Sean Gulbranson would love to bike from his Roseville home to, say, the nearby Target store. But to get there, he’d have to dodge vehicle traffic on a busy, multilane road, with cars moving so fast he’d feel he was risking life and limb.
“Usually if I’m biking in Roseville, I’m trying to get somewhere out of the city,” said Gulbranson, who bikes to his job in downtown Minneapolis through St. Paul. Both cities have more protected routes.
He should be getting some safer suburban routes, too, in the coming years. His Ramsey County suburb of 36,000 is working on its first dedicated bike plan, joining a growing number of suburban cities that have plans specifically addressing bike needs, according to the Metropolitan Council.

Roseville, which borders St. Paul and a sliver of Minneapolis, has limited bike-dedicated infrastructure. It has 40 miles of paved trails along roads and through parks that serve both bikers and pedestrians, and about 18 miles of striped shoulders.
The city has had a master plan for pathways for decades, but it wasn’t bike-specific, said Jennifer Lowry, Roseville city engineer and assistant public works director.
Roseville has obstacles to expanding its pedaling infrastructure: Most major roads there are county- or state-owned. “It’s all a partnership conversation, because it’s not our right-of-way to dictate,” Lowry said.
The city received a state active transportation grant for the bike plan, Lowry said, and is holding public engagement sessions and has an online survey for Roseville cyclists.
Biking the ’burbs
While the debates over bike lanes can be contentious anywhere, suburbs face their own set of challenges to adding them, said Amelia Neptune, the director of the League of American Bicyclists’ Bicycle Friendly America program.