ST. PAUL, Minn. — The city of St. Paul is looking to add more than 100 miles of new bikeways around the city.
The city already has more than 200 miles of bikeways. The new plan would increase that by more than 50 percent by the year 2040.
A typical bike lane you’ll see all around St. Paul separates cyclists and traffic separated by a barrier-less white line.
“You just have a painted stripe that’s separating you from multi-thousand pound cars that are zooming by you,” said Zack Mensinger, Chair of the Saint Paul Bicycle Coalition.
The city’s plan, if all goes as planned, would add 119 miles of new and improved bikeways.
The plan calls for more off-street, separated bikeways and paths throughout St. Paul.
Mensinger said surveys show roughly one-third of people avoid cycling, due to feeling unsafe, on busy roads like Hamline Avenue.
“Really this is about giving that extra third of people that option to really have that choice that they want to make, to get around that works best for them, helps them be healthier and more active, saves money on gas and things like that, saves a lot of wear and tear on the roads as well,” said Mensinger.