostly like the trail you showed. Very windy, beautiful scenery but not the most practical routes most of the time. However there is one huge exception known as the Atlanta Beltline. This is a multi-use pathway that cuts right through tons of great destinations in the city. It's also an old rail route but one where tons of businesses, homes, and parks lie along it and the eventual goal is to link up the various sections to form a ring around the inner city. It's generally a straight path with only slight inclines/declines, it's pretty wide with well maintained grass on both sides, but then just entrances to places like Ponce City Market, a big shopping/eating area, grocery stores, apartments, townhomes, and other assorted places. And everytime I go on it, the place is PACKED. It actually gets so crowded it's basically impossible to go max speed on a regular, non-ebike most of the time because it's such a popular destination and route. And it is quite easy to get there from our transit system. Trains and buses allow you to take bikes on and there's short bike-friendly routes from multiple train stations onto the Beltline. My only complaint is there could be a better set of connections to downtown from there as there are few separated bike lanes and those that exist stop short at not great places, but it's one of the best examples I've seen in North America of how a LONG (it'll be 33 miles once completed) 100% car free legit street can work.
For pure riding pleasantness, the trails with their lower foot traffic levels and natural scenery are the best. But for practical travel and destinations, the Beltline beats the pants off of complete streets. We need complete streets don't get me wrong, most of the city can't be completely car free. But if I'm comparing the complete streets I have encountered (mostly in the Atlanta suburb Decatur that is a very bike friendly city for the US) to the Beltline, it's no competition. Separated bike lanes are great, but having a direct, you can't even see or hear cars 90% of the time, route that is designed to take folks to real destinations? Absolutely unbeatable.
This sounds really interesting. Thanks for sharing what's happening in Atlanta.
@@Shifter_Cycling What type of bike is that? E bike? What is the fastest speed do you get to? Im trying to decide on if I want a ebike or a normal bike, I have a few hills here and there and want to drive it out far sometimes
The Beltline project sounds fantastic. I often bike on the multi-use pathways near me here in San Francisco. They now exist in several sections of Golden Gate Park. The biggest and most recently created is JFK Drive, which appeared in 2020 - it is an entire car street blocked off and converted to multi-use, and it's become a huge recreational destination as well as a major corridor for east-west travel, and one of the subjects of a political battle to bring back the cars. The Panhandle, east of JFK, continues the corridor, but it's really a bit too narrow for the amount of traffic it's getting. It has two paths, and only one is designated multi-use, but while cycling you have to pass a lot of pedestrians because they'll take either one.
All of them are useful to the extent that the park lets you exit to the neighborhoods. So the Panhandle's path is very useful because it's right on the grid and gets you to the commercial corridors, but other sections of the park are blocked off by destinations and won't exit for 10 blocks. This is not really as big an issue as the fact that once you exit, you go straight through busy intersections into painted lanes and a sea of parked cars. The streets need a complete-street redesign to make the network really work for the last mile, and it's become more pressing as pedestrian deaths have risen despite an official "Vision Zero" policy; just this past week, for example, a speeding car exiting the park turned into another car, plowing it into a bus shelter and hospitalizing four pedestrians waiting there.
The belt line is such a interesting study, I hope they add more housing along the belt line facing towards the path.
Starting to think I should get tf out of Americus then 👀
What do you think about the way I ranked these routes? Would you have scored them differently?
Yes, I would have scored them very differently. The multi use pathways took roughly a third more time than side streets and you rated them higher for liveability. Those side streets remind me of my hometown and they are quite fine to cycle down, and lead to way more useful places than the multi use pathways. I would never choose the pathways over side streets to get to that ice cream shop.
Also, two criteria’s that are subjective basically take anything objective out of it. Pleasure is a weird criteria. This cycle track is useless for commuting, but hey it’s nice! The Sunday drive rating feels out of place on an urban transportation channel.
You found driving on the side of a major street inhaling exhaust fumes more pleasurable that a quiet side street? That did not compute with me either. (Although that cycle track is quite Ace and I am jealous.) What would that track need to get a 10? I have a major highway through town with no sidewalks on the side with businesses and no bike lanes. If I got that it would be an 11, not a 9.
It was perfect! I do however think the main road doesn't have much shade and as someone who lives in a hot place it doesn't seem so nice to ride it. But definitely more "fun" looking than the other roads. Awsome video! :)
I absolutely agree getting turned around should count for the time. I’ve had to backtrack when a sidewalk/path just ends into a busy street that is not safe to bike through. Definitely a problem near office parks, almost like the infrastructure is designed to keep non car owners out of the area.
They have lined it well in places with trees, once they grow it'll be better
What phone app were you using? Looked like it was providing directions as well as duration and speed
This reminds me about how badly Victoria bungled some of its bike routes. It was obvious to put the cycle tracks right through the commercial "villages" in the city, take people direct to their destinations right? But instead business lobbied to tuck the bikes a block or two away from all the destinations on side streets because bikes should be out of sight tucked away on a residential side street. All in the name of preserving street parking that accounts for like 2% of their customers.
This is NIMBYism at it's worst. Victoria (I'm a resident) is actually comprised of 13 separate municipalities; with 13 distinct town councils, 13 individual mayors, etc. One can easily imagine the bureaucratic nightmare with proposing anything like cycling infrastructure that spans beyond these individual municipal borders. This is also why the federal government forced Victoria into building a sewage treatment facility after years of inaction--all 13 municipalities perpetually refused to house the required treatment plant until one was forced to.
Also, how is it that the business owners don't see new commuting infrastructure for bikes as a supplementary vector literally delivering customers to their businesses?
Similarly, I despise arriving at a destination, grocery store for example, only to discover the designated bike lock up area is adjacent to, or doubles as the staff/public smoking area.
Montreal built dedicated bike routes on commercial streets. The businesses were against the idea since in would reduce the number of customers able to park. In turns out that their sales sales in general have gone up and new businesses have opened. Another myth erased « bike lanes are bad for business »
What a missed opportunity! Businesses are just beginning to clue in to the hard data that sales actually INCREASE with bike lanes or pedestrians only zones. I am reminded of Bloomberg in NYC to Sadik kahn "In God we trust, everyone else brings data!" Toronto gripedf or years about bike lanes on Bloor or King St but now they love the increased business. Cars not whizzing by or parked out front monopolizing space means slow roll/stroll traffic that notices shops and stops and BUYS!
I was hoping to see you eating ice cream during the summary sequence, that would have been the cherry on top 😂, thanks for the great video.
I loved this comparison. Thank you, Tom. I recently rode through Calgary on my cross Canada tour and used the multi use path network to get out of the city. I was impressed how far the network reached, not only in city centre but well outside of it.
Good on you helping out that person who dropped their phone!
Special thanks to Alister for his input and inspiration for this video!
I agree wholeheartedly!
This is usually the channel I recommend to people who want to start cycling more, it's so nice to have this resource I can refer people to that's focused on bikes as transportation. Especially since you're also in Canada, which negates a lot of the "oh cycling isn't a viable alternative to cars here because bla bla bla".
Amazing, thank you Buzz!
Great test. While you didn't call it out, it's pretty apparent where geography plays a role in the usefulness (livability) of the infrastructure. The bridge, in particular, becomes the only way across the river.
I've lived in the Puget Sound area since 1997 and made use of all the various kinds of bicycle infrastructure. I used to live on the west side of the lakes and work on the east side. For nearly 10 years I rode a multitude recreational trails system around the north end of the lake because the bridge didn't have an option. This added 30 miles onto my otherwise 10-ish mile commute one-way. While it was an enjoyable ride, I really wanted a bike lane on the 520 bridge, because it would take me where I was going .
In Minneapolis, the Midtown Greenway was built along a largely grade-separated railroad track. As a cycle route AND a land redevelopment incentive, the Midtown Greenway has been a major success, during a neglected part of the city into a fashionable redeveloped area.
Lovely to see happy mums and kids riding together. It’s Kidical Mass in Exeter, U.K. today, it’s great fun
A good tip as a city commuter, use repetitive hand gestures. Ensuring there are vehicles a safe distance away:
-To make a left turn, signal with your left arm that you're going left.
-To make a right turn, signal with your right arm that you're going right.
-To merge point downward and diagonally (still outward from the body) to the lane you'd like to switch to.
Proceed when safe, and make repetitive motions with all so everyone knows what you're doing and apply this to all
A separated bike route through a neighbourhood shopping area is a great amenity. It often seems you can get to a shopping street safely by bike, but once there if you want to make several stops you may be dealing with faster through-traffic & parked cars.
One thing that struck me was the number of puddles on some of the bike-specific lanes after the rain...I could almost hear Pekka Tahkola saying 'Drainage!'. :-) Those puddles could easily turn to ice several months a year.
Also puddles have a nasty habit of hiding potholes.
There are so many awesome little restaurants in that part of the city, I'm so glad they made it more accessible
Nice video! There is also another item into consideration, that would be the purpose of the ride, like if you´re commuting I guess Cycle tracks would be the best option, but in case your going with a friend or family or kids to the ice cream shop, there’s always the social ride that’s also fun, riding side by side, and the best option in this case would be the pathways.
We have a Bishop Grandin Greenway here in Winnipeg, and it's a gorgeous 2-way seperated mixed-use path that I love taking. The problem, is that i need to bike for 15min on residential side streets, stroads, and cross 8 lanes of stroad (in 15sec) just to get there. It pains me that this is basically one of few "unicorn" paths in Winnipeg. If your stroad is lucky enough to have ANY bike infrastructure, you can bet your ass it's going to be a painted bicycle gutter.
Your local urban planners are brilliant
I think for major intersections there should always be bike-accessible over- or under-passes -- like the overpass between Sandstone and Hidden Valley, or the underpass under Stoney connecting Evanston and Hidden Valley. There was a time not too long ago we were burying the underpasses and knocking down the overpasses.
Thanks, Tom! Just got back from a bicycle tour in Friesland, Netherlands to Northern Kentucky. Wow. Where do we start? And - through an initiative of Catholic Social Services, we are collecting/repairing (& teaching repair) and giving/selling bikes to those who can't afford a car. The demand is huge. Can't help but wonder at the idea that action in this sector might drive bicycle infrastructure.
Thank you for the support, and this sounds like a great program. Grassroots initiatives like this are super important to get people on bikes in the first place.
Thanks for the video. Alastair is a good friend of mine, so it was a very pleasant surprise to hear his name when I stumbled upon this video. I sent him a thank you as well. ^_^
My city here in germany has a gigantic mulit use pathway, which makes a nearly continous circle around the whole city, which is actually quite nice.
But... If you have to go into the city, you still have to ride on roads, shared with cars. Yes, you can access a lot of the city with it, but unless its directly on route, you always have to leave the protected, well build path and start struggeling again.
Just want to say it, your city looks really nice :) the separated bicycle path, with the pedestrian walkway, separated by trees, awesome!! If that is on both sides of the street, I am jealous :D
Great video! They put those same cycle tracks on 24th avenue nw which is a major part of my commute to work at the UofC - and honestly one of the the major reasons I started biking to work.
We have a Greenway to Nowhere (which is a nice ride) but if you want to get to a place you have to ride on sidewalks and/or risk getting ran over on a Strode.
This could only a dream on my country, without any goog infrastructure even for the cars. 🇬🇹 Great content. 🖖
Where i live there are separated cycle paths by the side of most of the main roads. The cycle paths function like there own roads with a footpath at the side and 2 lanes for cycling traffic. Generally, rather than crossing roads you go on under them so there is little interaction with traffic but as they follow main roads, they still go everywhere you want. I think they are great, I can get everywhere I want. However they would be difficult to fit in after everything been built - my town was built with them.
Keep going, I'm learning how to start getting involved in making my city a better place to cycle from you. I'm reading Frostbike too, finally someone gets the challenge of ice and chinooks!
Amazing, thank you! I think every city has its unique winter challenges, and ours is ice and chinooks! Thanks for the support, and good luck in making your city better!
great simple way to explain bike commuting.
Thanks so much for the support. I really appreciate it!
Thanks for identifying these 3 distinct types of bike infrastructure. I'm just getting into urbanism and I was trying to articulate my frustration with most bike infrastructure in New England being relegated to only the multiuse/recreational trails. Still, even these are beneficial because of how dense my area is, but I think the key is integrating these types of bike infrastructure together; as you pointed out, it's annoying to have to adjust going from bike-friendly to bike hostile on your route
Definitely would like to see more of that, for sure.
I will also say that I'd like to see more creative use of the multiuse pathways. One of my favorite things on the (relatively short) Katy Trail in Dallas, TX was The tavern that backed up against it (the trail follows the power right of way through an area I'd call midtown in Atlanta's nomenclature). They basically made an "entrance" on the trail and ergo there was an amenity on the trail without even having to navigate the parking lot. That's not easy to do, I realize, but I do think that connections from the recreational trail to the city streets (with bike infrastructure) would greatly enhance the total experience. For example, we (Atlanta) have a "Greenway" that runs along a river and is very much recreational. But it parallels a street that is fully retail. And yet the access is minimal and supported by *no* infrastructure, which I find mind boggling. There's 10 miles of trail, completely away from roads, including crossing, that runs past neighborhoods whose tenants could ride down and shop there. Or get to work in other cases (my office is not far from the trail, but, again, incomplete infrastructure). Atlanta is linking trails in greater numbers now, but an equal focus on navigation, as you say, would be a boon to all.
My dad lives in Bowness and whenever I visit YYC, I either bring my folding Brompton, or I borrow a bike - so I know that multiuse pathway well! The seperated cycle track along Bowness road was an absolute game changer! if only it extended west all the way to Bowness Park, and it took you across Shaganappi and continued down Parkdale Blvd and through kensingtom! - but sadly, you need to switch back to the multiuse just a bit beyond that ice cream shop. Also.. I have to say, particularly as i'm a woman, that multiuse pathway is a bit too isolated in parts at night - and I feel safer with known danger of the giant trucks and busses on the main road, than on the isolated parts of the bow river path.
I will say in bigger cities having separated streets intended for higher bike use and others for car use between high demand areas is certainly good and is part of the reason Dutch biking is so good. ( those "side streets" become bike highways and have more economical connection to destinations than the car routes too over there.)
If you ate three ice cream cones I'd suggest a few extra kilometres.
Thank you for the comparison!
I think that it depends on where you need to go, and depends on what is surrounding the route. If you are surrounded by fences, then most options are good.
I use to cycle around my community, and taking transit everywhere outside my community up until I was 27. That’s when I got my drivers license. I would have kept it up, but biking infrastructure and transit here on Long Island, NY, absolutely sucks.
The separated path in Bowness appears to be a better design than the one in Capital Hill along 24th Avenue parallel to Confederation Golf Course. Last week I did see a car parked on the sidewalk / bike path. The bike path and sidewalk are not well separated. In fact the only difference is the colour, one part is black and one part is grey. I do appreciate when bike paths and cycle tracks are properly separated. Thanks Tom for all the great ideas and updates.
The new bike track was a welcome surprise the last time I biked over to that area. I frequently recreationally bike over to that area (coming from downtown it's nice to hop along the path and ride either east or west) so having an option to interact with the community is welcomed.
While you were riding the cycle track I noticed you passed a bus stop. In my commuting experience during morning rush hour in the Denver, Colorado, metro area, the cycle track would have been completely blocked by people standing while they waited for the bus. They would all be looking in my direction as I approached but not a single person would step off the path to let me by. Thereafter, whenever I got to this location I would take to the street so I wouldn’t have to deal with the blocked path.
The best cycle paths are highspeed cyclepaths. I use the F270 daily to go to school or to most places in the city. They are straight, extremely smooth and seperated from cars except for some streets with very little car traffic. But on these streets cyclists always have priority and at junctions cyclists also always have priority except for places that would be dangerous like say a junction next to a rail crossing. These cyclepaths are amazing so if you are ever in the Netherlands i recommend you try some of these out, my absolute favorite is the RijnWaalpad which goes From Nijmegen to Arnhem.
Here in SW Florida we have nothing but main roads or side streets. It sounds like you've got more choices. Also, a run to an ice cream shop doesn't seem like a need for a designated cycle path. Hell, we're just happy not to get run over. Include miles in addition to kilometers for us Yankees.
@notjustbikes will love this urban planning episode. Great video Tom
This is my first comment on YT. So thank you for the video,
I'm from Cologne, Germany and probably have a very different experience. I would say it depends on what kind of transport you do. Short distance or long distance. At the moment I'm planning an overnighter from Cologne to Amsterdam in the Netherlands. I also can choose between different routes and all your criteria are relevant. A lot of the trio is along a "bigger" street/road that connects cities. It's probably ahh the rank you would call a highway, but it's not an Autobahn and mostly only one line per direction as is normal over here.
There is a separated bikelane along that road, so it probably would best fit your third kind of infrastructure. But it's boring. And loud. And stinky. So I'm partly switching the route away from that road at infrastructure more of the second kind. Along a canal, through fields or through woods. Most of these are part of hope routes and and not single trail or the like. At other places I switch onto less boring side streets with old houses from the middle ages and cure shops. Instead of sticking the big road that over here often avoids the real centre of a town.
Same for daily commuting or tasks. I use a lot of parks and side streets over here in Cologne. As they are often less stressful, less noisy and sometimes even more direct. But we have a nice network of parks that are also intended for transport. Even some school routes him through them. As yes, there are kids taking the bike to school. Even as when I was younger it was more usual.
I'm actually not sure about the new bike track you got. Yes, going along main streets is something you want to be able to do. And you want those streets either be closed to cars or dedicated bike infrastructure.
But over here in Cologne we had those higher level, separated tracks. And we fought a long fight to get them removed and to get a (currently painted) bike line on the street instead. Actually at a lot of big streets now a former Caroline is dedicated to bikes, now. This is done for safety reasons. As if you are away from cars, the drivers don't realise you being there which can cause accidents as the crossings. And there is also an issue with getting doored if the bike line passes parked as closely as yours did.
As somebody else said. In Cologne we are not the Netherlands. But we currently have some programs and evaluations about accidents and how to reduce them. Like removing bad left and right turns for cars, putting the bikes beside the cars. Or to confer some network of side streets to bike streets or the like.
We still have a long way to go. But we already seem to have a lot more sensible options for biking well enough, and less stupid separation of shops and houses and park and destinations, that my answer over here would be different. My trip to my favoured ice shop is through side streets. Usually on foot. As it's part of my neighbourhood.
So the answer is: you just need more infrastructure when there is not "the best" but the one matching your planned activity and it's probably an easy mix of all three types that interconnect with each other.
You don't need bike-stroads. Putting bike lanes only at car stroads would lead to that. You want sensible long distance away from car bike-roads with few interceptions and few red lights. But you also want bike-streets, where it's easy to get to destinations. Both could be bike infrastructure alongside car infrastructure but they also could be something different.
This was great. This demonstrates levels of "goodness" of bike infrastructure.
At the last route I noticed the bikelane was curved towards the road at the intersections, In the netherlands it would constructed away from the road, less car speed, and so much saver.
This is a great point to note. Thanks for sharing.
Tom so good to see you still active on TH-cam and growing :D
Wow, it is good to see bowness area leading the street completeness trend
Очень нравится ваш канал. Спасибо за вашу работу!
Amazing timing. I went on a long ride last night and had this same experience. I wanted a chill ride so I took a long loop, basically a triangle of multi-use paths joined by a cycling route which ended up being a side street with some signs. It was "pleasant" for most of the distance but after 12k I was getting hungry and had to leave the route to ride in traffic to go somewhere with stores and restaurants.
The old way of city planning here is to put all the cars on the street with all the restaurants, breweries, cafes and patios and the bikes 1 or 2 streets over where there is nothing to do. In the few places that bike routes are where restaurants and patios are located it's great. Easy to get there and you can chill with a drink without 4 lanes of traffic speeding by.
thanks I'm living in the North of England near the seafront and there are multiple ways to get to certain zones and destinations. our council has just proposed more cycling routes to be made to encourage a greener environment
I appreciate the effort you go to in providing real world metrics. Well done and thank you.
Had no idea we had these on Calgary! So excited to ride on these tracks and hope to see them more around town!
In my community, we have a fairly comprehensive coverage with painted one-way bike lanes. I have found that I can get where I need in reasonable safety, except when the lane is co-opted for road work signs, tree trimmers and the occasional break down. We have a way to go yet.
"Massage parlours" lol, that tops ice cream, which really raises the issue of a need to use the bike for more important issues than ice cream (or perhaps massage parlours). Like shopping. I'm in Montreal and we have a dedicated dense bike way grid with many of them completely separate from cars and the main ones salted and cleared through winter. Clearly Calgary's municipal politicians are behind the times: no surprise as the city is as car-centric as Los Angeles... albeit on a smaller scale. It's more like Amsterdam here in Montreal at this point and that includes the critical issue of "car driver mentality". Every season more and more separated dedicated bikeways are being built. I honestly almost never have to actually drive on a road with cars near me here. And that's for shopping and essentials, not "ice cream." Cheers.
The comparison is excellent food for thought.
I'd enjoy riding all three routes.
What I pay most attention to are:
1. Dangerous parts (fast, close traffic)
2. No connections. Bike routes that just end.
3. Confusing or unmarked routes.
This is great. It's also a good point that all three routes felt safe and enjoyable.
That cycle track looks pretty awesome as a resident of Atlanta
Great video! In my city (Budapest, Hungary) I can appreciate that I have separated bike lane from home to work, because it’s along busy roads. You always say in your videos that you don’t like painted bike lanes. I think it depends on how busy the road is. In some areas of the city like suburban streets I think they can be completely fine. For me multi-use pathways are more problematic. Pedestrian always pay less attention than car drivers, often you can’t overtake them safely, they don’t even recognise that they aren’t on a simple sidewalk and sometimes yell on cyclist. A good example is a multi-use pathway in the city along the river Danube (Duna in Hungarian), many tourist are walking in every direction, very narrow in some places, hate to ride there.
This is a really good experiment. I guessed correctly which was the best, so I guess I wasn't surprised by it, but I find that it illustrates really well what the problem is without any drama. That's really important when you're trying to present information to people who aren't convinced by the whole urban cycling thing yet.
Hi Tom, I'm really loving all the videos brother. I also live in calgary, and you have inspired me to take up bike commuting. Hope to catch up with you one day.
The main point in favour of "cycle tracks" is that you can follow the established main transit routes. You don't have to relearn several different routes for a few destinations just because the side street pattern is not always aligned with the main roads.
That said, in most European cities and towns, the side streets can be a very "liveable" experience, too, especially in vibrant neighbourhoods. You might just discover the shop or restaurant that no car driver ever will.
Thanks!
Thanks so much Valerie! I really appreciate the support. It means a lot to me ❤️
Separate bike lanes are definitely the best. Outside of downtown Denver (CO), there aren't very many separate bike lanes. However, the Platt river goes in several directions, so the recreational paths that follow the river have become my most effective of way of running non-downtown errands by bike.
Works great for businesses near the river, but others, not so much.
Cycle tracks are a pretty common sight in the denser parts of Copenhagen, Denmark. When I visited a few years ago I was both shocked and impressed with the bike infrastructure. Definitely way ahead of anything we have here in the US
The REV network in Montreal is excellent bike infrastructure.
Happily it is being expanded to many more neighbourhoods around the island
Thanks
Thank you for the support! I really appreciate it!
Side streets are terrifying. Seattle keeps trying to push us on them and random cars out of driveways almost hit me all time
I have similar experiences with the side streets in st. louis that I usually don't take because we have the highest stop sign density in the whole country. deadass that's one of the main reasons why I'll take a freeway over a side street, even in that one in a million situation where the side street is more direct
I typically plan my route to use tertiary roads as much as possible, unless there is a suitable bike path or mup (far too seldom). Generally not much traffic. Usually adds 15 to 20% to the overall distance, but far less stress.
Great video! Although the problem with all of these types of routes, if you live in the US, they are very disjointed, very short and not maintained very well in many places. You’ll be riding along and anything designated for bike or even pedestrians will just end, or become blocked often by cars parking in them, or my favorite, paved over without being redesigned. Even cycle tracks, will have maintenance vehicles parked in them, sometimes on a regular basis.
Another big factor with those shared pathways is that their location can leave them very vulnerable to extreme weather events. Because they're often in low-lying areas adjacent to rivers, if there's a flood, they can end up seriously damaged and inaccessible for much longer than merely the length of time the flood lasted.
the separated bikeway had one major problem you didn't seem to notice: very little space between the bikeway & the parked cars. the opportunities for getting doored & for negative interactions with people at their cars are too high. these kinds of infrastructures are necessary, but they still have to be built with an awareness of all the hazards that are faced.
Great video Tom! Here in Hamilton Ontario, we have a few core city east west and north south protected bike lanes that work for commuting and getting you where you want to go with dedicated signals. There are 'bike routes' through side streets but they have the problems you outlined. Unfortunately, we are killing pedestrians and cyclists at a record rate on the 1950s 5 lane one way dragstrips the call Main and King streets!! The result ispeople are beginning to talk about redesign for safe streets. There are also great rail trails but they are just for recreation. Great rating scale and test design. Thanks to Alistair too!
Loved this video, it really shows what is like baseline for bike friendly infrastructure and livable cities. On the topic of whether to have
On the topic of wheter to have cycle track on both sides, I think I like having track on one side but in both directions. What happens otherwise (at least around here) is that both are too narrow and you can't pass safely (maybe we shouldnt?) And you cant fit a bike trailer through. Around here we have a protected contra-flow bike lane that is 2 bike widths wide and a striped-yellow-line, so it's easy to fit a trailer through and if nobody is using the other direction you can use it to pass. I think that's my favorite kind of bike lane.
I was shocked by the amount of potholes.
An annoyance with the side-street approach is that a lot of communities discourage use of their side streets as alternatives to the main route during rush hour by interrupting the continuity of the parallel side streets every few blocks.
I would measure 2 more metrics I find very important.
The Danger Factor. Along each route there are dangerous and safe portions. Use a map to add up the % distance on unprotected high speed or congested areas that you feel are dangerous.
Secondly, the Number of Traffic Lights. I hate sitting at badly timed lights in my city. So I will choose my route to avoid them and save wasted time.
Multi use pathways are the best by far if they take you towards your destination, sure you need bike lanes to feed into them from main roads but there's no comparison when it comes to enjoyability and safety imo. I'm lucky that I live a couple blocks from my city's main trail and it takes you through both area downtowns, a couple of the smaller entertainment districts, one of the areas bigger shopping districts and Michigan State's campus.
It obviously isn't possible to have off-grade trails everywhere but I think anywhere you have an available right-of-way cutting through a city be it a river or stream, a drain, a power line or a railway; you should take that opportunity to put in a pathway.
Good comparison. And I laughed when "cannabis shop" was one of the potential destinations that the segregated cycle track gave you access to. 🙂
Here where I live in UK it’s a mix of shared pavements, roads and public bridle ways. There needs to be more protected cycle lanes and shared paths.
In my city, Christchurch NZ, the separated cycleways tend to go down back streets which is good for quiet, less cars, access to schools, but bad for access to shops, businesses, other destinations. The main road has painted bike lanes on a 60kmph road so not very safe but it takes you past places you wanna go and is more direct. So it more depends on the route than the type of infrastructure imo. The direct route to destinations will always be the most convenient, but not necessarily the safest or most pleasant.
Hi Tom that's a great sounding bicycle bell. I've been trying to find a quality bell. Yours is really crisp tone almost musical instrument quality. That translates to bike use in that it resonates further. Nice in noisy urban traffic. But finding one whew, not as easy as you might think! Do you have name of manufacturer please? 🛎
Agreed with your points, this is similar in Denver. Side streets are lovely until you need to cross an obstacle like a river, highway, or railroad with limited bridges, then you have to switch to an unpleasant/unsafe busy street to cross it and maybe awkwardly ride the sidewalk. They can involve lots of zig zagging and turns which lengthen the route, make it less convenient and easy to screw up a turn. Trails are typically recreation focused, and only sometimes work well as transportation routes by accident.
Safe protected bike lanes with safe intersections on traffic-heavy major through streets with destinations must be the key backbone of the system. Side streets ARE still important to fill in the gaps between those backbones, provide short-distance neighborhood routes, and also provide a secondary option for anyone who doesn't want to be on the street with lots of cars. To make the side streets safe/comfortable they need frequent modal filters to keep out car through traffic, and they should have easy connections to protected infrastructure to get across bridges. My city calls these neighborhood bikeways, and so far they are doing a poor job designing them because they won't install enough (if any) modal filters, and they are trying to use some of them as a zig zaggy replacement for protected bike lanes rather than a complement, because they are too cowardly to remove parking on through streets. BOTH are needed. Parks and recreational trails should be taken advantage of as much as possible to double as transportation routes and links.
The Toronto area is chopped into isolated islands by highways and railways. Our Ministry of Transportation absolutely refuses to build safe crossings.
Near me there is a railway bridge over a road that is the only through route, with bike tracks on both sides of the bridge. The teeny tiny problem is that the entire space under the bidge is used by road pavement, from pier to pier. You can't even cycle in the gutter because your shoulder would be hitting concrete on the sides!
Loved the video, the progress in bike routes and the concept of complete streets! Small point of feedback: Please do point out where even these "bike tracks" are falling short, so politicians looking at this are also aware. I.e. Having bike go up and down at every (small) crossing, instead of having the crossing cars go up and down is a minus point. I also get that some streets have width limitations, but the cycling path is just a little too narrow to let cyclists past, which stresses out slower cyclists, especially in this age of e-bikes. Pluspoints for the space between the cars and the bike path though!
Boy you are a lucky to live in such a nice city with multiple choices for routes. I have visited Calgaray a few times but only in the winter to go skiing. I was always impressed with the bike lanes and parks downtown. Saut Ste Marie is making progress with a city circling multi use trail and some painted bike lanes. They have only done traffic calming on one street so far but it's come a long way from nothing. Hmmm... three trips to the ice cream shop and one trip to the cannabis shop. Nice choice of routes!!!
Nice to hear things are changing in the Soo (do you still call it that?). I recommend many trips to the ice cream shop.
@@Shifter_Cycling Yup it's still the Soo. Nothing much changes here except for the increasing number of potholes. Unfortunately both the Soo and Timmins ont, have the lowest population density to number of streets in North America so it's really spread out and although we are relatively small
Side Routes: One method that I see used is to be putting up a barrier gate that can only be unlocked by emergency vehicles. Bicycles and Pedestrians can still go around the barrier and prevents cars from using it as a shortcut for car traffic.
Multi-use pathways. The main multi-use pathway in my area is mainly Pedestrian driven. There is no bicycle infrastructure at the trailheads for it, they even put up signage saying that bicycles yield to pedestrians. There are also numerous areas where they don't drop down the curb for roadway crossings. Agreed on nothing to do, I can't use the playgrounds put on the pathway. I've shyed away from using my main one because it isn't equipped for bicycles and their speed.
Navigations, both of these methods screw up navigations so you are right on that front. But this isn't usually a problem if you know how to navigation it without the use of a navigation device.
Separated bicycle lanes: Don't have experience with it yet. Okay well one time but that was a special case when I was over 10 miles away from home and was only on it for like 500 feet. At least the navigation seemed to handle this one really well.