Canberra is one of the most cycle-friendly cities on earth – and it is getting better.
The bush capital has numerous cycleways because the city was planned with wide stretches of bushland and series of walkways. Cycles and cars were separated. More recently, construction has begun on a series of on-road cycle lanes. The importance of the separate cycle lane is that cars which cross the lane to turn, must give way to cycles in the lane, just like they give way to any traffic.
The cycleways weave through the suburbs and you can create any number of trips simply by buying the Canberra cycleways map from any newsagent.
A starting point, though, has to be the three lakes.
Lake Burley Griffin. The path goes around the lake and over all four crossings – Scrivener Dam, Commonwealth Avenue Bridge, Kings Avenue Bridge and Dairy Flat Bridge. It makes for a dozen combinations. The Commonwealth-Kings circuit is about 6kms. It takes in Commonwealth Park, the Carillon, the High Court, National Gallery and National Library and the flag display.
The full circuit is about 32kms, but the path is not quite complete. If you head east from the southern side of Kings Avenue, you have to go along Mundaring Drive in Kingston and through the Jerrabomberra Wetlands before picking up the path on Dairy Flat Road. I often come across bemused tourists at the path’s end at Mundaring Drive who have been told you can go right round the lake. A few signs would fix it.
Continue reading “2003_02_february_where to cycle”