Bike Redlands

Bicycle Master Plan

The City of Redlands Bicycle Master Plan provides a vision for improving the bicycling environment by providing direction for the expansion of the existing bikeway network, connection of gaps, recommendations for bicycle support facilities, and education and awareness programs. 

Download PDF of Redlands Bicycle Master Plan (35 mb, may take awhile to download)

The city currently offers three primary types of cycling infrastructures. View the different types in the images below.

Current Bike Projects

Orange Blossom Trail Phase III

The third phase of the Orange Blossom Trail will extend from the current trailhead at Redlands Blvd and California Street west along the Mission Zanja to the City’s limits at Mountain View Avenue. The $1,080,850 project is made possible by a $918,722 Transportation Development Act grant matched by $162,128 from the City’s Palmetto Grove Fund.

The project is expected to finish in 2017.

obtphase3

Orange Street Bike Way

The Orange Street bikeway project will install a class I off-street bike path along Orange and Pioneer streets connecting the Redlands and Highland cycling networks and providing a convenient route for Citrus Valley High School students to commute by bike. The approximately $4.5 million project is jointly managed by Highland and Redlands and is 96% funded by grants from California’s Active Transportation Program and the Transportation Development Act.

Estimated year of completion is 2020.

orangestbikeway

MSRC Grant Project

This project will add approximately 16 miles of class II bike lanes to the City’s bike grid. Streets were selected for inclusion in the project based on priority routes identified in the City’s 2015 Bike Master Plan. The $250,000 project is jointly funded by a grant from the South Coast Air Quality Management District’s (SCAQMD) Mobile Source Air Pollution Reduction Review Committee (MSRC) and the City’s subvention fund. Installation of the bike lanes is being coordinated with the PARIS paving program.

The project is expected to finish in 2017.

Map of Redlands, labeled "MSRC," shows main roads with red lines highlighting San Bernardino Ave, Alabama St, Barton Rd, Olive Ave, and Dearborn St.