Proposed Lee to Sea Greenway has 200k people within minutes of route

About 200,000 people live within minutes of the proposed Lee to Sea Greenway, according to campaigners who have launched a new website to promote the route.

Lee2sea.wordpress.com was recently launched by the Cork Cycling Campaign, the Transport & Mobility Forum Cork, and Cork Healthy Cities.

Dean Venables, chairman of the Cork Cycling Campaign, said: “The L2S, we think, hits the combination of leisure, commuting, and tourism uniquely strongly, with major benefits to each of those categories.

He added: “It would be a game-changer for Cork, providing a central, high quality cycling corridor traversing the city and hitting major places of employment, education, not to mention retail. There can be no doubt that a properly rollout of this greenway through Cork would be one of Ireland’s most important cycle commuting and recreational pathways.”

According to the website, the promoters of the route are not seting down a precise reoute at this stage but the route would start at the River Lee’s Inniscarra Dam travel into Cork city centre, run along the city’s historic quays, skirt the western shore of Cork’s huge natural harbour, and end at the impressive coastline near the harbour mouth.

The group said that within the city the route would use segregated two-way cycle paths alone with pedestrian pavements.

MORE: Lee2sea.wordpress.com


...That's the end of the article. Keep scrolling if you want to the comments, but IrishCycle.com *NEEDS* readers like you to keep it that way. It only requires a small percentage of readers to give a bit each month or every year to keep IrishCycle.com's journalism open to all. Thank you.


1 comment

  1. Brilliant idea, another Greenway in a beautiful part of the country. Access for cyclists and pedestrians to get out in nature. Already I have had enquiries from people wanting to bring Cycling Without Age, http://www.cyclingwithoutage.ie, to this new route. It would allow nursing and care homes and daycare centres the opportunity to bring their residents out for free, slow-cycling spins by the sea. Hurray!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.