Pilot project to create safety barrier for downtown Windsor cyclists
Residents and cyclists alike will begin to see work being done on Victoria Avenue. The city is creating a protected bike lane.
“What you're going to see is a bike lane here,” City councillor Renaldo Agostino demonstrated to a CTV camera pointing to an area near the curb.
“Then you're going to see the parking meter here. There's going to be parking blocks and then parked cars and then traffic as well.”
The parking meters and parking blocks would be alongside the road, protecting the bike lane from flowing traffic.
Cyclists have expressed their thoughts on the pilot project.
“That sounds like it could make things safer,” said cyclist Jeremy Proulx.
“I don't bike a whole lot, but I've almost been doored several times and avoiding that kind of thing can be pretty hairy at times so that sounds like a good play, at least on the surface.”
Agostino said the project will create a safe path to the core for cyclists who work, go to school or live in the area.
“It's been demonstrably proven that when people have, access to safe cycling infrastructure, that they spend more money in those communities,” Stephen Hargreaves told CTV News. The director of the Sandwich BIA and cycling advocate feels cyclists are encouraged when they feel safe.
“When infrastructure exists, people use it. When it doesn't, people decide, maybe I'll avoid that area, or maybe I'll go spend my money somewhere else.”
Work is expected to start shortly and be done by year's end. The bike lane will start at Chatham Street and go to Wyandotte Street East, where it'll connect to a recently added lane.
“We'll give it a go and if all is deemed good then I can't see why it can't happen everywhere else,” said Agostino who would like to see the pilot administered across the city.
Some residents in Ouellette Towers feel a recently installed bike lane on Pelissier Street could benefit from the same set up as the pilot.
“When I have to make a right-hand turn into here, I have to make sure there's no cars coming down the other lane, the bike lane, because they do drive down the bike lane,” said tenant Glen Gaines.
Some reportedly travel the full length of the bike lane from Elliott Street to Wyandotte Street without even realizing they might be in the bike lane.
“With all these changes, there's got to be a component of education as well,” Agostino said.
“I got another email this morning from somebody up on the corner where things don't seem to be working quite the way we want them to, so we're going to make adjustments along the way.”
With both commercial and residential growth expected on Pelissier Street, some feel bikes lanes don't belong on that stretch of road.
“I think you're going to see meters getting driven into and people just not going to know what's going on,” said Ray Blanchard, owner of the Bit Coin building. “I think it's a bad idea on commercial streets.”
He pointed to opportunities he’s bringing to the area along with the redevelopment of the parking area in the 600 block of Pelissier as factors that could bring high traffic to the street.
“If their solution is to move the meters out onto the street, that's going to make it even harder for businesses to get deliveries because big trucks have to come in and they have to get deliveries,” he said.
“It's going to basically create an obstacle course.”
Agostino said a report will go to council in the next few months.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
AI modelling predicts these foods will be hit hardest by inflation next year
The new year won’t bring a resolution to rising food costs, according to a new report that predicts prices to rise as much as five per cent in 2025.
Downtown Vancouver stabbing suspect dead after being shot by police
A suspect is dead after being shot by police in a Vancouver convenience store after two people were injured in a stabbing Wednesday morning, according to authorities.
2 Canadians confirmed dead in Poland, as consular officials gather information
Two Canadians have died following an incident in Poland, CTV News has learned.
Health Canada recalls more than 300 sexual enhancement products in four provinces
Health Canada has recalled hundreds of different sexual enhancements products from stores in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and B.C.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford calls Donald Trump 'funny guy' in Fox News interview
Ontario Premier Doug Ford called U.S. president-elect Donald Trump a 'funny guy' on Wednesday in an interview with Fox News for his comment that Canada should become the United States's 51st state.
Toddler fatally shot after his 7-year-old brother finds a gun in the family's truck
A two-year-old boy was fatally shot when his seven-year-old brother found a gun in the glovebox of the family's truck in Southern California, authorities said.
DEVELOPING As police search for suspect, disturbing video surfaces after U.S. health-care CEO gunned down in New York
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed Wednesday morning in what investigators suspect was a targeted shooting outside a Manhattan hotel where the health insurer was holding an investor conference.
Millions in Cuba remain in dark after nationwide blackout
Cuba said it was generating only enough electricity to cover about 1/6th of peak demand late on Wednesday, hours after its national grid collapsed leaving millions without power.
'Utterly absurd': Freeland rebuffs Poilievre's offer of two hours to present fall economic statement
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has rebuffed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's offer to give up two hours of scheduled opposition time next Monday to present the awaited fall economic statement as 'utterly absurd.'