Bike to Work Spokane
 

 
 
 
 

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If you map your route to work on MapMyride.com or Bikely.com, save the route with BTWS as part of the filename. That will enable us to build a composite map of bike commuter routes in the city to supplement other information sources.

 

Spokane Bicycle Parking Map: You can help add new locations as you find them.

View Spokane Bike Parking in a larger map

 

  • Spokane Regional Bike Map: Large files linked at this page.
  • Area bike maps: Resource page with links from Spokane Regional Transportation Council.
  • Centennial Trail: The Centennial Trail travels 37 miles along the Spokane River. Connect to this website to find access points, a detailed map, and other information about this ADA-accessible, non-motorized trail.
  • Columbia Plateau Trail: A 130-mile-long rail-bed trail that traces the 1908 original path of the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railroad.
  • Fish Lake Trail: 10-mile railroad corridor between Cheney and Spokane; trail under development.
  • Area recreational rides: Some suggested rides in Cheney, Medical Lake, Newman Lake, and Rockford
  • "Epic Rides" (PDF): Brochure from Spokane Area Convention and Visitors Bureau of some great rides in the area.
  • Search MapMyRide.com for Spokane-area rides
  • Spokane "retail zone of the congested district" downtown where it is against city ordinance to ride your bike on the sidewalk means all the area within the congested district bounded as follows:
    • On the west by the west line of Monroe Street;
    • On the south by the south line of Second Avenue from Monroe Street to Washington Street; and by the south line of First Avenue from Washington Street to Bernard Street;
    • On the east by the east line of Washington Street from Second Avenue to First Avenue, and by the east line of Bernard Street from First Avenue to Spokane Falls Boulevard.
    • The retail zone shall also include both sides of Monroe Street from Main Avenue to Broadway, also both sides of Riverside, Sprague and First Avenues from Madison Street to Monroe Street; and both sides of Post Street from Spokane Falls Boulevard north to the Post Street bridge.
    • On the north by the north line of Spokane Falls Boulevard;

Know of other maps and trails we should highlight here? Email us: info@biketoworkspokane.org

 

 

 

 

 

   
 
BTW Spokane is comprised of bicyclists who generally would rather bike than drive for almost any reason. Please join us in our quest to make bicycle commuting a more attractive transportation alternative as a contribution to making Spokane a better place to live, work and play.
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