CplKlinger
Senior Member
Just search "Active" and sort by memo date, and you should find it!This is great. Do you have a URL for the Memo Website so I can access the document? Hoping to download the PDF myself if possible.
Just search "Active" and sort by memo date, and you should find it!This is great. Do you have a URL for the Memo Website so I can access the document? Hoping to download the PDF myself if possible.
Active Transportation Implementation Acceleration Project (Winter 2024 Update)Just search "Active" and sort by memo date, and you should find it!
Memos to Council | Edmonton - Open Data Portal
data.edmonton.ca
Bruh… WTH are Sharrows and painted bike lanes doing on here. This can’t be real.On the memo website, there's a memo from Jan 22, 2024 regarding the active transportation acceleration plan. The memo website won't let me copy the document url annoyingly, and I can't figure out how to attach the PDF files that I uploaded here. That being said, here are some highlights.
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You’re probably not wrongI think @thommyjo has been dramatically overactive lately and needs to take an Ex-Lax or have a Snickers bar.
That JPG @CplKlinger posted was a bit hard to make out, but am I seeing correctly that the 100 Ave bike lane from 110 St to 116 St will finally be constructed next year?
I think @thommyjo has been dramatically overactive lately and needs to take an Ex-Lax or have a Snickers bar.
That JPG @CplKlinger posted was a bit hard to make out, but am I seeing correctly that the 100 Ave bike lane from 110 St to 116 St will finally be constructed next year?
A great question.How is this costing 1mil+/km if it’s not super high quality, permanent infrastructure?
At the January 31, 2023, City Council meeting, the following motion was passed:
That Administration provides a memo outlining all active transportation infrastructure projects that are planned for implementation as part of the 2023-2026 Capital Budget.
A great question.
Their number coincides similarly to what it costs to rehab a road per km (which I think, depending on road size and scope, is something around $1.2m per km with new curbs/sidewalks included). So while I understand that adding bike infrastructure does often require or coincide with a full road rehab, it kind of feels like they're trying hard to offloading some roadwork costs onto the funds earmarked for bike lanes.
That’s why temporary infrastructure is a problem. It’ll get ripped out if a Nickel type guy gets in. See Vancouver.It's my understanding that a good portion of the cost for this bike infrastructure goes into the traffic light system/fixtures that have to be updated and integrated and so the more intersections with traffic lights a bike lane goes through adds to the cost.
Also multi use paths are some of the most costly type of infrastructure apparently. This type, at least, can be described as permanent. But for the separated bike lanes on streets type of infrastructure, it's also my understanding that none of it is going to be high quality permanent style barriers.
It's also my impression, and maybe not surprisingly and perhaps even understandable, that the city is nervous of the new infrastructure coming in 2025 and 2026 because there are going to be cases where some parking will be lost and/or a driving lane will be removed. You can tell that by where some of the routes will be and there's just no other way. And so that's when the public resistance is really going to start up again like it has regarding the early stage of planning on 76 Ave where a petition is going around to fight the loss of any parking or slowing down traffic. There's no resistance to the 2024 bike routes announced because it doesn't affect drivers in the least.
The city I guess is treading lightly for 2024. But as the active transportation system expands, which is essential, something will haVe to give in some areas such as parking (I hate how much space has to be dedicated to parking) and so that's when things will get noisy again.
One road/intersection of high relevance to me that is in their plan is 112 Ave @ 82 St.That’s why temporary infrastructure is a problem. It’ll get ripped out if a Nickel type guy gets in. See Vancouver.
Also, how freaking bad are we at building stuff if TEMPORARY bike lanes are 1mil a km.
What a joke.
They better address intersections in this plan. Not just slap down routes that throw you into arterials with 0 protection.
I live near this corner and agree it's a major issue I have yet to see addressed. Alot of people bike on the sidewalk on the south side of 112th because biking on the road would be suicide, but there are a number of near blind alley exits that are going to lead to someone getting killed by a car.One road/intersection of high relevance to me that is in their plan is 112 Ave @ 82 St.
There's not really any room available to be sacrificed on the road or sidewalk. The sidewalks on the western portion is already too narrow, the road is curb to curb 4 lanes and a turn lane, and frequently backs up due to the LRT crossing.
There wouldn't be any tolerance here for removing a vehicular lane, so it'll take a genuine redesign, maybe even encroachments or land acquisition to accommodate bike traffic.
I don't think there's anything they could do with "tempermenant" infrastructure to accommodate bike lanes through that intersection, a redesign will be required. So I'm very very curious to see how they approach it - and a little worried.
I wouldn't be opposed to a path extension like that in addition to a bike lane on 112 Ave, but I would consider it to be an absolute failure as an alternative.I live near this corner and agree it's a major issue I have yet to see addressed. Alot of people bike on the sidewalk on the south side of 112th because biking on the road would be suicide, but there are a number of near blind alley exits that are going to lead to someone getting killed by a car.
My idea is to see them extend the bike path through the alley along Kinnaird ravine and then under the Kinnaird bridge to connect with the bike path by the Legion. It's a little circuitous but there is space to make a dedicate bike lane that is completely separated from traffic with exits onto the main roads as needed. I bet the main opposition would be the River Valley Alliance folks but that ravine could actually use some higher level of activation to make it safer anyway.
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