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Featured National Recreation Trail

Fred Marquis Pinellas Trail, Florida

Towns, bays, and forests enliven one of the nation's busiest rail trails.

Photos from Pinellas Trails, Inc.

florida MapIn 1883 a locomotive steam engine chugs through pine flat-woods, scrub-oak forests and along mangrove forests surrounded by warm Gulf of Mexico waters on a steel (commercial) trail in a remote west coast county in Florida. One hundred years later, a bicycle rider pants through the same forests surrounded by the same waters on a paved (recreational) trail in Florida's most densely populated urban county.

Cross Bayou Bridge on the Pinellas Trail
The Cross Bayou Bridge on the Pinellas Trail

The trail consists of a 15-foot wide asphalt surface that is striped and marked to designate 10 feet for use as a bike/skate lane and 5 feet for the walking lane. Where space allows, the walking lane is separated from the bike lane by a grass median. This multiple use separation allows for safe trail use.

The Pinellas Trail runs 47 miles in Pinellas County and passes through passes through the historic downtowns of Dunedin, Tarpon Springs, and Palm Harbor. Connecting trails lead to a variety of local parks as well as to Honeymoon State Park. The Fred Marquis Pinellas Trail opened in 1990 with an initial 5-mile stretch. Plans are underway for an additional 20-mile extension along the abandoned railroad corridor.

photo of trail overpass across highway
The Cross Bayou Bridge on the Pinellas Trail

The entire Fred Marquis Pinellas Trail, including the overpasses, is accessible to wheelchair users and other persons with disabilities.

Additionally, pedestrian overpasses were constructed over major road intersections throughout the county. The overpasses provide pedestrian and trail user safety in crossing very heavily used roads (many in excess of 70,000 cars per day). The overpasses also reduce the impact on vehicular traffic by allowing the unrestricted movement of vehicles that would otherwise have to frequently stop to permit trail users to cross the road.

photo of teenagers in front of mural
Young artists provide art along the trail in St. Petersburg
The Pinellas County Park Department partners with Pinellas Trails, Inc. to help provide amenities such as benches, covered shelters and water fountains on the trail. A wide variety of art also enhances the trail corridor.

Pinellas Trails, Inc. is a non-profit organization comprised of a group of citizens that support the Pinellas Trail and raise funds to purchase amenities for the trail. They also periodically provide funding for the purchase of trees to shade and landscape the trail. The Park Department also partners with a large number of volunteers that serve as Auxiliary Rangers on the trail.

photo of waterway and trees
View from Cross Bayou Bridge

The Pinellas Trail also features groves of live oaks hung with Spanish moss, tidal streams with wildlife, and quiet waterways for fishing. The average visitation on the trail since 1992 is 977,241 users per year.

For more information see the Pinellas Trail website.

The National Recreation Trails Program
American Trails, P.O. Box 491797, Redding, CA 96049-1797 (530) 547-2060 Fax: (530) 547-2035 nrt@americantrails.org www.AmericanTrails.org

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