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Cycling and Active Transportation in Edmonton


The Edmonton Bike Coalition wants your pictures of “sneckdowns,” a snowy phenomenon that reveals road space that isn’t being used by vehicles.

The term “sneckdown” originally described a neckdown, or curb extension, that is created by snow, but the definition has expanded to include any underutilized road space. “When snow falls and gets packed down, it highlights unused or excess road space that could be re-allocated for safer crossings, traffic calming, bike lanes, or wider sidewalks — often without impacting drivers at all,” the coalition said in its newsletter. “In other words: snow becomes a free urban planner.”

The coalition asks those out walking, biking, or rolling to snap pictures of sneckdowns and send them via email or by posting on social media with the hashtag #YEGSnowStories. Aaron Budnick, a volunteer with the coalition, told Taproot the photos will be used for public education and advocacy around street design. For example, when the city rebuilds roads through the neighbourhood renewal process, the coalition will use the photos to show specific locations where road space could be allocated to pedestrians.

The updated Complete Street Design Standards, which council approved in July, call for traffic-calming measures on all local and collector roads. The standards will be applied in new neighbourhoods and through renewal projects in established neighbourhoods. A report on the changes said it costs significantly more to install safety features after a street or road is built than to build them during initial construction. For example, a curb extension can cost up to $100,000 to install after a street is constructed, but as little as $9,500 if included in the initial design of the street.

sneckdown-5964.jpg
 
Looks like a draft design is coming in the spring.
Should be interesting to see what they come up with. It is probably not popular as those roads have been under construction for at least the last 2 years due to the sewer replacement, but lots of those stretches can really use a complete reconstruction as the surface is crumbling, and the sidewalks are pretty old. The painted bike lane portion of 106 St south of 51 Ave to 40 Ave can be straight up dangerous, as it is quite busy and wide, with what feels like 80% of vehicles going 10 over at any given time.
 
Noticed something on the Activate Transport Expansion page, for east Edmonton.

Last year it showed 106ave getting new lanes, but now they've switched it to 101ave. Maybe to align with priority growth areas?
TransportExpansion.jpgScreenshot_20260312-120201.png
 
Should be interesting to see what they come up with. It is probably not popular as those roads have been under construction for at least the last 2 years due to the sewer replacement, but lots of those stretches can really use a complete reconstruction as the surface is crumbling, and the sidewalks are pretty old. The painted bike lane portion of 106 St south of 51 Ave to 40 Ave can be straight up dangerous, as it is quite busy and wide, with what feels like 80% of vehicles going 10 over at any given time.
Glad something is planned here!

I live in Duggan and often use 106st to get to Whyte/DT, but I always detour up 111th to 63rd ave because that section is so poor. In summer it's passable on a quiet day, with the risk of getting doored by the parked cars. In winter the bike lane disappears completely so you're sharing one lane with traffic.
 
If those bike lanes remain unprotected, that project will have failed.
Hermitage Road is essentially 106 St 2.0, so this will be 106 St 3.0?

Noticed something on the Activate Transport Expansion page, for east Edmonton.

Last year it showed 106ave getting new lanes, but now they've switched it to 101ave. Maybe to align with priority growth areas?
View attachment 721344View attachment 721345
Works a bit better. I wish there was a better connection to Connors Road.
 
This is broader than just active transportation, but thought I would post here. Another well known international urbanist is coming to Edmonton for a few days.

Planning group still looking for a few cool urbanist/community-building activities for Mikael Colville-Andersen to participate in while he is here if anyone has suggestions.

Bike groups will be taking him for a ride. Will be nice to highlight O'day-min Park and residential construction taking shape as a result.

Like many Danish urbanists, he is a big fan of human scale residential like 6 storeys versus high rises, so he will probably at least appreciate that.

 
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Noticed something on the Activate Transport Expansion page, for east Edmonton.

Last year it showed 106ave getting new lanes, but now they've switched it to 101ave. Maybe to align with priority growth areas?
View attachment 721344View attachment 721345
Much prefer the 101 Ave option as a nearby resident. Connects better for commuting downtown / central, easier build out without having to focus on the bridge over Wayne Gretzky Drive, and there's already a shared use path just north of 106 Ave through the river valley, plus service roads along a good portion of 106 Ave. 101 Ave isn't bike friendly at all as is. I do wish this meant the re-imagination of 101 Ave was happening too, but I'll take this for now!
 

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