Regional Greenways - Vision to Reality: Developing the Central Valley Regional Gateway.

Author(s)
Scott, D.
Year
Abstract

The Central Valley Greenway (CVG) provides pedestrians and cyclists with a relatively flat, primarily traffic separated 25 km route connecting Vancouver, Burnaby and New Westminster. The CVG was developed in partnership with the federal and provincial governments, the regional governments at TransLink and Metro Vancouver, and the neighbouring municipalities of Vancouver, Burnaby and New Westminster. The goals of the CVG are to provide facilities that encourage people to cycle and walk, to attract new cyclists and provide experienced cyclists with improved connections. In Vancouver the 7.5 kilometers long route was constructed in three phases and links East Vancouver with the downtown and False Creek. The Greenway generally follows the rail line from the rail yards near False Creek, east to Burnaby. Along the way it climbs one hill to cross the rail tracks at Clark Drive and crosses ten busy streets. The CVG provided an opportunity to test several technical innovations including: sharrows or shared use lane markings are symbols placed on the pavement to demarcate areas of the street intended for bicycle travel; cross-bikes or multi-use path crossing markings at roadway intersections, are used to demarcate where the multi-use trail crosses the roadway at an intersection and where cyclists and pedestrians are to cross; and bike-streets are typical residential streets that have been retrofitted to create separated bike paths that look and feel like a street. For the covering abstract of this conference see ITRD number E217481. and situational awareness benefits of different self-explaining design measures. A comparison will be done of different approaches leading to recommended common strategies (addressing Objective C of the call).The work will be focused on rural roads and having Vision Zero and transnational benefits of the projects outcome in mind. Other considerations and limitations will be to look on effects of combination of measures, different road types and conditions, as well as different road user categories. omprehensively in a project report. Findings will be made available to road authorities, researchers and practitioners across Europe. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
C 48450 (In: C 48449 [electronic version only]) /21 /72 /82 / ITRD E218768
Source

In: Transportation in a Climate of Change : proceedings of the 2009 Annual Conference and Exhibition of the Transportation Association of Canada, held in Vancouver, British Columbia, from October 18 to 21, 2009, 15 p.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.