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The Disappearing Sixth Avenue Protected Bike Lane

What could be a safe, direct connection to the Midtown core and Central Park instead deposits cyclists into five lanes of chaotic car traffic.
The Disappearing Sixth Avenue Protected Bike Lane
The block between 47th Street and 48th Street where a woman on a Citi Bike was struck yesterday. Photo: Google Maps

The new protected bike lane on Sixth Avenue, between 8th Street and 33rd Street, has turned one of the city’s most stress-inducing bike routes into one of its best. But north of 34th Street, Sixth Avenue has no bike lanes whatsoever. What could be a safe, direct connection to the Midtown core and Central Park instead deposits cyclists into five lanes of chaotic car traffic.

We got a stark reminder of the unfinished business on Sixth Avenue yesterday morning, when the driver of a white van injured a 56-year-old woman riding a Citi Bike between 47th Street and 48th Street. The victim survived with her leg badly injured, according to witnesses.

In September 2015, when the Sixth Avenue protected lane was first announced, DOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg said DOT’s goal was to expand it north, but that the agency had to take it “one step at a time.”

Since then, the agency has said an extension from Canal to 8th could happen in 2017. No timetable has been provided, however, for the critical stretch between 33rd and Central Park.

In a statement, Transportation Alternatives Executive Director Paul Steely White said the city’s protected bike lane network isn’t expanding fast enough to keep up with the growing bike-share system. Almost 40 percent of the 613 bike-share stations are more than quarter-mile from a protected bike lane, he said.

“Today’s crash reportedly occurred at an unprotected location between 47th and 48th Street, providing more evidence that we need a protected bike lane along the entire length of Sixth Avenue, just as cyclists need protection along all of New York City’s dangerous major streets,” said White.

Photo of David Meyer
David was Streetsblog's do-it-all New York City beat reporter from 2015 to 2019. He returned as an editor in 2023 after a three-year stint at the New York Post.

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