Vancouver approves plan for 12 new bike lanes - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver approves plan for 12 new bike lanes

Vancouver is moving head with plans to build 12 new bike lanes over the next five years, and share them on a trial basis with skateboards and scooters.

Cyclists will share the lanes with skateboards for a year as part of a pilot project

The city of Vancouver has approved 12 new bike lanes. (Canadian Press)

The City of Vancouverhas approved plans to build 12 newbike lanes over the next five years, as outlined in an earlier transportation report by city staff.

Skateboarderstend togo back and forth. And cyclists tend togo in straight lines so we will have to see how that works.- Vancouver City CouncillorHeather Deal

Thursday night's vote means the city can move forward on new routesplanned foreight busy downtown streets includingRichards, Bute, Smithe and,Nelson streets, along with Commercial Drive and the Granville Street Bridge.

The plan also includes a year-long pilot project toshare protectedcyclinglanes with rollerbladers, push scooters and skateboards.

Skateboards alongside cyclists

"They didn't have a safe place to go," City Councillor Heather Deal told CBC today."Skateboarderstend togo back and forth. And cyclists tend togo in straight lines so we will have to see how that works."

Some years ago skateboarders were allowed to use side streets, but now they don't need to fear tickets in protected bike lanes.

The plan was outlined earlier this year in the city's Transportation 2040 plan. The goal is to make cyclists feel safer, after bike traffic hit record highs in 2015.

"We know there are a lot of people who will bike if they feel safer. We've seen those numbers shooting up in recent years as we add more safe cycling routes,"CouncillorHeatherDeal said earlier this year.

Parking their concerns

The plan is to start with new routes alongCambie, Nelson and Smithe in 2016 and 2017.

Some restaurant and business owners have already raised concerns that will cut into parking spaces.

The Cambie Street project will connect the Dunsmuir bike route to Gastown, and mean removing a quarter of the parking spots between Dunsmuir and Water streets.

New bike routes on Nelson and Smithe streets will connect eastbound and westbound traffic between Richards Street and the Cambie Bridge. Vehicle traffic won't change, but 20 parking spots will be lost.

In each case, bikes will be protected from moving vehicles by some sort of barrier, either a row of parked cars or a concrete divider, city councillors have said.

"There is a lot of work to be done," said Deal.

She acknowledgedthatCommercial Drive would be the biggest challenge as the street is already crowded with buses, cars and walking traffic that frequents the stores, restaurants and coffee shops.

Nick Pogar of the Commercial Drive Business Society says thecity needs to consult with his group, and hopes city staffrethink the expensive, controversialplans for the busy destination street.

"There are already four bikelanesthat exist in the area. We don't think the additional burden on the taxpayer is warranted," said Pogar.

Restaurant owners have beenoutspoken against the Commercial Drive bike lane plan, with particularconcernabout the impact onparking along the "The Drive," apopular focal point in the city.

The City of Vancouver has committed to building 12 new protected bike routes in the next five years. (City of Vancouver)