Improved bike infrastructure lacks connections
THE main problem with Winnipeg’s active transportation network isn’t so much a shortage of bicycle routes throughout the city — it’s the lack of connectivity between them.
Winnipeg has many shortcomings when it comes to cycling: a woeful lack of protected bike lanes, poorly cleared and maintained routes, and a car-centric culture that is often at odds with the development of a safe and reliable network of bike corridors.
One of the most glaring weaknesses, however, is the patchwork of bike routes in the city that are largely disconnected from each other. Many designated routes end abruptly, leaving cyclists with no option but to switch to regular roads in busy traffic, or ride illegally on sidewalks.
Public surveys have shown that a lack of well-connected, protected bike routes is one of the top reasons more people don’t commute by bike.
The city has taken some steps to improve that connectivity. The most recent announcement will see River and Stradbrook avenues in Osborne Village fitted with one-way protected bike lanes in 2023. A two-way protected bike lane will also be added on River from Bryce Street to Fort Rouge Park. It’s good news, and it will expand the bike network in that area.
But it’s not enough. Similar bike routes have been constructed in other neighbourhoods and, like Osborne Village, they are not connected to a city-wide grid of cycling corridors. While they enhance active transportation in those communities, they’re often disconnected from other parts of the city.
Winnipeg has made significant progress over the past two decades in an effort to become a more cycling-friendly city. There are many examples where cyclists can travel long distances around Winnipeg on safe, reliable routes, away from snarling traffic (although many are not well advertised).
But it’s hit and miss. Some areas of the city have good access to dedicated bike routes, others have virtually none.
It’s particularly treacherous downtown, where cycling usually involves riding on regular roads alongside less-than-accommodating drivers. It’s hazardous, and few are willing to take the risk. The lack of protected lanes in and around the core area discourages many from
commuting downtown by bike.
Cycling from Osborne Village to downtown, for example, typically means crossing the Osborne Bridge alongside regular traffic, an adventure many deem too dangerous (even in diamond lanes, which are shared with transit buses).
There is a proposal to build a cycling/pedestrian bridge across the Assiniboine River, from Fort Rouge Park to McFadyen Park. The proposed bridge would connect to a protected bike path along Assiniboine Avenue, which extends east to The Forks and west to the neighbourhoods of West Broadway and Wolseley. It would connect several parts of the city and significantly expand the bike network.
Unfortunately, the proposal is on the “unfunded” list of infrastructure projects and its future is unknown. Active transportation gets a lot of lip service from politicians, but at budget time, projects such as protected bike paths and cycling/ pedestrian bridges tend to take a back seat to car-oriented infrastructure.
Many Winnipeggers are willing to ditch their motor vehicles in favour of active transportation. One only has to look at the hundreds of bikes parked outside of Winnipeg Blue Bombers games at IG Field, or the many well-used, caged-in bike storage facilities around the city, to see the public’s desire to adopt a healthier and more environmentally friendly form of transportation.
When the city builds safe and reliable bike routes, people use them. It’s time for city hall to make that a priority.