steveintoronto
Superstar
Any more info on that?...especially with the recent cut-through at the west end of CAMH at Sudbury.
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Any more info on that?...especially with the recent cut-through at the west end of CAMH at Sudbury.
Any more info on that?
Excellent! I had no idea that was there, and cycled to friend's place just south of the CAMH fence many times. I did a Google Street View of the area just a few minutes ago, there might also be a lane that cuts through there, best I just cycle down and poke around. Short cuts like that to get you away from the maddening traffic crowd makes cycling so much more pleasant. It then allows you to cut up Sudbury to Duff and Queen, under the bridge west, and then up the side roads to Lansdowne eventually to the West Toronto Rail Trail at Sterling and Dundas.A cut was made through the fence at the SW side of CAMH. There is also a directional sharrow on Sudbury directing cyclists to the cut-through. I use this every time I bike downtown, and I usually see a cyclist go through it when I walk by.
Article summates:Metcalf Foundation@metcalf_ca
5 mins ago
New city report on TO’s 1st fully-separated bike lanes finds # of cyclists tripled, collisions dropped 64%: http://www.insidetoronto.com/opinio...ed-bike-lanes-are-working/?platform=hootsuite
According to the report, once the Sherbourne Street lanes were fully separated between Bloor Street East and Lake Shore Boulevard as of 2015, the number of cyclists per day tripled to 3,500. And while many more bikes are using the lanes, the rate of collisions has actually reduced from 14 incidents for every 1,000 cyclists to five. Where plastic bollards were installed fully separating traffic, the level of "encroachment" by cars dropped to virtually none.
Article summates:
[If Toronto Council is serious about making cycling safer in this city, it should make it a priority to build more separated bike lanes. The evidence is there.]
The numbers are proving what we intuitively knew.
I like Sherbourne, not completely sure why, but the elevation is a huge plus in lieu of a concrete barrier. It's not that fast, like Adelaide or Richmond, but psychologically much more comfortable.
Metcalf Foundation@metcalf_ca
5 mins ago
New city report on TO’s 1st fully-separated bike lanes finds # of cyclists tripled, collisions dropped 64%: http://www.insidetoronto.com/opinio...ed-bike-lanes-are-working/?platform=hootsuite
According to the report, once the Sherbourne Street lanes were fully separated between Bloor Street East and Lake Shore Boulevard as of 2015, the number of cyclists per day tripled to 3,500. And while many more bikes are using the lanes, the rate of collisions has actually reduced from 14 incidents for every 1,000 cyclists to five. Where plastic bollards were installed fully separating traffic, the level of "encroachment" by cars dropped to virtually none.
Article summates:
[If Toronto Council is serious about making cycling safer in this city, it should make it a priority to build more separated bike lanes. The evidence is there.]
The numbers are proving what we intuitively knew.
I like Sherbourne, not completely sure why, but the elevation is a huge plus in lieu of a concrete barrier. It's not that fast, like Adelaide or Richmond, but psychologically much more comfortable.
I think the total number of accidents is what matters. An increase of 6 accidents is a very undesirable outcome. People are ignoring the fact that bicycling is a dangerous activity. These separated bike lanes might be marginally safer than no bike lanes but they are still dangerous and if they result in an increase in the number of bicyclists that ends up cancelling out any small improvement in safety. Hence you get alarming statistics like the fact that the de Maisonneuve bike lane in Montreal has the 2nd highest number of bike accidents of any road in Montreal, or the large number of serious and fatal accidents on separated bike lanes in Ottawa in the last few months.
If we want to improve safety we should build more subway lines because serious and fatal accidents on subways are extremely rare (especially on newer lines with platform screen doors). I really don't understand why city council wants to encourage bicycling given how dangerous it is. I strongly suspect that walking is significantly safer than riding a bike in separated bike lanes for instance.
I think the total number of accidents is what matters. An increase of 6 accidents is a very undesirable outcome. People are ignoring the fact that bicycling is a dangerous activity. These separated bike lanes might be marginally safer than no bike lanes but they are still dangerous and if they result in an increase in the number of bicyclists that ends up cancelling out any small improvement in safety. Hence you get alarming statistics like the fact that the de Maisonneuve bike lane in Montreal has the 2nd highest number of bike accidents of any road in Montreal, or the large number of serious and fatal accidents on separated bike lanes in Ottawa in the last few months.
If we want to improve safety we should build more subway lines because serious and fatal accidents on subways are extremely rare (especially on newer lines with platform screen doors). I really don't understand why city council wants to encourage bicycling given how dangerous it is. I strongly suspect that walking is significantly safer than riding a bike in separated bike lanes for instance.
The suburban councillors should be demanding that segregated bicycle lanes be built on the wide suburban want-to-be-expressway arterial roads.