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Riders stop at one of the high trestles on the Virginia Creeper Trail. The Virginia Creeper Trail is a 35-mile (56 km) multi-purpose rail trail.Located in southwestern Virginia, the trail runs from Abingdon to Whitetop, Virginia, near Mount Rogers National Recreation Area and the North Carolina state line.
Colton Ave. rail-trail, runs approximately 1.7 miles along Colton Ave. and Inland Center Drive in Colton and San Bernardino on former Pacific-Electric right-of-way; Duarte Bike Trail, spans 1.6 miles from Buena Vista Street to Vineyard Avenue in Duarte, using a portion of Pacific Electric's former Glendora line; El Dorado Trail; Fairfield ...
In June 2018, NOVA Parks received a $3.2 million grant from the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority that enabled it to expand a 1.2 miles (1.9 km) long W&OD Trail segment within the City of Falls Church. The project converted an 11 feet (3.4 m) wide section of the trail and part of its adjacent green space into a dual paved path ...
As of Aug. 16 or sooner, if the contractor hired to do the work beats its deadline, the last 2 miles of that 9-mile gap will disappear under an extension of the High Trestle Trail ― though some ...
On Thursday, the bridge's grand reopening was celebrated in a ceremony attended by over 70 trail users and community leaders. New Trestle to Trestle bridge opens, connecting trail users from Des ...
Volunteers worked alongside park staff to pull tires, tarps, and other debris from the New River. New River Trail State Park is a 57.7-mile (92.9 km) rail trail and state park located entirely in southwest Virginia, extending from the trail's northeastern terminus in Pulaski to its southern terminus in Galax, with a 5.5-mile (8.9 km) spur from Fries Junction on the main trail to Fries.
Clarke's Gap, also known as Clarks Gap, is a pass through Catoctin Mountain west of Leesburg, Virginia.The gap has an elevation of 643 feet (196 m). The gap is not a true wind gap, but rather a man-made railroad cut through a local saddle point between two ridges to the southeast and northwest created by the drainage of Dry Mill Branch of Tuscarora Creek to the east and an unnamed tributary of ...
The Washington Secondary Rail Trail is a designated section of the East Coast Greenway. In 2014, the original Coventry Greenway section was rehabilitated, and the 4.8 miles (7.7 km) Trestle Trail East section was added, extending the western end by almost five miles.