Skip to main content

Seoul gears up for bike-only road

New route will connect to city-wide cycle rapid transit network next April
By Ben Spencer September 15, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Seoul to develop exclusive roads for cyclists (© Kamchai Charoenpongchai | Dreamstime.com)

The Seoul city government in South Korea is to open a bicycle-only road along its central Cheonggye Stream in April 2021.

A report by Yonhap News Agency says the 6km road will connect the Cheonggye Plaza in the central ward of Jongno and the Gosanja bridge in the eastern ward of Dongdaemun.

The project is part of the government's plans to expand the city's bicycle road network from 940km to 1,200km by 2030. 

Additionally, the government also wants plans to develop 23.3km of bicycle highways called cycle rapid transit (CRT) that are separated from roads used by cars. 

The Cheonggye Stream bicycle road will connect to bicycle highways that will be constructed to form a city-wide CRT. It will include the Jungnang Stream in the east and Sejong Boulevard and Hangang Boulevard, which reaches the Han River. 

City officials expect the CRT to provide cyclists better access to Seoul Forest and Olympic Park in south-eastern Seoul.

Construction along the Cheonggye Stream will mostly take place at night to reduce congestion. 

The move comes at a time when cycling is becoming more popular while also helping people maintain social distancing.

In March, New York City's Department of Transportation confirmed a 50% increase in cycling on all East River bridges compared to last year - while Colombia's capital Bogotá added 117km to the city's cycle path to disperse crowds away from public transport.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • HumanForest brings e-mopeds to London 
    December 28, 2021
    Vehicles can travel up to 28mph and join fleet of e-bikes already in UK capital
  • Japanese companies win ITS order for Vietnam's Expressway
    March 19, 2014
    Three Japanese companies, Toshiba Corporation, Hitachi and Itochu Corporation are to supply the Vietnam Expressway Corporation (VEC) with an intelligent transportation systems (ITS) package to be installed on the 55-kilometre Ho Chi Minh and Dau Giay section of Vietnam’s North-South Expressway. The order, worth around US$39 million, includes electronic toll collection (ETC), traffic control and equipment monitoring systems, and is the first for an integrated ITS package that Japanese companies have recei
  • £100m UK C/AV site opens next March
    November 30, 2020
    Assured CAV plans to develop and test vehicles safely 'at the limit of controllability'
  • Business Monitor revises forecast on Russia’s infrastructure sector
    February 14, 2014
    Business Monitor’ latest report on Russia’s infrastructure sector has considerably revised down their construction industry forecast for the country in 2014 in light of recently published lacklustre official data. With a contraction of 1.25 per cent in the first nine months of 2013, they now forecast only moderate growth in the industry of 1.5 per cent for 2014. Although they had anticipated significant growth in the industry as a result of the large investments made for the Winter Olympic Games, this s