Queens Residents Launch Campaign for Bike Lanes Connecting Parks

Getting to nearby parks from Jackson Heights is much faster by bike than it is by transit. Now, a group of local residents wants safer ways to make the journey. Map: Queens Bike Initiative
Getting to nearby parks from Jackson Heights is much faster by bike than it is by transit. Local residents are mobilizing for street redesigns to help them safely bike to green spaces. Map: Queens Bike Initiative

Northern Queens residents who want to safely bicycle to nearby parks are trying to convince the city to install new bike lanes in neighborhoods from Astoria to Corona.

It all started with a post by Sergio Peçanha to a Jackson Heights neighborhood forum about two weeks ago. With Travers Park and the adjacent 78th Street play street set for reconstruction soon, Peçanha wanted to bicycle with his kids to other parks instead.

He found there weren’t many options nearby. In fact, advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks says Jackson Heights fails to meet virtually every metric the city sets for park access [PDF]. So Peçanha turned to his neighbors on the forum. “If we had bike paths connecting our neighborhood to parks in Northern Queens,” he wrote, “it could be a huge improvement for the neighborhood.”

Soon, other local residents joined and began calling their campaign the Queens Bike Initiative. “We’ve been doing everything through email. We’re excited to get on the ground,” said Alexia Tate, a Jackson Heights mom who began bicycling a year ago and teaches music classes throughout Queens. She heard about the effort through a parents’ forum.

“It’s growing by the minute,” said James McIntyre, a bike commuter who is moving to Jackson Heights from Brooklyn and works in affordable housing financing. “We want to make it as inclusive as possible.”

The advocates would like to see new greenways and protected bike lanes running as far west as the waterfront in Astoria and Long Island City and as far east as Flushing Meadows Corona Park. The paths could connect residents in Steinway, East Elmhurst, Jackson Heights and other neighborhoods to nearby parks and provide a safe way to make trips that take a long time by subway or bus.

So far, the group has met with members of the Transportation Alternatives Queens committee and read up on existing efforts to secure new bike lanes. Up next: Meeting with elected officials and community boards. The group has also started a petition directed at DOT.

“I haven’t actually been involved in contacting public officials or working with community boards,” Tate said. “I’m really interested in doing that.”

“We’re definitely in the early planning stages. We hope to be working on the proposal through the summer,” Tate said. “The protected bike lane is what we’re really after, at the end of the day. That would be really ideal. But we have to get out on the streets and see what’s viable.”

The group is hosting a ride on Sunday — the same day of the Tour de Queens — to scope out potential streets for bike lanes. It meets at 11 a.m. at the Travers Park greenmarket composting and fabric recycling booth, on 78th Street near Northern Boulevard.

“Everybody has different ideas about what they’d like to see,” Tate said. “We are looking for as much support as we can get.”

A previous version of this post incorrectly attributed a quote about working with public officials and community boards to James McIntyre. The quote has now been properly attributed to Alexia Tate. Streetsblog regrets the error.

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