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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

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 Guadalupe River Trail

 



Be aware that some reaches of the trail system may be impacted by planned and current Trail Closures

 
Length:

11.4 miles open (discontinuous)

Surface:

Gravel – Alviso at Gold Street to Highway 880 (6.3 mi.)

Paved – Highway 880 to Virginia Street (3.1 mi.)

Paved – Chynoweth Avenue to Lake Almaden Park (2.0 mi.)

Amenities:

Guadalupe River Park and Gardens Visitor and Education Center, Restrooms, Benches, Emergency Call Boxes (6)

Nearby Parks:

Guadalupe River Park & Gardens, Arena Green, Ryland Park (via Ryland Parkway Trail), McEnery Park, Almaden Lake Park; Discovery Meadow

Trail Connections:

Highway 237 Bikeway, River Oaks Pathway, Los Alamitos Creek Trail, Ryland Parkway Trail

Photo & Video Gallery:

photos

Downtown and Lower Guadalupe River

High water event

along river


Maps:
map

Great restaurants and businesses just a short distance from the trail!

World class artwork along and near the Guadalupe River Trail!


More Information:

Master Plans:

Interpretive Signs:

Visit the Education page for interpretive signs found along the trail


Description: The northern reaches of the Guadalupe River Trail is open from Alviso at Gold Street to Grant Street near Highway 280. The portion through Guadalupe River Park and Gardens provides many opportunities for recreation and entertainment.  For more information, visit the Friends of the Guadalupe River Park and Gardens website or the Friend's Blog.

In south San Jose, the trail begins at Chynoweth Avenue and travels south to Lake Almaden Park. Future flood control improvements by the Santa Clara Valley Water District and the Army Corp of Engineers will support trail development.  Although not direct, the Highway 87 Bikeway does offer a means of traveling from downtown to the Chynoweth Avenue entry of the Guadalupe River Trail by using a combination of off-street bikeway, striped bike lanes and low volume roads. See the Highway 87 Bikeway link for more information.

Future Improvements
Flood Protection (280 to Blossom Hill Road) The City of San Jose is coordinating with the Santa Clara Valley Water District and the US Army Corps of Engineers to ensure that future flood protection work permits development of a continuous trail system.  The Flood Protection Schedule shows work from Highway 280 to Blossom Hill Road over the next few years.  The City will monitor opportunities to open unpaved trails immediately upon completion of flood control improvements and seek funds for final trail improvements whenever feasible. Watch the Guadalupe River's flood control channel during a high water event.
Flood Protection Schedule

Reach

Area 

Scheduled Construction 

7

SPRR to UPRR (Willow, Lelong, Alma)

June 2013

8

UPRR to Willow Glen Way (Dawson, Mackey, Northern)

June 2014

9

Willow Glen Way to Curtner (Guadalupe & Malone)

June 2015

10A & 10B (d/s)

Curtner to NB Almaden Expressway Southbound

June 2016

10B (u/s)

NB Almaden Expressway to (approx) Blue Jay Drive

June 2012

10C

Stream gage station 23b to Capitol Expressway

June 2016

11

Capitol Expressway to Branham Lane

June 2017

12

Branham Lane to Blossom Hill Road

June 2012

Canoas Creek

Almaden Exp. to Nightingale Dr.

June 2018

Ross Creek

Almaden Exp. to u/s Jarvis Av.

June 2018

d/s = downstream, u/s = upstream

Lower Guadalupe River Trail (Gold Street to 880)

The 6.4 mile paved trail improvements will include gateway elements at major arterials.  Improvements at Gold Street are typical of other locations along the trail.

Upper Guadalupe River Trail (Branham Lane to Chynoweth Avenue) Design work is on hold as the Santa Clara Valley Water District develops its flood control plan.  The City has funding to design the trail once the service road alignment is known. The trail will likely be as shown by the conceptual plan.
Public Art - "Lupe the Mammoth"

The City of San Jose’s Public Art Program and Greenmeme are collaborating on a major art installation along the Lower Guadalupe River to recall the mammoth discovery of several years ago.  View the linked presentation to see the early Conceptual design of the form, scale and texture of the public art piece. The piece is being developed under oversight of the City’s Public Art Program and is funded through the City’s 1% allocation of construction budgets from projects like the upcoming paving of the trail system.  For further information about the mammoth, visit San Jose’s Children’s Discovery Museum for a new exhibit about “Lupe”, San Jose’s pre-Columbian Mammoth.

List of Trails

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Last Modified Date: 12/15/2011

 
 

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