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The Genesee Valley Greenway is a rail trail in western New York's Genesee River valley. The trail stretches for 90 miles (140 km) along a former Pennsylvania Railroad right-of-way as well as adjacent land from the Genesee Valley Canal. The low grade path is a multi-use trail which is well suited for hiking, biking, horsebacking riding and cross ...
Genesee Valley Greenway: 59 miles (95 km) Jefferson Road Rt. 252 to Letchworth State Park and Sonyea, New York. Then segments and gaps to Cuba, New York: Monroe, Livingston, and Allegany Counties Genesee Valley Rail Road (Pennsylvania Railroad) Gorge Trail: 2.2 miles (3.5 km) [9] Chittenango Falls State Park, Madison County
East Coast Greenway; Empire State Trail; Erie to Pittsburgh Trail; G. Genesee Valley Greenway; H. Harlem Valley Rail Trail; High Line; Hudson Valley Rail Trail; J.
Genesee Valley Greenway pedestrian bridge 2012 [32] Genesee Valley Greenway Uses old Pennsylvania Railroad pilings (1881–1963) Possible old Genesee Valley Canal aqueduct pilings (1840–1878) Leicester–Mt. Morris (village) Old Mt. Morris Dam
Genesee Valley Park covers 800 acres (3.2 km 2) and features two public golf courses and a recreational area. [1] The park has four foot bridges crossing the Genesee River and Erie Canal, and is located at the intersection of the Genesee Valley Greenway trail and the Erie Canal towpath trail, which stretches across New York State.
Genesee Valley Trail 4.5 7.2 Genesee: Grand Trunk Western Railroad [72] George Atkin Jr. Recreational Trail 4.2 6.8 Genesee: Pere Marquette Railway [73] Harger Line Rail-Trail 10.1 16.3 Saginaw, Tuscola: Michigan Central Railroad [74] Harbor Beach Bike-Pedestrian Path 1 1.6 Huron: Pere Marquette Railway [75] Linear Park Pathway 2.3 3.7 Lapeer
A section of greenway trail opened in North Raleigh late this summer, part of a long-anticipated link between William B. Umstead State Park and the rest of the city’s greenway system.. But that ...
The Nine Mile Creek Aqueduct in the Camillus Erie Canal park. The arches now support a tow path trail. Although many of the multi-use paths in New York are converted rail trails, there are some significant examples that were never railroads.