Melbourne is set to get its first bicycle "super highway", with a planned 2.5 kilometre elevated path proposed to connect commuters from the inner-west to the city.

Key points: 14 kilometres of new cycle paths will link Melbourne's west to the city

14 kilometres of new cycle paths will link Melbourne's west to the city Included in the plan is a 2.5 kilometre "bicycle super highway" over Footscray Road

Included in the plan is a 2.5 kilometre "bicycle super highway" over Footscray Road The upgrades are part of the Government's Western Distributor project

The bikeway, designed to cater for high-speed commuters, will take cyclists from Shepherd Bridge over Footscray Road and into the Docklands.

It will form one section of 14 kilometres of proposed new cycling infrastructure in the city's west.

The new bike paths are part of the Victorian Government's $5.5 billion Western Distributor project, which will see the construction of a series of roads aimed at taking trucks and heavy vehicles off the West Gate Bridge.

The "veloway" was part of the submission by a consortium led John Holland and CPB Contractors, after the Government released a reference design for bike path upgrades last year.

The bridge will allow cyclists to avoid crossing busy Whitehall Street in Footscray. ( Supplied: Victorian Government )

Victoria's Bicycle Network's Gary Brennan, who was consulted on the plan, said the bikeway would be suspended under the Western Distributor Roadway, allowing riders to avoid traffic lights and heavily used intersections.

"Because they're building an elevated freeway, it made sense to attach a bike lane underneath the elevated freeway," he said.

"So it would also be elevated and would not have to cross any cross streets, railway lines and would also get the bike riders of the Maribyrnong River and the Moonee Ponds Creek," he said.

Victorian Transport Minister Luke Donnellan said while pedestrians would be allowed on the elevated cycleway, they would be encouraged to use existing bike paths into the city.

"You will be able to walk in it, but really it's very much focused on those opportunities for people to ride to and from work," he said.

"I suspect it will be used a lot by people travelling at speed, but there's also the path along Footscray Road, which will be left for people doing sightseeing, and just enjoying looking at the port and the like.

"The existing paths will be upgraded and improved, and will also form that opportunity for people to maybe just have a slow ride."

Trucks preventing cycling uptake

Mr Brennan said while the number of cyclists coming in from the west has grown, insufficient infrastructure and the number of trucks on the road were preventing it from rivalling the north as a cycling destination.

"The demographics from the west are changing and there are a lot more younger households forming in the west, there are a lot more people who are interested and keen to ride bikes," he said.

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"We counted on Footscray Road at the entrance to the CBD, and we're getting between 1,600 and 1,800 riders in the morning peak.

"Some of those are coming from the Moonee Ponds Creek to the north and others are coming from Footscray and Yarraville and Williamstown to the south.

"It's not up to [inner-north] levels yet."

Included in the Government's plan will be a bridge near Yarraville Gardens, allowing cyclists to avoid Footscray's busy Whitehall Street, where a cyclist was killed last month.

The proposal will now undergo an environmental effects consultation, to be completed by the end of the year, with construction due to begin in 2018.

Yesterday, the Government also announced a ban on trucks on Frances Street and Somerville Road in Yarraville, and Buckley Street and Moore Street in Footscray.

Local Labor MP Wade Noonan said residents had been frustrated by trucks using suburban roads and worried about their families' safety and health.

"Some 5,000 trucks a day use a section of Frances Street to access the port," he said.