Toronto Star

WHEELS ON WOODBINE

Woodbine Ave. sees spike after lanes installed, cars see increase in travel time

- DAVID NICKLE TORONTO.COM

City sees a near tripling of bicycle use two years after installing bike lanes along Woodbine Ave.,

The installati­on of bike lanes on Woodbine Ave. has resulted in a near tripling of cyclists using the street in just two years — and an increase in travel time for cars heading north on the street of just over two minutes during peak periods.

Those are results of two traffic counts on Woodbine between Cosburn Ave. and Gerrard St., one conducted in May 2016 and another in May 2018.

The bike lanes, fully separated in part, run along Woodbine Ave. from O’Connor Dr. in the north to Dixon Ave. in the south. First installed in 2017, the lanes were immediatel­y controvers­ial, as residents south of Gerrard St. complained that the congestion caused by narrowing Woodbine to a single lane were sending commuter traffic along residentia­l streets.

Since then, city transporta­tion staff have made adjustment­s to turn lanes and traffic flow, and Toronto council has approved plans to adjust onstreet parking north and south of Danforth.

The new traffic count numbers indicate that the bike lanes are being used.

Staff did counts over two oneweek periods: May 11 to May 17, 2016 — before the lanes were installed — and another be- tween May 12 and May 18, 2018 — about a year after the lanes had been installed.

In 2016, the average number of cyclists ranged from 70 to 80 per day.

In 2018, that number ranged between 220 and 230 a day — a near tripling of cyclists on Woodbine.

There’s also been a 30 per cent increase of people cycling on Woodbine in the past 10 months alone. In Oct. 2017, there were 425 cyclists on that section of Woodbine. This July, counts on Woodbine south of Danforth Ave. saw a peak of 580 cyclists on one day.

Motor vehicle travel times were compared between May 2016 and May 2108, in both directions between O’Connor and Queen St. E., in three periods: morning (7-10 a.m.), midday (11 a.m-1 p.m.) and afternoon (4-7 p.m.).

In the morning, a northbound trip took 9:05 minutes, up from 8:36 minutes, and a southbound trip took 8:41 minutes, up from 8:23 minutes.

The midday southbound trip took a second less, 8:19 to 8:20 minutes. Northbound cars took 1:15 minutes longer, with their trip up to 8:48 minutes from 7:33 minutes in 2016.

The afternoon rush saw the longest delays. Northbound trips went from 9:16 to 11:57 minutes — an increase of 2:41 minutes, and southbound trips increased from 8:20 to 10:32 minutes, an increase of 2:12 minutes.

The city also looked at the volume of traffic using side streets — specifical­ly Woodmount Ave. between Danforth and O’Connor, and Savoy Ave. and Heyworth Cres. east of Woodbine. The city found no noticeable change in congestion on Woodmount or Savoy after the installati­on of the bike lanes on Woodbine.

There were no “before” stats available for Heyworth Cres., but counts delivered in October 2017 saw a total of 237 cars using Heyworth over an eighthour period.

Cars moved at an average of 25 km/h in the 30 km/h posted speed zone.

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 ?? RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR ?? First installed in 2017, the Woodbine Ave. bike lanes prompted fears of commuter traffic on residentia­l streets.
RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR First installed in 2017, the Woodbine Ave. bike lanes prompted fears of commuter traffic on residentia­l streets.

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