San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SR-56 BIKE PATH WORK TO BEGIN IN 2023

- BY KAREN BILLING Billing writes for the U-T Community Press.

An expanded 5/56 bike path extension project is anticipate­d to start constructi­on in June 2023, improving connectivi­ty for cyclists commuting between Interstate 5 and Interstate 15 as well as stretching out a popular fitness corridor for walkers, runners and stroller striders.

The 56 bike path is a 10.5mile multi-use pathway that runs along state Route 56 between I-5 and I-15, with separate dirt and paved pathways. Trailheads are on Carmel Country Road, Carmel Creek Road and El Camino Real. Where the trail comes through Carmel Valley, it has been named the Marvin Gerst Trail in honor of a longtime community volunteer.

Currently, the pavement skids to a halt at a dirt trail approximat­ely 200 feet away from I-5. The proposed Caltrans project would extend the bike path and go underneath I-5 where it will connect to the Old Sorrento Valley Road and the Coastal Rail Trail and I-5 North Coastal Trail.

This final connecting segment will improve the safety for those heading west toward the coast — commuters will no longer have to cross the busy streets of El Camino Real and Carmel Valley Road. By linking with Old Sorrento Valley Road, trail users can also gain access to the Torrey Pines Preserve.

The project has had a few delays, originally expected to begin last year.

“The project slated to begin in fall 2021 included, among other infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, only laying new asphalt over a small portion of the old Sorrento Valley Road bike path. It did not include the larger connection of the bike path,” said Steve Welborn, Caltrans public informatio­n officer. “In an effort to expand the project and deliver a more efficient product the planning department was able to procure funding to complete the connection for a larger I-5/SR-56 bike path.”

This extra work resulted in a delay of the project due to a third party utility relocation as well as a change in the environmen­tal process, needing additional permits and involving Coastal Commission approval because of the wetlands and sensitive areas nearby.

“All is now on track for the project to begin constructi­on next summer,” Welborn said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States