We are excited to announce that you can now view all existing, and designated bikeway facilities from the 2010 Bike Plan on our website. The new map gives you a number of viewing options that you can select via checkbox, including:
- Existing bikeways – existing bike paths, bike lanes, and bike routes, and Sharrows (shared-lane markings)
- 2010 Bike Plan bikeways – designated bike paths, bike lanes, bike routes, and Bicycle Friendly Streets (BFS)
- 2010 Bike Plan Network – Backbone, Neighborhood, Green networks
- Council Districts
You can also type in an address to zoom to a location of interest. The default map view is in “terrain” mode, but you can de-select this view under “Map,” allowing you to more closely examine locations. We’ll be updating this map on a regular basis to ensure that it reflects our most current, up-to-date bikeway facility inventory. Special thanks to Assistant Bicycle Coordinators Emily Dwyer and Ricardo Gutierrez for their hard work that made this map possible.
There’s no gap in the Venice Blvd bike lanes – which you show at Cadillac-Guthrie.
There’s also no bike lane on University Avenue, nor on Figueroa at Expo.
The Cypress Avenue bike lanes connect to the ones on Eagle Rock Blvd, too – your map shows a gap.
Sorry for so many comments, but there are more errors in the mapping of Bike Plan (including 9th Street in San Pedro, Expo right of way bike lane on the tracks)… any mechanism for reporting/fixing errors?
Hey Joe,
We’ll double check these. Comments on this blog post are fine for reporting errors. Thanks for the feedback.
Bike lanes on Fallbrook Ave continue north of Roscoe Blvd. This was added after this portion of the street was repaved in the last two years or so.
Great to see a bike map available on this website.
[…] Read the article: Online City of Los Angeles Bikeway Map now available […]
Awesome tool, thanks….just keep adding more bike facilities on the roads of Los Angeles!
[…] LADOT Puts Up-to-Date Bikeways Map Online (LADOT Bike Blog) […]
Hi Joe and Dennis,
Thanks for the notes on the existing facilities. We were a little eager on launching this, but all the existing facilities should be up to date by the end of today. Let me know if you find any other discrepancies.
Joe, regarding the Bike Plan layers, we’ll need a little more time to get those corrected. We had some issues with our shapefiles not saving correctly that we need to work out. I’ll post a comment here again when we get everything straightened out.
Thanks all!
-Nate
Wow, the Westwood Park path is still considered to be an existing bikeway? How can I request that it be properly maintained? There are huge cracks in the pavement and minimal markings indicating that it’s a bike path.
Here are two posts (one written by me) from Biking In LA which lay out the problems with this facility:
http://bikinginla.wordpress.com/2010/02/11/anatomy-of-a-bikeway-%E2%80%94-l-a-%E2%80%99s-abandoned-class-1-bike-path/
http://bikinginla.wordpress.com/2010/10/18/a-low-cost-fix-for-a-troubled-west-l-a-bikeway/
Map looks great. FYI, UCLA appears to have added additional sharrows on Gayley Ave from Charles E Young Dr S to Landfair Ave (a continuation of those you implemented).
[…] check out what’s available wherever you’re headed (it’s powered by Google Maps). The LADOT Bike Blog says “We’ll be updating this map on a regular basis to ensure that it reflects our most current, […]
It would be great if there was a way to highlight the City of Los Angeles boundaries (other than by turning on the City Council Districts) so that we can see the progress you are making better without blaming Beverly Hills’ or West Hollywood’s lack of progress on LADOT.
I noticed that the Riverside Drive bike lane extends from Laurel Canyon Blvd to Tujunga Ave on your map. However, I haven’t been able to find any documentation that the bike lane was extended for this section nor does Google Street View show such a bike lane. Was this recently added or is this an error?
[…] LADOT Bike Program recently took a giant leap forward with our website’s new interactive map, where you can see both existing and designated bikeway facilities from the City’s 2010 […]
[…] LADOT Bike Program recently took a giant leap forward with our website’s new interactive map, where you can see both existing and designated bikeway facilities from the City’s 2010 Bicycle […]