St. Louis Bike Lane Maps and Crosswalk Laws

Transportation Missouri 4 Minutes Read ยท published February 09, 2026 Flag of Missouri

St. Louis, Missouri maintains official maps and local rules governing bike lanes and pedestrian crosswalks. This guide explains where to find the citys published bike-lane maps, the municipal code provisions that set crosswalk and pedestrian right-of-way rules, and how enforcement, complaints, and appeals are handled at the city level. Use the links below to access the authoritative pages maintained by the City of St. Louis; each citation points to an official city or municipal-code resource so you can verify rules and procedures directly.[1][2]

Where to find bike lane maps

The City of St. Louis Department of Transportation and Public Works posts the official bicycle network and street-design resources, including current bike-lane striping, protected lanes, and planned projects. City GIS and transportation pages host downloadable maps and interactive viewers for route planning and design review.[1]

Check the transportation departments map viewer for the latest installed lanes before riding.

Where crosswalk rules are published

Regulations governing crosswalks, pedestrian right-of-way, and traffic-control devices are set out in the Citys municipal code and traffic ordinances. The consolidated municipal code available through the citys code publisher contains the operative language that officials enforce for crosswalk markings, signals, and driver obligations.[2]

Penalties & Enforcement

Enforcement of bike-lane and crosswalk provisions typically falls to municipal enforcement agencies and the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, with parking or traffic divisions handling non-criminal citations and the municipal court processing violations. Specific monetary fines, escalation ranges, and statutory sections should be confirmed on the cited municipal code and enforcement pages.

  • Fine amounts: not specified on the cited page; see the municipal code for any enumerated penalties.[2]
  • Escalation: first, repeat or continuing offence ranges are not specified on the cited page; consult enforcement or court notices for practice guidance.[2]
  • Non-monetary sanctions: orders to correct markings, stop-work or compliance orders, and court judgments are possible; specific remedies are set by ordinance or court order and may not be itemized on the cited pages.[2]
  • Enforcers and complaints: report unsafe or obstructed bike lanes, missing or damaged crosswalk signs, or driver violations through the Citys 311/reporting portal or the transportation department complaint pages.[3]
  • Appeals and review: appeals of citations or enforcement orders proceed through municipal court or administrative review where available; exact time limits are not specified on the cited page and must be confirmed with the issuing agency or court.[2]
If a specific fine or deadline matters for your case, get the citation number and consult the municipal code or the issuing agency immediately.

Applications & Forms

No single, named form for bike-lane installation appeals or pedestrian-crosswalk disputes is published on the cited pages; project permits or traffic-control requests are normally handled through the Department of Transportation and Public Works permitting process or the City's online services. For street-work permits or temporary traffic-control plans, check the transportation or public-works permit pages for application names and submittal instructions.[1][2]

Action steps

  • Locate the official bike-lane map and confirm whether a lane is designated on your route.[1]
  • Document any defect or obstruction (photos, date/time, location) before filing a report.
  • File a report via the Citys 311/reporting portal or the transportation department complaint page; keep the report number for follow-up.[3]
  • If cited, read the citation for appeal instructions and contact municipal court promptly to learn deadlines.
Retain photos and any communication with the city as evidence when following up or appealing.

FAQ

Where can I find the official City bike-lane map?
The City of St. Louis Department of Transportation and Public Works maintains the official map and interactive viewers on its transportation pages.[1]
Who enforces crosswalk rules in St. Louis?
Enforcement is handled by municipal enforcement agencies and the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department; procedures and penalties appear in the municipal code and enforcement pages.[2][3]
How do I report a damaged crosswalk or blocked bike lane?
Report problems using the Citys 311/reporting system or the transportation departments complaint form; keep your report number for tracking.[3]

How-To

  1. Open the City of St. Louis transportation maps or GIS viewer to locate designated bike lanes and current projects.[1]
  2. Photograph the issue (location, nearby signage, obstructions) and note the time and date.
  3. Submit a report through the Citys 311 portal or the transportation department complaint page and save the confirmation number.[3]
  4. If you receive a citation, read appeal instructions on the citation and contact municipal court or the issuing agency for deadlines and next steps.

Key Takeaways

  • Official bike-lane maps and crosswalk rules are published by City departments and the municipal code.
  • Report issues via the Citys 311 system and keep documentation for appeals.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of St. Louis Department of Transportation and Public Works - transportation maps and resources
  2. [2] St. Louis Municipal Code - consolidated ordinances and traffic provisions
  3. [3] City of St. Louis 311 - report a street, traffic or public-works problem