Minneapolis has long been one of the top bicycle commuting cities in the country. Commuting by bicycle offers benefits to both the riders and the community in the form of health and reduced pollution and traffic. Increasing density along the Glenwood corridor will mean more residents going to an from work. Unfortunately for bicycle commuters, Harrison lacks a designated, direct connection to downtown.As a part of Minneapolis' 10 year Transportation Access Plan, pedestrian and bicycle facilities have been analyzed throughout the city. While off-street paths exist close to Harrison and Bryn Mawr within the Cedar-Lake Corridor and Bryn Mawr Park - and north-south connectivity will see major improvement in the neighborhood with the construction of Van White Boulevard - east-west movement is still challenged. See the Bicycle and Pedestrian Gap Analysis - PDF. Improvements to the Glenwood Avenue corridor in the form of on-street bicycle lanes would serve to connect new commercial development and new residents to downtown resources as well as amenities within Wirth Park.
In the image above - from the Gap Analysis - item 25 is the Glenwood Corridor. Purple lines are existing or proposed off-street pathways and orange is the Downtown network.
Additional info:
City of Minneapolis Bikeways Masterplan - Northwest quadrant identifying the Glenwood Corridor





