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Route verte
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The Route verte (French for "Green Route," or "Greenway") is a network of bicycling and multiuse trails and designated roads, lanes, and surfaces in Quebec, Canada. The trail network inaugurated on August 10, 2007, and spans 5,034 kilometres (3,128 mi) as of 31 October 2013[update].[1] It includes both urban trails (for example, in and around the city of Montreal) and cycling routes into quite isolated areas in the north, as well as along both sides of the Saint Lawrence River, out to the Gaspésie region, and on the Magdalen Islands, linking more than 320 municipalities along the way. The Route Verte is not entirely composed of trails, as nearly 61% of the network actually consists of on-road surfaces, whether regular roads with little traffic, wide shoulders, special lanes on highways, or otherwise. The segregated trails are mostly rail trails shared-use with hikers and other users.[2]
![]() | You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (April 2025) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Routes
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Gallery
- Beginning of "axe 2" of the Route Verte at Ville-Marie in Abitibi-Témiscamingue
- "Axe 5" of the Route Verte along the Lachine Canal, in Montreal
- "Axe 1" of the Route Verte in the Lennoxville borough of Sherbrooke, used in the winter for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing.
- "Axe 1" of the Route Verte between Bishop's University and Lennoxville, used in the winter for walking.
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