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Cycling infrastructure (Separated bike lanes)

Sorry, what is the exact construction happening? Is there a diagram or a map?

Finch Hydro Corridor - Pharmacy to Birchmount, Multi-use Path.

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Above from this project page:

 
At Bloor and St. George today the concrete edge has been replaced at the SW and SE corner. It's now orange and at least visually looks less hazardous. However the asphalt patching looks very rough in places, and there are random cuts in the sidewalk and the asphalt with a some sort of concrete saw for no obvious reason. The NW corner is just closed off for bicycles, at least there is a "single file" sign.

Unfortunate situation with all the rework needed for what I felt was supposed to be the pinnacle of bicycle infrastructure in Toronto. I really wish they replace the bike lanes asphalt fullly, and not just leave asphalt patches there.

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Raise it with the area Councillor.

Specifically, here's what you need to ask for.

You want the pavement inspected and milled. (that means they grind off the top layer and lay a thin new, more level coat on top) that should automatically trigger a refresh of all the markings, but no harm in mentioning the need for same.



You wouldn't.....Blue Jays way, north of Front is scheduled for reconstruction and full cycle tracks, in 2030.

You could ask for that work to be advanced; but with all the other work going on, and the World Cup in 2026, I can't see them advancing a major project to sooner than 2027. But ya never know.

I don't know if the design is ready, normally it wouldn't be that far out; but Peter/Blue Jays way has been deferred so many times there might be a plan done.

***

There is currently no work programmed on Blue Jays way south of Front.



Yes, see above, in 2030.
Thanks for the advice @Northern Light! I wrote a long and detailed email with many photos to Councillor Malik, I will post an update if I hear back from her, or 311.
 
Doubt they will properly repair it as this is the usual standard!

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I couldn't find many photos of the university ave bike lanes so I went to take some photos today! I'm curious what the lane on the left is for as it seems more like a parking area
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Sorry some photos are duplicates, the site is running extremely slow for the last month for me and errors out whenever I click edit or even post.

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Finch Hydro Corridor - Pharmacy to Birchmount, Multi-use Path.

View attachment 599587

Above from this project page:


A little TY to @robmausser for his giving me a small statistical milestone here at UT
 
This seems like the best thread to put this, from The Economist. Not sure I like the idea of random stops for cyclists but ..

ON A SUMMER’S day in Southport, in north-west England, the Merseyside police were on the hunt for stolen bikes. Their suspicions were raised by a “well-known male”, recently out of prison, on a notably pricey bicycle. Officers stopped him, entered the bike’s details into a database and rang the owner, who had been under the impression his bike was locked up outside his workplace. It had been recovered before he’d realised it had gone.

The Merseyside police force is the first in England and Wales to experiment with routine stops of cyclists. It has carried out more than 4,000 checks in the past year. But its example is likely to spread. Bike theft is a blight in many British cities. Around 200,000 bikes were reported stolen in England and Wales last year; the real number is much higher because many thefts go unreported, and bikes taken in burglaries are usually not separately recorded as bike thefts. Very few are ever recovered. In London more than 90% of bike thefts in 2022 went unsolved, leading some politicians to complain that it has been “effectively decriminalised”.

This is not just a pain for their owners. Stolen bikes and e-bikes have also become the getaway vehicle of choice for thieves, according to the Merseyside police. In one way or another, some 80% of acquisitive crime in Liverpool involves a nicked bike.

That is bad for cities, which have built thousands of miles of cycle lanes in recent years. The likelihood of having a bike stolen still puts many would-be riders off, says James Brown of BikeRegister, a company which sells security-marking kits, which tend to include a unique code that is hard to remove. Others give up after having one or two bikes stolen.

It is also corrosive of trust in the police. The “broken-windows theory”—coined by two American criminologists, James Q. Wilson and George Kelling, in the 1980s—held that visible signs of crime often lead to more serious wrongdoing. As bikes have grown more popular, their stripped carcasses have become one of the more obvious signs that low-level crime is permitted. Cyclists complain that, even when they find their stolen bike on a second-hand website, the police won’t help.

Part of the problem is simply that police are stretched. Community policing has been pared back, making brazen street theft less risky. For those officers tasked with investigating crimes, the loss of a treasured two-wheeler can be a long way down the list. As home security has made burglary harder and more people have taken to getting around on flashy rides, bikes have become an attractive target.

Titus Halliwell of the Metropolitan Police Service in London reckons stealing them is now the most “low-risk, high-reward” crime. In the capital crafty thieves are shifting towards battery-powered angle grinders, which get through the best locks in seconds (slow learners elsewhere still seem to rely on primitive bolt-cutters). Many work in gangs that are practised at getting rid of stolen goods quickly. “You only need to steal four bikes a week and sell them for £250 each and you’re making £50k a year tax-free,” notes Mr Halliwell.

But the Merseyside example also shows how things can be turned around comparatively quickly. Between July 2023 and July 2024 the pilot project saw reported thefts fall by 46% compared with the previous year. Pippa Wilcox, the constable in charge, explains that as well as stopping suspicious riders the police have helped to get thousands of bikes across the city marked, either by retailers or through events at schools and workplaces. The aim is to make stolen bikes “too hot to handle”.

Linking bike theft to other crimes has helped win the support of colleagues. Officers have a phone app that lets them search a database of marked bikes. They like the fact that when they are searching someone’s property on suspicion of drug offences, they can also try and bust them for bike theft. Returning bikes to surprised owners, sometimes aided by social media, has boosted local confidence in policing, says Ms Wilcox. Merseyside’s approach is being recommended to other forces.

Two regulatory changes would help. The first is creating a requirement for manufacturers and retailers to mark new bikes. The French government did that in 2021; three years on, around a third of all bikes are marked. The second is to put more pressure on online platforms such as Gumtree and Facebook to ensure they are not marketplaces for stolen goods, by for example requiring sellers to include security-marking codes. Bike thieves may be enjoying a smooth ride at the moment. It could be punctured rather easily.
 
Back to the Millwood/Pape/Donlands intersection. Most of the construction/painting there seems done, though there is still only one car lane SB. However, they have widened the bike lanes on the bridge itself, at the cost of one of the 3 NB lanes (which were never busy). Painted infrastructure for now, hopefully concrete dividers soon? (Pylons still present. I seem to recall there may be bidirectional cycle tracks here, not sure if that's still on).
NB:
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Shoutout to my bus driver on the 56 this morning who drove NB *in the bike lane*!!! Yes, between the pylons and the curb.

Clearly this is a work in progress, but 🤯
 

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