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Planning for a non-motorized trail along the Huron River began in the 1980s, with a City of Ann Arbor study for a "Huron River Greenway." [4] The Washtenaw County Parks and Recreation Commission took over the project in the late 1990s, and by 2001, the Border-to-Border Trail was envisioned as a 35-mile (56 km) trail from Hudson Mills Metropark to Ford Lake.
This list of rail trails in Michigan lists former railroad rights-of-way in Michigan that have ... Betsie Valley Trail: 22 35 Benzie: Ann Arbor Railroad [29] [30] [31 ...
The top locations include Honolulu and Ann Arbor, Michigan. ... In addition to more than 180 miles of public trails for hiking, biking, and running, artistically inclined folks can take in a show ...
Malletts Creek is a tributary of the Huron River and the most substantial waterway in the City of Ann Arbor at a length of 4.7 miles (7.6 km). [ 11 ] [ 12 ] A tributary of Maletts Creek flows through County Farm Park, and in 2011 and 2012 a portion of this tributary within the park was converted into a three-acre wet meadow with native vegetation.
Two of these trails are relevant to US 12. The St. Joseph Trail ran between the Benton Harbor–St. Joseph area and Detroit by way of what is now Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, Jackson, and Ann Arbor. The second, the Sauk Trail, ran further south through what is now Niles, and Coldwater to the Ann Arbor area. [10]
Betsie Valley Trail is a 22-mile (35 km) rail trail in Benzie County, Michigan, United States, owned by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and operated by Benzie County. [1] [2] [3] It is on the trackbed of a former Ann Arbor Railroad line and extends from Frankfort to Thompsonville, via Elberta and Beulah. [1]
[3] [4] Farther north, it crosses a line of the Ann Arbor Railroad [7] near Azalia as the trunkline runs to the east of Milan at the Monroe-Washtenaw county line. [3] [4] North of Milan, the freeway crosses a line of the Norfolk Southern Railway. [7] The landscape takes on a more suburban residential character as the freeway approaches the Ann ...
Starting at Michigan Avenue (modern-day US Highway 12) in downtown Detroit, it generally parallels the present-day Interstate 94. The 200-mile (320 km) route runs from Detroit to Ann Arbor, Albion, Marshall, Battle Creek, Paw Paw, and Benton Harbor. In some areas, it is still known as Territorial Road, like Calhoun County. [2]