If your bike commute to work has been thwarted for the past three days by snowy lanes, it won't be for much longer.

The Department of Sanitation was working on clearing them Wednesday, an agency spokesperson said Wednesday afternoon.

"After snow storms, we work to clear the 6,000 miles of city streets first to open them to emergency vehicles, and then work on bike lanes," DSNY spokesperson Belinda Mager said in an email.

As of Tuesday afternoon, 99 percent of city streets had been plowed after Saturday's record-setting blizzard, the city agency told PIX 11. Altogether 1,726 snow laborers had cleared away 99.5 million cubic yards of snow, weighing 7.25 million tons.

But the city's bike lanes, a network the city has extended in recent years to service thousands of commuting cyclists and reduce traffic deaths, remained clogged with snow and slush the next morning.

Here are some of the bike lanes that were in need of shoveling or plowing in Brooklyn Wednesday morning: @NYC_DOT Clinton & Tillary St. Bike lanes. I particularly like how snow was plowed into bike lane instead of buffer. pic.twitter.com/aeWA8hcbsH — Brian Howald (@bdhowald) January 27, 2016 Flushing Ave #bikenyc lane: pic.twitter.com/dm5nE5Rgkz — Ian Sinclair (@im_sinclair) January 27, 2016 @im_sinclair Sands St. #bikenyc lane: pic.twitter.com/eYt1S7A2wK — Ian Sinclair (@im_sinclair) January 27, 2016 The lane leading from Flushing Avenue to Sands Street and feeding onto the Manhattan Bridge is a "major #bikenyc artery," according to Ian Sinclair, a city planner at the NYC Department of City Planning.