Cycling Infrastructure

How Canada's Cities Are Rethinking the Road

From separated bike lanes on downtown arterials to regional trail networks linking suburban commuters, Canadian municipalities are reordering street space. This journal tracks those changes.

Bike lane on Rue de Verdun in Montreal, Quebec

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Cycling in Montreal
Bike Lanes June 2026

Expanding Bike Lanes in Canadian Cities

Municipal governments from Victoria to Halifax are adding protected cycling lanes at a pace not seen in previous decades. What's driving the change and what the infrastructure looks like on the ground.

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Bike path end marker on a cycling corridor
Commuter Cycling June 2026

Commuter Cycling Programs Across Canada

Bike-share networks, employer cycling incentives, and municipal commuter routes are changing how Canadians travel to work. A look at the programs operating in major urban centres.

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Segregated cycle lane on a city bridge
Infrastructure June 2026

Protected Cycling Corridors in Urban Canada

Dedicated cycling corridors physically separated from motor traffic represent a distinct step up from painted lanes. Several Canadian cities are building them into existing street grids.

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Protected cycle superhighway

About This Journal

Documenting the Shift Toward Cycling-Friendly Streets

ClearPath Journal focuses on how Canadian cities are redesigning streets to accommodate cycling. The content draws from municipal planning documents, transport authority publications, and publicly available data on infrastructure spending and route completion.

Coverage spans the entire country—from Vancouver's seawall extensions to Halifax's active transportation strategy—with attention to how decisions are made, what gets built, and how networks connect.

There are no commercial interests or advocacy positions behind this journal. It is an editorial record of public infrastructure choices.

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