Chattanooga Times Free Press

PATH TO THE FUTURE

GREENWAY PLAN CALLS FOR 55-MILE LOOP

- BY DAVID COBB STAFF WRITER

The impending completion of two local greenways will finish a long-anticipate­d 25-mile arc of multiuse paths through Chattanoog­a, and it could just be the beginning for the area’s growing network of urban trails. As the last bits of the Tennessee Riverwalk and South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway come together, local philanthro­pists and planners are establishi­ng a vision for the next generation of greenways, with some hoping a proposed expansion through North Georgia will elevate the trail system from a local amenity to a national tourism destinatio­n.

A proposed multi-use trail called the ChickChatt Greenway would travel around the southern end of the Chickamaug­a battlefiel­d, connecting East Ridge to St. Elmo. Combining with the riverwalk and South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway, it would create a 55-mile, continuous-path loop for cyclists and pedestrian­s.

The concept is a regional highlight among several bicycle and pedestrian paths proposed for North Georgia in a draft feasibilit­y study presented recently to the Chattanoog­a-Hamilton

County/North Georgia Transporta­tion Planning Organizati­on.

Paths in the study, including the ChickChatt Greenway, “are planning suggestion­s at this point, as the plan has not been locally adopted, so routes and connection­s may change,” said Julianne Meadows, Northwest Georgia Regional Commission director of regional planning, in an email.

The public will have a chance to weigh in on the study on April 13 in Ringgold, but there is already local momentum behind the idea.

“It would make the region a world-class tourism destinatio­n,” said Jim Johnson, a member of the project’s steering committee.

Johnson, who helps travelers book bike tours of Europe as president of biketours.com, elicited cheers when he announced the ChickChatt Greenway concept to a group of cycling enthusiast­s at a BikeWalk Tennessee fundraisin­g event last month.

The Lyndhurst Foundation is helping fund the feasibilit­y study along with the Federal Highway Administra­tion.

Johnson pushed for the study last year after attending a conference in Carrolton, Ga., where he found inspiratio­n in the community’s 18-mile greenbelt loop that some use as transporta­tion to the community’s schools.

“I came back from that conference,” Johnson said, “and thought, ‘OK, we’ve got the Riverwalk going pretty much to St. Elmo, and we’ve got the South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway connecting soon to Camp Jordan, and we have a whole bunch of people saying, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to ride safely to the battlefiel­d?’ So then a light went off in my brain, as it sometimes does.”

Johnson believes the ChickChatt Greenway could rival the Silver Comet, a paved rail-trail that stretches 61.5 miles from the western outskirts of Atlanta to the Alabama state line. Economic impact studies have shown the Silver Comet generates $57 million in annual economic impact.

The ChickChatt Greenway would feature better scenery and could have a similar economic benefit, Johnson said.

A presentati­on on the study draft prepared by Ragan & Smith, the project’s consultant, said the proposed routes are being establishe­d based on opportunit­ies to connect communitie­s, key points of interest and commerce, existing multi-use paths and natural or historic features.

Linking existing places of commerce and stimulatin­g more tourism potential is listed first in the project’s goals.

The other goals:

› Connecting routes to the natural resources and scenic beauty of the study area

› Creating recreation­al opportunit­ies and health benefits › Connecting routes to places of historical and cultural value

› Evaluating improved transporta­tion options and safety factors for the multi-use routes

› Measuring the cost and maintenanc­e considerat­ions of different routes

In Chattanoog­a, roughly a mile of the Tennessee Riverwalk and three miles of the South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway are left to be completed before the two will connect fully from East Ridge to St. Elmo. Both are expected to be completed under the city’s five-year capital plan for open spaces, according to city Open Spaces Director Lori Goerlich.

Chattanoog­a is not included in the North Georgia feasibilit­y study, but the city is beginning to look at a long-term plan, Goerlich said.

“Big picture, Open Spaces is exploring a comprehens­ive Parks and Greenways Master Plan for the city of Chattanoog­a,” Goerlich wrote in an email. “The existing Parks and Recreation Master Plan is about 20 years old. An updated plan that considers all the changes since that time and reflects our community’s interests, neighborho­ods, natural areas and growing economy can be a comprehens­ive visioning guide for future park and greenway expansion.”

Rick Wood, Tennessee state director of the Trust for Public Land, said recently it’s still possible his organizati­on could explore a westward expansion of the Riverwalk into Marion County in the coming decades, too.

Johnson is also working with planners on a conceptual North Shore Greenway that would tie in with the local trail system.

When he announced the ChickChatt Greenway concept at the BikeWalk Tennessee fundraiser, he joked that he hopes to still be alive when the vision for a 55-mile greenway loop comes to fruition.

They better make it wheelchair accessible, just in case, he joked.

“Is it something that’s going to happen in five years? Ten years? Probably not,” Johnson said. “But the riverwalk has been a vision for 30 years, and if we’d waited for a time when it could happen in five years, none of these things would happen. It has to start with a vision and eventually, over time, things come together.”

 ?? STAFF GRAPHIC BY MATT MCCLANE ??
STAFF GRAPHIC BY MATT MCCLANE
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Elis Kuyrkendal­l, right, and Bert Kuyrkendal­l skateboard down a greenway off McCallie Avenue on Nov. 23 in Chattanoog­a. A newly proposed greenway would connect to existing trails to create a 55-mile loop connecting Chattanoog­a and the Chickamaug­a Battlefiel­d.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Elis Kuyrkendal­l, right, and Bert Kuyrkendal­l skateboard down a greenway off McCallie Avenue on Nov. 23 in Chattanoog­a. A newly proposed greenway would connect to existing trails to create a 55-mile loop connecting Chattanoog­a and the Chickamaug­a Battlefiel­d.

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