Bicycle transportation planning and engineering


Bicycle transportation planning and engineering are the disciplines related to transportation engineering and transportation planning concerning bicycles as a mode of transport and the concomitant study, design and implementation of cycling infrastructure. It includes the study and design of dedicated transport facilities for cyclists as well as mixed-mode environments and how both of these examples can be made to work safely. In jurisdictions such as the United States it is often practiced in conjunction with planning for pedestrians as a part of active transportation planning.

Networks, signage and maps

In 1970 in the United Kingdom, the Milton Keynes Development Corporation produced the.
Cycle networks of routes can be developed in co-ordination with maps. Co-ordination can be local or national.

Bikeways

Some examples of the types of bikeways under the purview of bicycle transportation engineers include partially segregated infrastructure in-road such as bike lanes, buffered bike lanes; physically segregated in-road such as cycle tracks; bike paths with their own right-of-way; and shared facilities such as bicycle boulevards, shared lane markings, advisory bike lane, road shoulders, wide outside lanes, shared street schemes, and any roadways with legal access for cycling.

In roadway

guidelines state "desired width for a cycle track should be 5 feet. In areas with high bicyclist volumes or uphill sections, the desired width should be 7 feet ".
CROW standard width for one way cycle paths in the Netherlands is a minimum of 2.5 m. For bidirectional use the minimum is 3.5 m.

Unsegregated

Options for barriers are soft-hit posts, raised curb or traffic barriers.

Off road

Bicycle transportation engineers also are involved in improving intersections/junctions and traffic lights.
Advanced stop lines are one example of road markings on mixed mode shared space as cycling infrastructure.

Other infrastructure

s, curb extension, improving the road surface; building bicycle parking such as bicycle locks, bicycle stands, lockers.

Legislation

in California new bikeway design standards were last adopted in 1976. Those designs were adapted by the Association of American State Highway and Transportation Officials to become the AASHTO Guide for Bicycle Facilities, which is followed in the USA.