Last year, fellow cyclist Peter Low organized the first Willowdale Community Ride with Councillor Lily Cheng. However, I couldn’t make it since Helen and I were on vacation in Uzbekistan at the time, though you can check this great recap from fellow bike blogger Lisa Stokes from Brampton. Today marked the second time Peter and Lily put together this ride which almost 100 people made it out for. A testament to show there indeed is demand for cycling in North York even with the lack of cycling infrastructure! 😉
September 13, 2025
January 20, 2025
Bathurst Complete Street Project
Upon reviewing the North York map for the 2025-27 Bike Plan, one of the most significant projects in the pipeline is the Bathurst Complete Street from Bainbridge to Steeles Avenues. A cycling route which also shows up in York Region’s 2022 Transportation Master Plan. Ahead of the public consultation scheduled for Thursday, January 30 (6:00 – 8:30 PM) at Rockford Public School, let’s look at what this project has to offer, as well as what’s needed to further improve connectivity in the area.
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Bathurst Complete Street rendering - Via City of Toronto |
November 25, 2021
Diving Into Toronto’s 2022 – 2024 Bike Plan
Back in July, I wrote about the upcoming bike plan update in Spacing to explore whether it would help Toronto build back better. While the overall trend would maintain last year’s annual pace of over 30 kilometres (if built), some major arterials were listed as studies at the time. Now that the final report has been released and will be debated at next Thursday’s Infrastructure and Environment Committee meeting, it’s time to look at what has changed since then and what needs to be done.
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Celebrating the opening of the Esplanade-Mill bikeway (Phase 1) |
October 26, 2020
Increasing Suburban Cycling in Toronto - Revisited
Back in late May, I wrote about the need to expand cycling in Scarborough, Etobicoke, and North York and suggested roughly 150 kilometres of routes that would be needed to build a robust cycling grid in Toronto. A lot has happened since then including the building of almost 40 kilometres of bike lanes – the largest expansion in Toronto’s history – and some new proposals issued by the Toronto Community Bikeways Coalition (which I am part of). Here is a review of what has been built under ActiveTO, the TCBC proposals, and which gaps remain to be filled.
Bayview from Rosedale Valley to River was one of this year's ActiveTO installations |
June 09, 2020
Toronto Needs an ActiveTO Phase 2
The recently installed Dundas East cycle tracks are part of the 25 km approved under ActiveTO |
May 25, 2020
Increasing Cycling in Toronto's Inner Suburbs
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Proposed spine (dark blue) and suburban (cyan) bike routes with existing infrastructure highlighted in red |
April 26, 2019
My Longitudinal Frustration
The West Toronto Railpath was part of my original bike commute |
November 07, 2018
North York's Cycling Black Hole
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Toronto's cycling map - note the large gap in North York |