published Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Trails group to converge here

Audio clip

Joe Taylor

Joe Taylor planted his feet near the edge of the Hunter Museum of American Art's deck and took a long look across the Tennessee River.

The Quad Cities, Iowa, resident and American Trails board member wasn't in town long enough to know the name of the Walnut Street Bridge, but that didn't matter.

Just the sight of it draped against mountains validated his nonprofit organization's choice to make Chattanooga the home for a national conference highlighting "all kinds of trails for all kinds of Americans," Mr. Taylor said.

  • photo
    Staff Photo by Angela Lewis People walk on the Riverwalk between the Hunter Museum of American Art and the Walnut Street Bridge.

"That fantastic bridge is symbolic of this city's attitude toward walkability, livability and wellness," he said. "It has quite a national reputation."

Trail administrators from all 50 states and an estimated 800 trail advocates will migrate to "this model the United States can learn from" starting Nov. 14 for a four-day conference, Mr. Taylor said.

He said participants will brainstorm better ways to facilitate trail operations and experience a healthy dose of "socializing and networking."

"Trail building is hard work, so it doesn't hurt to have fun every so often," Mr. Taylor said. "We'll help the local economy."

Chattanooga's water trails, equestrian trails and hiking trails all played a major part in the decision to choose the city, he said. Several outdoor advocacy groups plugged into the city also didn't hurt, Mr. Taylor said.

Goals of American Trails National Symposium:

* Design and build sustainable trails

* Obtain more funding for trails

* Preserve more open space amidst urban development

* Develop more support for volunteers

* Promote trail use as a means for mental, physical and spiritual well-being

Source: www.americantrail...>

Minya James, a recreation specialist with Outdoor Chattanooga, said her company is working full-throttle to promote several projects to showcase in November.

She's excited about showing off Raccoon Mountain and a trail being built at Enterprise South industrial park, home to the new Volkswagen plant. The Enterprise South park will open in October and host a 9-mile trail for beginners and eventually a longer "pump and jump" track for experienced mountain bikers.

"You can get on a bike in downtown Chattanooga and in 15 minutes be on a cool trail," Ms. James said. "For an urban environment, that's incredibly unique."

Continue reading by following these links to related stories:

Article: Support for greenway work

Article: Greenway goes long

Article: Council OKs South Chickamauga Creek Greenway design

about Chris Carroll...

Chris Carroll covers politics for the Times Free Press. A Chattanooga native, he graduated from Red Bank High School in 2005 and earned a bachelor’s degree in history from East Tennessee State University in 2009. Chris has investigated violent crime, hospitals, Red Bank politics and East Ridge politics since joining the newspaper in January 2010. For a jailhouse interview story with accused murderer Antonio Henry, he won a third place Tennessee Associated Press Managing Editors ...

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