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Riverfront Park is also part of the larger Capital Area Greenbelt and maintains bike lanes and paved paths. Along the park are many statues, memorials, a series of exercise pits, gardens, public art installations, and a Harrisburg Centennial time capsule .
Riverfront Park at Liberty Street (one block north of State St.), Harrisburg 40°15′46″N 76°53′21″W / 40.2628°N 76.8893°W / 40.2628; -76.8893 ( Genevieve Roadside
Riverfront Park (Harrisburg) W. Wildwood Park (Pennsylvania) This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 10:50 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
With the Susquehanna River's Riverfront Park and Capital Area Greenbelt within walking distance—as well as Italian Lake—Uptown Harrisburg is an example of relaxed urban living. Much of Uptown's development (post-automobile) lends itself to having longer blocks, rear alleys with detached garages, and shopping plazas/large surface parking ...
Riverfront Park may refer to: Newark Riverfront Park, a park in Newark, New Jersey; Riverfront Park (Salem, Oregon) Riverfront Park (Harrisburg), a park in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Allegheny Riverfront Park, a park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; North Shore Riverfront Park, a park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
The Capital Area Greenbelt is a looping trail located in the area of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.This 20-mile loop around Pennsylvania's capital city provides visitors and tourists with opportunities to hike, ride bicycles, skate, jog, fish, walk their dogs, spot rare birds, learn about history, enjoy native flora and fauna, and appreciate nature.
Visitors on Riverfront Park for "July 4th Food Trucks & Fireworks" in 2021. The festival's name has changed across the years, from "The Harrisburg Independence Weekend Festival" to "American MusicFest" in 1999, to "Harrisburg Jazz & Multi-Cultural Festival" by Mayor Linda D. Thompson in 2010, then "Harrisburg's Fourth of July Celebration" in 2013 under Mayor Eric Papenfuse, "Harrisburg ...
In light of publicity given to the U.S. Holocaust Museum, a group of survivors that had lived in the Harrisburg area pressed for a local memorial. [1] It was designed by David Ascalon for $200,000 on a site designated by the City of Harrisburg along the public park land adjacent to the Susquehanna River. [2] The Memorial was dedicated in 1994.