Sharrows aim to help drivers and cyclists share the road
New bicycle lanes are being painted on more than a half a dozen busy traffic routes throughout Winnipeg.
The new lines create "sharrows," or narrow lanes demarcated on existing streets; it's hoped they'll help ease tension between cyclists and motorists, who often feel like rivals for space on the roads.
"It's going to increase the awareness of drivers to share the road with cyclists, and … it'll increase the awareness for cyclists, you know, to stay where the sharrows are," said Janice Lukes of the city's active transportation advisory committee.
Since the new lanes are on seven busy streets, most of the people who will use them will be experienced cyclists, Lukes said. She hopes the sharrows lead the city to take more steps to become more cycling-friendly.
"It's an absolutely huge first step, from nothing to this — and then it's only a matter of time where you're going to have more families [who] want separated lanes," she said.
"I do believe that the will of the government is there to where eventually we'll see that, maybe in the next two years. It wouldn't surprise me."
The city set aside $100,000 in the 2008 capital budget for the sharrow initiative.
The lanes, accompanied by signs urging motorists and cyclists to "share the road," will appear on:
Higgins Avenue. Roblin Boulevard. Grant Avenue. Regent Avenue. Plessis Road. Dakota Street. Dunkirk Drive.
