Community Corner

Residents Have Opportunity to Weigh in on Regional Bike Plan

Great Rivers Greenway seeks input from people on large-scale regional bicycle plan at an open house at UMSL.

The North County area, including Florissant, has an opportunity to have a say in the development of the area’s bicycle routes and trails throughout the area.

The Great Rivers Greenway hosts an open house on Tuesday, May 17 at the University of Missouri-St. Louis Millennium Student Center. People have an opportunity to come through between 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.

The event is the second of a series of open houses by Great Rivers Greenway that allows St. Louis area residents a chance to weigh in on the agency’s large scale, long-range regional bicycle plan to enhance on-road connectivity in the region throughout the next 20 years. A previous event occurred at the earlier this month.

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Todd Antoine, deputy director of Great Rivers Greenway, said the plan’s goal is to create safer routes for bicyclists and increase the use of bicycles for transportation.

“Some folks out there are comfortable riding on the roads. Others prefer to stay on the bike trails,” Antoine said. “We’re trying to get folks in the middle."

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He said in addition to making roads safer for cycling, the plan includes educating bicyclists and motorists to share the road with each other.

Paul Wojciechowski, vice president and St. Louis area manager for CH2M HILL, which is the engineering firm involved on the project, said being bicycle friendly doesn’t necessarily cost municipalities more money.

“It doesn’t always involve a cost for the city,” Wojciechowski said. “It could be simply striping the road differently. (If) they’re going to restripe a road, striping is already involved in the project cost anyway."

For example, turning a four-lane road into a three-lane road with a turn lane and wider shoulders sometimes can help traffic, Wojciechowski said.

For projects with additional expenses--say for a raised bicycle lane--he said the plan can help direct municipalities to funding sources such as grants and low-interest loans for bicycle projects.

“This is a great way to get people out and raise safety issues to address,” said Brian Plegge, an avid bicyclist from Webster Groves who also bikes to work downtown.

Other open houses on the regional bicycling plan will be from 4:30 - 7 p.m. at the following locations:

  •  May 19 - St. Peters City Hall, 1 St. Peters Centre Blvd.

During the meetings, residents can learn about existing routes in their communities, view maps, comment on the proposed network of regional on-road routes, review what it will take to implement the system and learn about the performance measures needed to ensure successful expansion of an interconnected on-road system of bicycle routes in the region.

The plan encompasses St. Louis, St. Louis County and St. Charles County. More than 100 municipalities are involved in the planning effort.


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