Sangamon Valley Trail | |
Established: | July 26, 2011 |
Began: | 2010 |
Length Mi: | 11.5 |
Location: | Sangamon County, Illinois, United States |
Trailheads: |
The Sangamon Valley Trail is an 11.5miles rail trail on the west side of Sangamon County in the U.S. state of Illinois. Skirting Springfield, Illinois, it extends from Centennial Park, on Springfield's southwest side (39.7565°N -89.7604°W), to Irwin Bridge Road near Sangamon County's northern border (39.9094°N -89.7055°W). It was constructed by a Sangamon County team in two stages; the 5.5-mile-long first or southern stage was completed in 2010–2011 at a cost of $3.8 million, and opened to the public on July 26, 2011.[1] The 6-mile-long second or northern half of the trail was completed in 2016-2017 at a cost of $4.4 million, and opened to the public on November 16, 2017.[2] The trail is operated by the Springfield Park District.[3]
The Sangamon Valley Trail's 38miles right-of-way has been set aside for rail trail use. It occupies an abandoned segment of the St. Louis, Peoria and North Western Railway, later consolidated into the Chicago and North Western Railroad. The primary metropolitan area served is the greater Springfield, Illinois metropolitan area.[4] The entire right-of-way connects Girard, Illinois, on the south end, to Athens, Illinois, at the north end. The right-of-way spans the western half of Sangamon County in a north-south direction, and also traverses small sections of Macoupin County and Menard County. Population in the trail's service area in western Sangamon County is growing rapidly .[3]
A $4.4 million extension of the trail was constructed in work beginning in summer 2016. The additional 6miles of trail, which extends northward from the trail's former Stuart Park trailhead, connects Stuart Park with Fancy Creek Township near Cantrall, Illinois. The extension of the trail to a northern trailhead at Irwin Bridge Road enables the recreational pathway to cross the Sangamon River, the river that provided the trail with its name.[5] [2] Local leaders look forward to further lengthening of trail-accessible pavement on unused sections of the acquired right-of-way. These extensions could lengthen the trail into portions of Macoupin County and Menard County.[6]