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About
Sand Creek Regional Greenway
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Creek Regional Greenway is a nearly 14-mile public greenway,
connecting the High Line Canal in Aurora at Tower Road
and Colfax Avenue, with the South Platte River Greenway
in Commerce City. The soft-surface Sand Creek Regional
Greenway trail completes a loop of 50 miles of off-street
urban trails in the northeast metro Denver area. |
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The
Sand Creek Regional Greenway trail is a work in progress.
We have ongoing construction, detours, and modifications to
our trail and we thank trail users for sticking with us through
all these changes.
We
call ourselves a Wilderness in the City - and we do not irrigate
or maintain traditional landscaped city parks, only native
plants and grasses. We are currently fundraising for trail
improvements such as parks and natural areas, restrooms, trailheads,
and picnic shelters.
Please
bear with us as the trail changes over the next few years
- we are trying hard to improve the Greenway. The areas around
us also change on a regular basis, especially the Denver section,
which is in the middle of a new development that will bring
20,000 new residents and 30,000 new jobs to within 3 miles
of the Greenway.
With
your patience and support, we will provide the best "wilderness
in the city" experience possible as we wind through our
diverse environment that includes industrial areas, new development,
mature neighborhoods, and natural habitat.
All
non-motorized uses of the trail are welcome: bicycling, horseback
riding, walking, running, and pets on leashes. The trail is
wheelchair accessible.
Sand
Creek Regional Greenway is a cooperative project of the cities
of Aurora, Commerce City, and Denver and non-profit organizations
Sand Creek Regional Greenway Partnership and Stapleton Development
Corporation.
Sand Creek at one time was a ribbon of water serving only
the willows and wildlife. It became the scene of everyday
life for the Native American, a guide for the frontier settlers
and later, a provider for the growth of Colorado industry
and agriculture. It will become an urban sanctuary and living
classroom that serves today's inhabitants as well as future
generations.
Because
Sand Creek represents that study in contrasts between sanctuary
provided by unfettered nature and the developing needs and
desires of people, it also represents each generation's efforts
to balance those contrasting demands. Sand Creek, a catalyst
in the interconnected web of nature and community, can be
a refuge, a place to play, a classroom and a model for how
we restore urban waterways, maintain our diverse high plans
legacy and enrich the communities along it.
--
Sand Creek Regional Greenway Master Plan, 1997
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