Hometransalt.org
Bicycle Blueprint
Introduction

NYC Cycling
1. NYC Bike Policy
2. State of NYC Cycling
3. Cyclists & Streets
A Bike and a Prayer


Riding Infrastructure
4. Street Design
5. Bridges
6. Road Surfaces
Greenways
8. Parks
9. Bicycles and Transit
10. Reducing Traffic


Security
11. Bicycle Theft
12. On-Street Parking
13. Indoor Parking


On the Job Cycling
14. Bicycle Messengers
Fifth, Park & Madison
15. Freight Cycles
16. Gov't Cycling


Reducing Risks
17. Accidents
Three Who Died
18. Air Pollution


Bicycle Education
19. Schools
20. Public Education


Appendices

      Chapter 7:
Greenways
a) Urban Oases
b) Paths for People
c) The Greenway Movement
d) History
 New Opportunities
f) A Model Greenway
g) Making Greenways
h) Greenway Corridors
i) Chapter 7 Recommendations
Figure7: Map of the Greenway System of New York City

New Opportunities

Read the latest news on this subject.

Opportunities for greenways abound throughout the New York area. Abandoned canal towpaths, harborfronts and railroad rights-of-way lend themselves perfectly to conversion to greenways. For example, an 11-mile stretch of defunct rail line running along Staten Island's north shore could form a vital link in several north-south regional greenway networks. Even the Reagan Administration, not always the nation's staunchest defender of open space, expressed enthusiasm for greenways: The 1987 report of the President's Commission on Americans' Outdoors proclaimed, “We can link our nation together with threads of green that everywhere grant us access to the natural world.”




a) Urban Oases
b) Paths for People
c) The Greenway Movement
d) History
 New Opportunities
f) A Model Greenway
g) Making Greenways
h) Greenway Corridors
i) Chapter 7 Recommendations
Figure7: Map of the Greenway System of New York City

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