Ottawa Citizen

Orléans, Cumberland to be linked by bike, walking paths

- MATTHEW PEARSON mpearson@postmedia.com twitter.com/mpearson78

Stephen Blais leans over the handlebars of his bike and looks to the south, where a crew of constructi­on workers is turning a strip of grass along a hydro corridor in the Avalon subdivisio­n into a new multi-use path.

Joggers, cyclists, in-line skaters, dog walkers and folks out for a stroll will soon be able to get from Innes Road to the southern edge of Ottawa’s urban boundary without stepping foot on a busy arterial road. The path will also intersect with the new east-west Trans-Orléans multi-use path, a 3.2-kilometre link between Millennium Park and transit station on Trim Road to the commercial hub at Innes and Tenth Line roads.

Elsewhere, the Cumberland Village cycling connection will see paved shoulders added to or extended on several rural roads to create an easier and safer connection between the village and Trim Road.

In all, the work represents nearly $5 million in recreation­al paths coming to Blais’s Cumberland ward this year, thanks in part to federal infrastruc­ture money.

“There has been a pent-up demand for these connection­s,” the city councillor said.

Even though the emphasis of the new pathways is on recreation­al use, commuter cyclists could theoretica­lly use them to reach a transit station and take advantage of OC Transpo’s rackand-roll service or head north to the pathway network along the Ottawa River.

The work currently underway on the Avalon north-south pathway, which Blais admits might yet be given a catchier name, fills a critical missing link. Paved pathways are already in place on either end of this one-kilometre stretch, expected to be complete by the fall.

The new routes will also connect to an establishe­d path that runs southwest from Innes Road near DuPlateau Street.

For people who live in the heart of the dense suburb, the new pathways will mean they don’t have to rely on a car to run simple errands or walk several kilometres out of their way to reach amenities.

“If you’re going to the drugstore to pick up a prescripti­on, you don’t want to have to get in your car if you can walk or bike in 15 minutes,” Blais said.

The lack of quick and easy connection­s is a common complaint among some suburb dwellers, but Blais said the new pathways will make it much simpler to reach parks, recreation centres, schools, shopping and rapid transit stations. And they make good use of an unused hydro corridor and land set aside by the city for future transit expansion.

“The hydro corridor is wasted space if you don’t put something there people can use,” he said.

Most people who filled out an online questionna­ire about the Trans-Orléans pathway requested the installati­on of benches, trash cans and lighting. The city said “yes” to benches, but additional garbage cans and pathway lighting aren’t part of the plan.

 ?? DARREN BROWN ?? Coun. Steve Blais on the constructi­on site of new bike paths near Lavoie St. and Carmella Cres. in Orléans.
DARREN BROWN Coun. Steve Blais on the constructi­on site of new bike paths near Lavoie St. and Carmella Cres. in Orléans.

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