Jump to content

Rails to Trails


RestedTraveler

Recommended Posts

The City is moving forward on the next portion of the trail. The construction trailer is on site at Greenville Tech and the City's signature signs are out informing people of what's going on. A 170' bridge will be used to cross the Reedy River at Cleveland Street, and about a mile of trail will be added to make its way to South Pleasantburg Drive. :thumbsup:

Greenville is moving very quickly on this trail system. I guess every place has its priorities. I sure am glad this is one of Greenville's.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

  • 4 weeks later...

The Swamp Rabbit Trail continues to grow:

-Article on section under construction next to Greenville Tech: http://www.journalwa...mp-rabbit-grows

-Article on new 1.4 mile section that stretches from I-85 to Lake Conestee: http://www.wyff4.com...172/detail.html

Edited by citylife
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 4 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...

From Greenville News:

Mary Walsh said she did virtually no advertising before opening Swamp Rabbit Cafe and Grocery in what used to be the offices of a meat-packing plant on Greenville’s Westside.

On the first day, the new business was overwhelmed by customers dropping in from the Greenville Hospital System Swamp Rabbit Trail, she said.

“I don’t know if we would be in existence if it weren’t for the trail,” Walsh said.

Walsh’s experience illustrates how an economy of shops and restaurants has begun to develop along the 17.5 miles of trail that are often filled with bicyclists and walkers.

Supporters gathered in Walsh’s store Wednesday to unveil new data showing how people are using the trail and how it has affected businesses. They hope to use the figures to promote active living, recreation and economic development.

“We need data first to drive policy changes,” said Furman University’s Dr. Julian Reed, who studied a year of trail use.

Reed, an associate professor of health sciences, estimated that about 359,000 people used the trail in its first year.

It was busiest on weekends, primarily Saturdays, with peak time from noon until 1:30 p.m., Reed found. The most used access point was Duncan Chapel Road on Furman’s campus.

More than 90 percent of users were on the trail for exercise or recreation, while 6 percent used it for transportation, Reed found.

Bicycling was the most frequent activity, followed by walking, running and rollerblading, he wrote.

Most users lived within 15 minutes of the trail, drove to access it and spent one to two hours on it, Reed wrote.

Supporters said the trail has helped drive a rise in sales at some businesses and encouraged new businesses to open, while promoting physical activity amid a rise in obesity rates.

“It gets people out of their cars, onto their bikes and onto their own two feet,” said Lisa Hallo, director of the sustainable communities program for conservation group Upstate Forever.

Greenville County Councilman Willis Meadows said the trail is an asset as officials recruit businesses to the county.

“Businesses are looking for a healthy, productive work force,” he said. “The trail is a thing they look at and say, ‘This is one of the ways that people can get out.’”

Reed’s study focused on the 9.5-mile segment from the hospital’s North Greenville campus in Travelers Rest to Linky Stone Park in Greenville.

Fountain Inn also has a short section of Swamp Rabbit Trail not connected to the rest but the hope is to one day link the parts, creating one long path from one end of the county to the other.

For the city of Greenville, the challenge now is to connect neighborhoods to the trail, said City Council member Amy Ryberg Doyle.

It will take “a lot of work and money, money, money,” she said.

Nine owners or managers of retail businesses within 250 yards of the main trail were interviewed for Reed’s study.

Most businesses reported sales or revenue increases from 30 to 85 percent, Reed wrote. One business decided to open as a result of the trail, and one business saw a 30 percent increase in sales after moving to be closer, he wrote.

More businesses are on the way, said Ty Houck, director of greenways, natural and historic resources for the Greenville County Recreation District.

A bicycle business serving international customers plans to move into the same former meat-packing complex as Walsh’s store in May, he said. A massage therapy business also expects to open on the site, Houck said.

Another bicycle business could also move to the former plant, drawing customers from as far as 250 miles away, he said.

Advantages of having a business on the trail include more recognizable branding and new people visiting because of the location, Reed wrote.

The biggest disadvantage was people using businesses’ parking spots to visit the trail, he found. Also, some businesses noticed that providing access to the bathroom led to a rise in utility bills, he wrote.

Funding for Reed’s study came from the Environmental Protection Agency through Upstate Forever. Additional funding came from the Greenville Pickens Area Transportation Study and Furman University.

Trail supporters packed Walsh’s store on Wednesday, chatting among the aisles of locally grown lettuce, granola bars and other food. They dug into their pockets to pay for cups of coffee and pastries.

“We do local food here,” Walsh said. “We do fresh and healthy foods. With the trail being here, we get to expose that to all different types of people.”

“Businesses are looking for a healthy, productive work force,” he said. “The trail is a thing they look at and say, ‘This is one of the ways that people can get out.’”

Reed’s study focused on the 9.5-mile segment from the hospital’s North Greenville campus in Travelers Rest to Linky Stone Park in Greenville.

Fountain Inn also has a short section of Swamp Rabbit Trail not connected to the rest but the hope is to one day link the parts, creating one long path from one end of the county to the other.

For the city of Greenville, the challenge now is to connect neighborhoods to the trail, said City Council member Amy Ryberg Doyle.

It will take “a lot of work and money, money, money,” she said.

Nine owners or managers of retail businesses within 250 yards of the main trail were interviewed for Reed’s study.

Most businesses reported sales or revenue increases from 30 to 85 percent, Reed wrote. One business decided to open as a result of the trail, and one business saw a 30 percent increase in sales after moving to be closer, he wrote.

More businesses are on the way, said Ty Houck, director of greenways, natural and historic resources for the Greenville County Recreation District.

A bicycle business serving international customers plans to move into the same former meat-packing complex as Walsh’s store in May, he said. A massage therapy business also expects to open on the site, Houck said.

Another bicycle business could also move to the former plant, drawing customers from as far as 250 miles away, he said.

Advantages of having a business on the trail include more recognizable branding and new people visiting because of the location, Reed wrote.

The biggest disadvantage was people using businesses’ parking spots to visit the trail, he found. Also, some businesses noticed that providing access to the bathroom led to a rise in utility bills, he wrote.

Funding for Reed’s study came from the Environmental Protection Agency through Upstate Forever. Additional funding came from the Greenville Pickens Area Transportation Study and Furman University.

Trail supporters packed Walsh’s store on Wednesday, chatting among the aisles of locally grown lettuce, granola bars and other food. They dug into their pockets to pay for cups of coffee and pastries.

“We do local food here,” Walsh said. “We do fresh and healthy foods. With the trail being here, we get to expose that to all different types of people.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This trail is tax money well-spent, and a great example of City-County-City partnership! I'd love to get some residential spinoff development to go along with the commercial side of things... But, I guess the new West End park will help with that, at least near the downtown portion of the trail.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

From Greenville News:

On Tuesday, the newest section of the popular Swamp Rabbit Trail opens at Greenville Tech’s Barton campus on Pleasantburg Drive, a spokeswoman said.

Mayor Knox White and Greenville Tech President Keith Miller will officially open this section of the trail at 11 a.m., said Leslie Fletcher, a city spokeswoman.

The section is located at Cleveland Street side of the campus, she said.

The trail, which is opening in sections, is geared to biking, skating, jogging and walking.

Refreshments will be served by Greenville Tech. The event is free and open to the public.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...

Looks like Swamp Rabbit is heading into Simpsonville:

The Golden Strip could be next to reap the benefits of an economy beginning to bud from a trail where merchants are offering outdoor tourists everything from ice cream to bicycle rentals.

An early proposal calls for a new section of the Greenville Hospital System Swamp Rabbit Trail to connect Heritage Park to downtown Simpsonville and nearby City Park. The hope is to eventually make the section part of a continuous path from Fountain Inn to Travelers Rest.

While the paved trail promotes healthy lifestyles through outdoor exercise, it is also an economic-development engine that helps

drive customers into shops, restaurants and cafes.

Several Main Street merchants in Simpsonville said they are excited about exposing downtown to visitors from outside the city and dishing up food to hungry bicyclists. In Fountain Inn, officials hope the trail and its network will help rejuvenate a neighborhood hit hard by foreclosures.

The revitalizing influence of the Swamp Rabbit has precedent in Travelers Rest, where the trail has been credited with breathing new life into a struggling downtown.

David Dyrhaug, the planning director in Simpsonville, said that the trail and other “greenways” drive tourism.

“A lot of sales that these merchants can anticipate will come from people outside of Simpsonville that will be coming to use the trail here,” he said.

http://www.greenvilleonline.com/article/20120918/NEWS/309180117/Golden-Strip-hopes-trail-tourism-dollars?odyssey=tab%7Ctopnews%7Ctext%7CNews&nclick_check=1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Excellent article on improvement projects in some local communities, including trails and developing a downtown for Mauldin. Some great numbers for TR regarding the Swamp Rabbitt trail impact.

I love the statement:

“Don’t ever forget to say it’s OK that you were wrong,”
.

There are few cases where that is so true with no shades of gray.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...
  • 2 months later...

According to WYFF, the Swamp Rabbit Trail will be expanding north to Heritage Elementary School. Completion is slated for Summer 2013.

 

That's great news! We hear a lot of noise about its southward expansion, but not too much regarding the north side. It's nice to see it actively growing in both directions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's great news! We hear a lot of noise about its southward expansion, but not too much regarding the north side. It's nice to see it actively growing in both directions.

 

This may be a dumb question, but is there an overall plan for the trail system? Like an optimistic plan for where this trail will end. It would be awesome for it to link up through the mountains up North. Is this supposed to be part of the Palmetto Trail?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.