Getting out of Dodge
Sometimes you just need to flee Champaign-Urbana on your bicycle for the flatness that lies beyond. And sometimes wind direction or a specific destination requires heading north or west, which means crossing an interstate or three. Just for fun, I ranked the local overpasses and underpasses from most spandex-wetting down to most comfortable. Your mileage may vary.
18) Bloomington Rd over I-57: To be avoided under any circumstances. There's little or no shoulder, tons of semi truck traffic, and it doesn't get a whole lot better once you cross the bridge, either, especially if you want to go north.
17) Prospect over I-74: Not a fun time, either, but at least the traffic is lower-speed and less truck-heavy. Crossing the interstate here is the least of your troubles, as navigating the bike hell that is North Prospect is much less fun. Ducking onto the bypass behind Meijer and taking that to Olympian is fairly peaceful.
16) Cunningham under I-74: This being Rt. 45, there are plenty of trucks to contend with, but with it being an underpass there's at least some shoulder to bail out onto.
15) Neil over I-74: Sort of the Prospect overpass' less-threatening brother, in that it offers a lot of the same problems, but at what seems to be a lower traffic volume.
14) Market over I-57: Our most-rural junction on this list, the Market crossing is not actually that bad, but riding Market north to get there can be pretty harrowing. I made a navigational error and ended up going south on this stretch of road once around dusk, and a barreling semi passed within a foot of me. Very life-affirming, if you're into that kind of thing.
13) Springfield under I-57: I've only rode west out of town once this way, and it wasn't miserable. Highway 10 has a shoulder for a little ways west of 57, but you're better off turning right or left at your first opportunity.
12) Bradley over I-57: Could be worse, but the shoulder is pretty dangerously cracked and breaking up on both sides of the road. So, if a Kraft truck comes roaring up behind you, you get to make a choice between staying on the white line and hoping the truck gets over enough, or taking your chances with the damaged pavement grabbing your wheel on the shoulder. Good times!
11) Kirby over I-57: Condition of the too-narrow-for-comfort shoulder is the issue here as well, but things are pretty mellow once you get past the interstate. Bonus points for the roundabouts in the McMansion subdivision right before you get to Staley. Sustainable!
10) Windsor over I-57: The pavement's in good shape and there's a bit of a shoulder, so this one really is pretty decent. Plus, you get to check in on the rapid progress of the YMCA construction and whatever else you may have missed since your last visit to Cherry Hills.
9) Mattis over I-74: Much, much improved since they paved the shoulders north of 74 last summer. Now, this crossing is your biggest impediment; it's great that it's a four-lane bridge, but changing lanes is kind of tricky going both directions.
8) High Cross over I-74: It's fairly high-traffic, but enough of a shoulder that it's not too bad.
7) Duncan over I-72: Most of my crossings of this one have been early in the morning, so traffic hasn't been an issue. No complaints about this bridge, although if you're headed north, you still have to cross 74 and 57 after you get done with this one.
6) Perkins over I-74: Crossing is pretty low-traffic and low-speed, plus you can duck east onto a rural road right after the crossing. Staying the course is fun, too, as there's a muslim mosque that purchased an old church building in a sort of edge-of-town suburban neighborhood.
5) Lincoln over I-74: Your go-to route for fleeing Urbana, as you can observe the scrapyard/ grocery warehouse/ garbage transfer station/ concrete plant wonderfulness, and then duck onto old Lincoln and be in the country in a big hurry. This route has the most potential for future loss of bike-friendliness due to any Olympian Drive extension or Lincoln re-routing plans that may come.
4) Mattis over I-57: Crossing the interstate is super-pleasant, especially with the recent shoulder re-paving. But if you're looking to go northwest from here, get ready for a couple of miles of no-shoulder riding on Mattis unless you want to tangle with the gravel on Ford-Harris. Definitely the most-improved crossing in town(s) in the three years I've lived here, though.
3) Oak under I-74: A great way to get from North Lincoln back to Champaign, or to get out of town from Champaign to the northeast. If you're not familiar, from Bradley and Market, go east on Bradley and turn left on Oak, which is your first street after the railroad crossing. Frontage road peacefulness awaits.
2) Market under I-74: If you need to get to North Prospect on a bike from either downtown Champaign or Urbana, this is really the only fairly-comfortable route. The potential for flats exists from plentiful broken glass, but the riding is pretty mellow. Not a great gateway to routes out of town, though, so be aware.
1) Curtis over I-57: I have to give Savoy some props here. Last Sunday, I rode the Prospect off-street trail from Windsor to Curtis, and then the shoulder and off-street path on Curtis all the way to this new, lovely, wide crossing. And once you're across 57, 1300N is about as quiet a road as you'll find leading out of C-U.
Have your experiences been the same or different? There's no point in putting together a ranked list if no one gets upset, so let me have it.
11 comments
Jeff
Not to nitpick (actually, yes to nitpick), but Curtis over I-57 is technically Champaign Township. Savoy has nothing to do with Curtis road west of Prospect.
That’s what I get for trying to say something nice about Savoy, I guess.
Kelley Wegeng
I pretty much agree with this list, although I can’t refrain from making additional comments:
For #13 Springfield under I-57 the real danger is not the underpass but the railroad tracks that cross Springfield just east of there at an angle. If you’re being crowded by cars there it’s really hard to go perpendicular across the tracks and if you’re on a road bike that can be a huge problem. It’s even worse if there’s loose gravel (and there sometimes is). My fear of that area is probably partially unjustified (I wiped out there once), but it counts as the scariest area in town for me.
For #1 you’re absolutely right that’s the best one in town but in the rest of the post you mentioned taking the Prospect off-street trail from Windsor to Curtis. I think I must have really bad luck on that one because 100% of the times I’ve tried it I’ve encountered obstacles such as cars nearly hitting me as they come out of the neighborhood to the east, elderly people with walkers or parents pulling kids in wagons or kids on big wheels, all of whom I’m really skittish about figuring out how to go around. I’ve been yelled at by cars for taking the road there instead of the path, too, so it seems I just cannot win on that stretch of road.
Also, as regards, #2 and #3, I’ve done #2 and felt unsafe enough as a female riding alone in that neighborhood that I don’t know that I would brave #3 which is probably even less traveled. It’s probably safe enough - I ride fast, and don’t have a set schedule heading that way, but I get nervous easily.
Coming back into town via #6 Perkins over I-74 is Really Fun, in part because you can go Really Fast. I’ve found myself needing to brake so as to not exceed the speed limit in that stretch before. (Which is probably also Not Safe, but…)
@Kelley: Good call on the tracks on Springfield. I knew I was forgetting something that made me avoid that area.
richard
Nothing good to say about the Savoy part of Curtis! First, west of US-45 is all 2-lane still. There is this really weird “no traffic” area taking up the northern-most lane east of Wesley (why?). Finally, it is not until well past Prospect that the shoulder appears.
Further west, there is a definite death trap. That nice shoulder vanishes just east of Wynstone. SO, one must either carefully move into a traffic lane. Or, one must go onto the side walk right where there will be lots of right-turning traffic onto Wynstone.
Anyway, I’ve made it home alive twice now. It’s still a definite(!) improvement over what it was 5 years ago.
Oh yeah - this is about overpasses. I really do like the Curtis overpass!
I take that Kirby overpass of I-57 almost everytime out of town, and it is a bear. I make every effort to avoid slowing traffic down as much as I can. I don’t want to be one of those cyclists that Ms. Butt wrote a letter to the editor about in the N-G a few weeks ago. But on Kirby heading out of town, there just is no option. It’s too narrow! You pretty much have to take the lane.
Sue
Per Curtis—once restaurants and motels and gas stations are there, it could contend with Prospect. Right now it’s sweet ;)
My big ol’ flash flag leads drivers to giving me more passing room and sometimes waiting behind me as I charge over Bradley from Parkland.
Rich
I agree with Jeff. I commute on Kirby over I-57 and the drivers range from very conscientious to complete jerks, although seemingly the better ones are starting to outnumber the other ones. It may have something to with the time of day. I take the lane.
I do everything possible to avoid north Prospect on bike or car.
That said, I take Bloomington Rd to Mahomet frequently and always have been treated nicely by the trucks. The shoulders have improved a lot in the last two years. The bigger danger is the entrance to Andersons on Staley during harvest where there are no shoulders and lots of young drivers with temporary CDLs.
Since there is no shoulder pretty quickly going west on Springfield, I don’t find myself using it much.
Duncan over 57 and 74 going north is now patched but was more hole than road for a while. It is far better coming from the other direction.
Kirby can be very problematic on weekends in good fishing weather because some drivers don’t realize their trailers are wider than their trucks.
Occasionally biking to Farm & Fleet is my lone contribution to the art of daredevilry.
UrbanaJake
Interesting and well-written. Bravo!
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