Consultation on the proposed Hornby separated bike lane; Dunsmuir stats

Another good public space related press release from the City of Vancouver… this one on the proposed Hornby Street separated bike lane (designed to provide a connection between the Burrard Bridge and Dunsmuir bike lanes).
At the same time, some interesting numbers on the numbers of riders using the Dunsmuir separated lane.
A good opportunity for folks to provide input and to let Council know about their thoughts on this new cycling infrastructure. There’s a website survey, as well as a public information session taking place mid-August.
City launches consultation on downtown bike lane;
Ridership on Dunsmuir sets new recordThe City of Vancouver invites public input on the development of a separated bike lane in the Downtown core to connect existing lanes and provide greater separation between cyclists and vehicles.
Under the proposed plan, a separated bike lane on Hornby Street would connect the existing Burrard Bridge and Dunsmuir Street separated bike lanes and also connect with the seawalls in Coal Harbour and off Beach Ave. on the English Bay end.
An information session will be held on Wednesday, Aug. 11 between 11 am and 7 pm in the rotunda of the Pacific Centre Mall at Howe and Georgia streets. City of Vancouver staff will be on site to provide information, offer survey cards and receive feedback from the public.
Surveys will also be mailed to businesses and residents along Hornby to solicit feedback. For more information on the proposed plan, visit Cycling – City of Vancouver. To fill out a survey on the proposed bike route visit Vancouver.ca/hornbysurvey.
The consultation runs from now until mid-September.
When considering which street to implement a north-south separated bike lane, City staff evaluated factors like safety, truck and transit use, existing bike routes and use, traffic flows as well as the presence of on-street parking and loading zones. Staff evaluated Burrard, Thurlow, and Hornby streets.
Hornby Street is the preferred option for a cross-town separated bike lane because:
- it already has a one-way bike lane;
- there is high bicycle and medium vehicle use of Hornby;
- it has no transit routes; and,
- it is not a designated truck route.
The consultation for the route comes amidst significant growth in the use of the new separated bike lane on Dunsmuir and the Burrard Bridge milestone of one million cyclists across the bridge on July 7, just six days short of the bike lane’s one-year anniversary.
Counters also show 2000 cyclists are using the Dunsmuir lane each day, up from 500 a few months ago, a 250 per cent increase.
About 30,000 bike trips a week are being made across the Burrard Bridge this summer.The City is committed to becoming the greenest city in the world by 2020 and bike lanes are an important way to help reach that goal. The increased use of separated bike lanes shows cyclists prefer a protective barrier between vehicles and cycling traffic.
As more people get out of their cars and onto a bike or walk, the city will enjoy improved air quality, less traffic congestion and reduced greenhouse gases.
Hornby Strret from the Seawall to Drake Street is very steep. Very, very few ever pedal up this hill. The only result will be loss of badly needed parking places for local businesses.
It’s a worthy plan that fails in its execution. There are far better options.
re: steep section
The bike lane is designed to connect the Burrard Bridge with downtown – not the seawall. The section between the Burrard Bridge (via Pacific) and Drake is not that steep.