Bike & Ped
- Escalon Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons
- Lathrop Warren Avenue Sidewalk Improvements
- Lathrop Regional Ped-Bikeway Project
- Lathrop Class 2 Bikeway to ACE Station
- Lathrop Active Transportation Plan
- Lodi Church Street Road Diet
- SJRRC East Channel Street Streetscape & Connectivity Project
- Central Stockton Road Diet & Striping Connection Project
- Stockton SRtS Priority Safety Project
- Stockton Miner Avenue Complete Street Improvements
- Stockton South Airport Separated Bikeway Project
- Stockton California Street Road Diet Project
- Tracy Boulevard Sidewalk
Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons - Escalon
Escalon students, seniors and other residents can cross State Route 120 at Viking Street and Elizabeth Avenue more safely now that Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons and other safety features have been installed at those intersections thanks to Measure K funding. The recently completed project upgraded one crosswalk and added two new crossings with flashing lights and high visibility striping to make it safer for neighbors day and night.
Warren Avenue Sidewalk Improvements - Lathrop
The completed Warren Avenue Sidewalk Improvements in Lathrop greatly improves access and safety for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists in a disadvantaged neighborhood by enhancing sidewalks, curbs, gutters, and ADA-compliant ramps. Joseph Widmer Jr. Elementary School students now have 5 ½-foot-wide sidewalks, ADA-compliant ramps, 2-foot curbs and gutters, and 7-foot-wide parking lane on both sides of the street thanks to the Safe Routes to School project funded by Measure K.
Regional Ped-Bikeway Project - Lathrop
Lathrop pedestrians, cyclists and motorists will be safer because of a project now in planning phase that is using Measure K funds. Updating the City Bicycle Master Plan to be consistent with the San Joaquin County Regional Bicycle Master Plan will lead to safety improvements across Lathrop and the rest of the region. The plan will inventory and evaluate current facilities citywide and provide direction for developing and implementing safe and convenient bike paths, including future construction of regional bikeways.
Class 2 Bikeway to ACE Station - Lathrop
Regional commuters and others traveling in San Joaquin County will benefit from this project in Lathrop. Using Measure K funding, it will design and construct about 4.2-miles of Class 2 bikeway south on Harlan Road from Louise Ave to the Lathrop-Manteca ACE Station. The project, currently in the environmental impacts review phase, will include striping, signal and signing improvements to facilitate the bikeway for multi-modal users. The project will connect residents north of Louise Avenue and in the growing River Islands neighborhood to the Lathrop-Manteca ACE commuter train station. That also reduces vehicle emissions and miles traveled, improves air quality, and encourages a healthy lifestyle by increasing opportunities for active transportation, or self-propelled, human-powered transportation, such as walking, bicycling, or even skateboarding.
Lathrop Active Transportation Plan (ATP) - Lathrop
Lathrop residents who get around on bicycles, on foot or other self-propelled, human-powered transportation will benefit from a comprehensive citywide Active Transportation Plan (ATP). Using Measure K funding, it will help Lathrop to improve, expand and enhance the safety of active transportation mobility throughout the city. The ATP will identify opportunities to increase walking and biking use and help the city address regional goals to reduce vehicle miles traveled and greenhouse gas emissions, which improves air quality throughout the region. The city is currently reviewing proposals from consultants for professional transportation services to plan and develop the ATP.
Church Street Road Diet - Lodi
Lathrop residents who get around on bicycles, on foot or other self-propelled, human-powered transportation will benefit from a comprehensive citywide Active Transportation Plan (ATP). Using Measure K funding, it will help Lathrop to improve, expand and enhance the safety of active transportation mobility throughout the city. The ATP will identify opportunities to increase walking and biking use and help the city address regional goals to reduce vehicle miles traveled and greenhouse gas emissions, which improves air quality throughout the region. The city is currently reviewing proposals from consultants for professional transportation services to plan and develop the ATP.
East Channel Street Streetscape and Connectivity Project - San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission
A project in Stockton by the San Joaquin Regional Rail Commission using Measure K money will greatly improve the ability for regional residents to travel between the Robert J. Cabral Station, the San Joaquin Regional Transit District’s Downtown Transit Center, and beyond to the city’s waterfront and entertainment district. Street improvements to Channel, Stanislaus, Grant and Aurora streets will upgrade that connectivity. The project will strengthen active transportation connections through new sidewalks, high visibility crosswalks, bike lanes, street lighting, landscaping and other improvements. The idea is to encourage people to use different types of transportation and further the revitalization of Downtown Stockton. Final design for the project is being completed, but construction is being paused while the city undergrounds utilities in the project area. Construction is expected to begin in spring 2023.
Central Stockton Road Diet and Striping Connection Project - Stockton
Stockton pedestrians, cyclists and motorists will be able to get where they are going more safely due to the Central Stockton Road Diet and Striping Connections Project. Using primarily Measure K Bicycle, Pedestrian, Safe Routes to School money and a Smart Growth Incentive Program grant, which is administered by SJCOG, the project will implement a low-stress bicycle facilities, or bike lanes and other bicycle infrastructure, in central Stockton to improve intercity connectivity. East and west bicycle facilities will be built on Monte Diablo Avenue, Fremont Street, and Acacia Street from Louis Park to California Street, and on Fremont Street from Baker Street to El Dorado Street. Reduced travel lanes on Madison Street and bicycle lane improvements will serve as a north/south connector between the project’s east/west bicycle facilities, and would extend from Harding Way to Fremont Street. The city expects to complete project design in fall 2023.
Safe Routes to School Priority Safety Project - Stockton
The Safe Routes to School Priority Safety project, currently under construction in Stockton with anticipated completion in December 2022, will improve safety and accessibility for students and other pedestrians near six elementary schools throughout Stockton — McKinley, Pittman, George W. Bush, Taylor, John Marshall and Roosevelt. The project will construct pedestrian crossing improvements, including new raised medians, pedestrian refuge islands, vehicle lane reductions, curb and gutter, curb ramps, high visibility crosswalks, and other signing and striping.
Miner Avenue Complete Street Improvements - Stockton
Measure K funding was used for the Miner Avenue Complete Street Improvements project rehabilitating Miner Avenue between Center Street and Aurora Street. Pedestrians, cyclists and motorists can travel more safely along this corridor because of this project completed in January 2022. Vehicle travel lanes were reduced from two to one in each direction, the roadway was repaved, buffered bicycle lanes were added, landscaped medians were installed, and a roundabout at the intersection of Miner Avenue and San Joaquin Street was constructed repurposing the Hunter Square Fountain Spire at the center of the roundabout. Other streetscape amenities — bike racks, benches, trash receptacles and landscaping along the widened sidewalks — will help to revitalize the Miner Avenue Corridor to help incentivize economic development in this corridor.
South Airport Separated Bikeway Project - Stockton
The South Airport Separated Bikeway Project will increase safety and access for pedestrians and cyclists along Airport Way between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Performance Drive near the Stockton Metropolitan Airport in South Stockton. Class IV bicycle facilities — bike lanes with a physical separation such as a concrete curb, landscaping or other physical barriers between the bikeway and the travel lanes — will be built along the project corridor. Traffic signals will be upgraded to account for bicyclists and a pedestrian walkway will be improved to current Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) standards. Design of the project will be completed by the end of 2022 and construction will begin in spring of 2023.
California Street Road Diet Project - Stockton
The California Street Road Diet Project in Stockton will make things safer for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists. Travel lanes will be reduced and bicycle lanes and other infrastructure will be built along the project corridor. Traffic signals and sidewalks will be upgraded to account for bicyclists and to meet current Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) standards. The project is split into two phases. Phase I runs along California Street between Alpine Avenue and Miner Avenue and Phase II runs along California Street from Miner Avenue to Eighth Street. The project continues along Eighth Street from California Street to El Dorado Street. Project design is complete and construction is expected to begin in spring 2023.
Tracy Boulevard Sidewalk - Tracy
Tracy is using Measure K funds in designing the Tracy Boulevard Sidewalk Project to improve Tracy Boulevard between Valpico and Linne roads making it safer for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists. Work will include earthwork and grading, a new meandering sidewalk, Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant ramps, landscaping and irrigation, benches, and trashcan and refreshed striping for the area. The project will provide easier access along the northern and southern portions of Tracy Boulevard from Gandy Dancer Drive, which currently has no sidewalk along this portion of the roadway. The project will also close the sidewalk gap to the ACE Train Station parking lot immediately south of the project promoting greater accessibility for Tracy residents in the area.