Bridge to Bay Trail
Trail Overview Map*** NEW!
Google Map Trail Overview*** NEW!
The St. Clair County Parks and Recreation Commission (PARC) is working in conjunction
with 13 local units of government to develop a 54-mile paved trail from Lakeport
State Park to New Baltimore. St. Clair County helps plan and promote the trail while
each local unit of government is responsible for constructing their section of the
trail. Most trail construction projects are funded by grants. PARC usually helps
to fund the local match required for trail construction grants.
St. Clair County’s
eastern border is unique. It showcases over 50 miles of shoreline along some of
the best fresh water in the world — Lake Huron, the St. Clair River, and Lake St.
Clair. Along that shoreline, we have urban areas, open vistas, beaches, parks, attractions,
an international bridge and ferries to Canada, giant lake freighters and now a linear
trail — the Bridge to Bay Trail, which will be a paved pedestrian/bike path 54 miles
in length.
The Bridge to Bay Trail extends from St. Clair County’s northern border; under the
Blue Water Bridge; through Port Huron, Marysville, St. Clair, Marine City, and Algonac;
past state and municipal parks, museums, gazebos, and lighthouses. Sometimes the
trail is within reach of the water’s edge and sometimes a few miles inland. It connects
community with community for walkers, joggers, strollers, and bicyclists of all
ages. It can potentially link to the Wadhams to Avoca Trail within St. Clair County,
the Millennium Legacy Trail, the Discover Michigan Trail, the Macomb County Trail
Network, and – via ferry – the St. Clair Parkway Trail in Lambton, Ontario, Canada.
Before roads, native inhabitants and early European explorers traveled St. Clair
County by water. They canoed, fished, and trapped along the area’s rivers and creeks.
Overland routes were paths that generally bordered the waterways. Then came plank
trails wide enough for horses and wagons, paved roads for automobiles, and eventually
super highways that link St. Clair County with the rest of North America.
As St. Clair
County has developed toward a mobile automotive society, we sought a balance within
nature and a peace that comes from traveling at a slower pace under our own power
— by foot or by bike. The result has been a re-emergence both in St. Clair County
and throughout the United States to build and utilize trails for pleasure, recreation,
physical fitness, and solitude.
The Bridge to Bay Trail began with an observation in the early 1990’s that numerous
municipal, township, and state parks line St. Clair County’s eastern border. If
connected by a trail, these parks would become a “strand of pearls.”
Members of St. Clair County’s Parks and Recreation Advisory Council (PRAC) and afew
government officials suggested constructing a trail for non-motorized travel along
the coast from the Blue Water Bridge to Anchor Bay. The idea received initial support
from bicyclists, hikers, and equestrians.
Taxpayers also approved the idea. In 1994, a majority of voters passed the county’s
first millage devoted exclusively to parks and recreation projects. This millage
also helped establish the county’s first Parks and Recreation Commission (PARC).
In the mid-1990’s, East China Township pioneered the first three parts of the path:
a modest one-mile length along M-29 between Bree and Puttygutt roads, a beautiful
meandering section within East China Township Park, and a 2.5 mile stretch of abandoned
railroad bed from the park south to Marine City
In 2000, the original
trail concept continues to become reality. Six completed sections and lateral spurs
cover more than 20 miles of the proposed 54-mile Bridge to Bay Trail. Running right
next to, or a few miles inland from, the county’s much-admired shore, these trail
sections connect many pearls — parks and beaches, schools and playgrounds, residential
neighborhoods and commercial centers, libraries and government buildings, and tourist
attractions.
Residents value the Bridge to Bay Trail for its convenience and relaxing recreational
value. Tourists and visitors consider it a welcome attraction.
The Bridge to Bay Trail is diverse in style, landscape, and purpose. Various sections
include boardwalks, river walks, rail trails, safety paths, and bike paths.
Parts of the trail share transportation corridors with state highways and county
thoroughfares, while other sections pass through quiet wood lots and wetlands.
In places, natural vegetation, birds, crickets, and frogs abound. In other places,
the sound of children playing is prevalent. Along the shore, sailboats and powerboats
grace the beautiful coastal waterway and lake freighters offer mighty and moving
majesty.
Some sections — in and around the Algonac State Park, the East China Township Park,
and Pine Grove Park — are purely recreational. Other sections link neighborhoods
with either the country or a nearby community.
In total, the beauty of the Bridge to Bay Trail is its functionality — to get away
or get to, or simply be.
The Bridge to
Bay Trail’s recreational popularity is shared by residents and tourists, by walkers
(and their pets), bikers, and bladers, by the young, elderly, and families.
The Bridge to Bay Trail is a cooperative trail program involving the St. Clair County
Parks and Recreation Commission and local units of government in the county’s shoreline
communities. Individual communities are responsible for designating trail routes,
developing and constructing their trail sections, and maintenance, regulation, and
policing.
Funding for the Bridge to Bay Trail comes from St. Clair County Parks and Recreation
millage, local government funds, and grants. Grant money for the trail has been
provided by the United States government through the Transportation Equity Act for
the Twenty-first Century (TEA-21), and by the State of Michigan through the Michigan
Department of Transportation (MDOT), the Michigan Department of Natural Resources
(MDNR), and the Michigan Natural Resources Trust Fund (MNRTF).
The Southeast Michigan Greenways Council has provided maps and planning assistance.
Bridge to Bay Map
St. Clair County Trails Plan
Contact Information
St. Clair County Parks and Recreation
8254 County Park Drive
Goodells, MI 48027
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