Brant Cycling Club

Brant Cycling Club

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Brant Cycling Club aims to create and foster a cycling community that will;
• Help build a vibrant community through a healthy and positive cycling culture,
• Improve the lives of residents, including youth, through allowing them to
experience the joys of riding in their local area,
• Improve cycling infrastructure/trail network with in Brant,
• Organize cyclists and advocate for cyclin

06/08/2026
Photos from Brant Cycling Club's post 06/03/2026

Brant County always look better by bicycle
(Not just on days when somebody flips a Lamborghini onto the highway and makes traffic a mess.)

06/02/2026

Do we dream of a city where people can ride their bikes from one end of town to the other on safe and marked bike lanes? Yes.

Are we as organized as the complainers who stand in the way of these dreams instead of helping build a city where you don’t always need a car for every single trip? Evidently.

The argument against bike lanes is usually about cost. The evidence increasingly says that argument has it backwards.

A report from the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy, supported by the FIA Foundation, found that networks of protected bicycle lanes can be remarkably cost-effective. In the cities it studied, these networks created more economic value each year than they cost to build, paying for themselves in under a year once you account for transport savings and the health benefits of more people exercising. On that measure they outperformed far more expensive projects, including metro rail.

The safety case is just as strong. One of the most comprehensive studies of road safety, led by researchers at the University of Colorado Denver, found that it was not the number of cyclists that made a city safer, but the infrastructure built for them. Separated, protected lanes were linked to fewer fatalities for all road users, not only those on bikes.

The type of lane matters enormously. Research from Canadian cities including Toronto and Vancouver found that physically separated cycle tracks were far safer than painted lanes, and far better at convincing hesitant people to ride in the first place. Paint on the road, it turns out, does relatively little. A kerb or a row of bollards does a great deal.

Put together, the picture is hard to argue with. Protected lanes save lives, cut emissions, ease congestion, and often return their cost within a year. For cities still treating them as a luxury or a nuisance, the data suggests they are one of the best value investments a transport budget can make.

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Address


Brantford, ON