Urban Cycling Infrastructure · Canada

Cycling lanes, bike paths, and commuter routes across Canadian cities

Detailed coverage of protected bike infrastructure, route planning, and urban cycling developments from Toronto to Vancouver. Updated regularly with publicly available data.

Protected bike lanes in Toronto, Ontario

Cycling infrastructure across Canada

Reports on bike lanes, path construction, commuter route changes, and infrastructure policy across major Canadian municipalities.

Cities and regions covered

Ontario

Toronto

Bloor Street, Danforth, University Avenue, and the downtown cycling network. Protected lanes, sharrows, and planned extensions.

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Quebec

Montreal

REV (Réseau Express Vélo), BIXI integration, seasonal path access, and the four-season cycling push.

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National

Commuter Routes

Dedicated commuter corridors in Ottawa, Calgary, Vancouver, and Edmonton — infrastructure design and connectivity gaps.

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How this content is put together

All coverage draws from publicly available municipal reports, Transport Canada data, and on-record infrastructure documents. No statistics are invented; where exact figures are unavailable, neutral language is used.

Publicly Available Sources

Data referenced on this site comes from Transport Canada, city open data portals, and organizations such as NACTO.

Editorial Approach

Coverage follows an informational, descriptive style. No commercial affiliations influence content selection or framing.

Update Frequency

Articles are reviewed and updated when municipal or provincial cycling infrastructure changes are reported through official channels.

Scope

Coverage focuses on Canadian urban cycling infrastructure. Rural routes and recreational trails are outside the current scope of this publication.