Hudson Valley Rail Trail | |
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![]() The trail by the Commercial Avenue parking lot | |
Length | 4 mi (6.4 km) |
Location | Lloyd,Ulster County,New York |
Trailheads |
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Use | Hiking, bicycling, horseback riding, roller blading, and cross country skiing. |
Sights |
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Website | hudsonvalleyrailtrails.org |
TheHudson Valley Rail Trail is a paved 4-mile (6.4 km) east–westrail trail in thetown of Lloyd inUlster County,New York, stretching from theHudson River through thehamlet of Highland. The trail was originally part of thePoughkeepsie Bridge Route, a railcorridor that crossed the Hudson via thePoughkeepsie Bridge. Controlled by a variety of railroads throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the bridge was damaged and became unusable after a May 8, 1974 fire. By the 1980s, the corridor's then-owner,Conrail, had routed all rail traffic in the regionnorth through Selkirk Yard and was eager to relieve itself of the bridge and adjoiningrights-of-way. In 1984, it sold the entire property for one dollar to a felon who did not maintain it or pay taxes on it. The section of the corridor west of the Hudson was seized by Ulster County in 1991 and transferred to the town of Lloyd.
During the 1990s, abroadband utility seeking to layfiber optic cable paid the town to pass through the former corridor. The town used part of its payment to pave the route and open it as a public rail trail in 1997. The creation of the trail was supported by a localRotary club, which built a pavilion along the trail. The pavilion includes a donated antiquecaboose. While the trail originally ended at Route 44–55, it was extended eastward between 2009 and 2010, intersectingRoute 9W and continuing to the Poughkeepsie Bridge. The extension was paid for bystimulus funding.
The bridge, now apedestrian walkway called Walkway Over the Hudson, connects the trail with theDutchess Rail Trail to the east, creating a 30-mile (48 km) rail trail system that spans the Hudson. The trail is expected to be extended west, where it will borderRoute 299. As it passes through Highland, the trail is carried by several bridges, connects to four parking areas, and traverses awetlands complex. The trail forms part of theEmpire State Trail.[1]
The Hudson Valley Rail Trail is part of the former railcorridor that comprised thePoughkeepsie Bridge Route. It ran east through thehamlet of Highland, in thetown of Lloyd, over theHudson River via thePoughkeepsie Bridge.[2] Highland has historically been Lloyd's largest population center.[3] The corridor was, throughout its history, operated by theCentral New England,Philadelphia and Reading,[4]New Haven,Erie,Ontario and Western,Lehigh and New England andPenn Central railroads. Under the ownership of Penn Central, traffic along the bridge route was discouraged in favor of anorthern route throughSelkirk; the use of newer technology atSelkirk Yard to improve efficiency was cited as the primary reason.[5] At one point, the Poughkeepsie corridor had been the primary thoroughfare for freight being shipped toNew England, and the New Haven yard at nearbyMaybrook was once "the largest railroad yard east of theMississippi River". Rail traffic over the Poughkeepsie Bridge stopped entirely after the bridge was damaged in a May 8, 1974 tie fire.[6]
After Penn Central went bankrupt,Conrail assumed control of the corridor, but opposed renovating it due to budgetary concerns.[7] Rail traffic up to the bridge continued until March 1982, when Conrail received permission from theInterstate Commerce Commission to completely cease using the corridor; the tracks were removed the following year.[8] Donald L. Pevsner, a transportation lawyer fromFlorida, secured afirst-refusal option for purchasing the corridor to create restaurants and tourist attractions, but allowed it to expire on November 1, 1984, because he could not secure financial backing;[9] he claims that Conrail expressed a desire to sell the corridor, at that point apotential liability, to the "first warm body" that would buy it.[10] Conrail immediately sold the Poughkeepsie Bridge and adjoiningrights-of-way on November 2, 1984, for onedollar to Gordon Schreiber Miller, a convictedbank fraudster[11][12] who "seemed uncertain what he wished to do" with the corridor.[11] Miller did not pay taxes, fines or insurance on the corridor, or maintain it.[13] He went bankrupt in 1990 and sold the corridor for one dollar to his friend Vito Moreno, who also did not pay taxes on it. In 1991,Ulster County seized the right-of-way west of the Poughkeepsie Bridge and gave over 5 miles (8.0 km) of the abandoned corridor to the town of Lloyd.[14]
Parcels of the right-of-way between Lloyd and the neighboringtown of New Paltz were sold-off by the county shortly before ownership of the remaining corridor was transferred to Lloyd and converted to arail-trail.[14][15] Roughly $400,000 in funding to convert the corridor to a trail was acquired through aneasement from the town of Lloyd to abroadband utility for the laying offiber optic cable,[16] though only $70,000 was needed topave the trail.[15] The trail remains a right-of-way for the fiber optic line.[6] The development of the trail was supported by Highland'sRotary club, which has since built several utilities for trail users, including a pavilion, garden and parking lot.[15] The corridor was officially opened as a trail in 1997.[17] Initially 2.5 to 3 miles (4.0 to 4.8 km) long,[16][17] it stretched from Riverside Road in the west to Vineyard Avenue in the east; the removal of anoverpass on Vineyard Avenue, as well as a blockage under a bridge onU.S. Route 9W, prevented the trail from continuing east to the Poughkeepsie Bridge.[17]
Lloyd received a $224,000 state and federal grant in the summer of 2000 to create such a connection.[18] Additional funding for the eastern extension was provided in November 2006, when the state granted $1.5 million to construct a bridge and a tunnel, and to complete the path.[19] Lloyd received a $7,500 grant in 2002 to extend the trail west to the Black Creek Wetlands Complex;[20] the town received an additional grant for $20,000 in May , 2005 to complete the Black Creek extension.[21]
In 2006, a local businessman donated an antiquecaboose to the trail Association; this was placed beside the pavilion.[22] Built in 1915,[23] it was "one of ... the first cabooses made of steel instead of wood".[24] An October 2007 study of paint chips from the caboose found the paintcontained lead. The study was released less than a week before atown supervisor election in Lloyd; one of the candidates, Ray Costantino, was president of the Hudson Valley Rail Trail Association,[24] and one of the early proponents of the trail.[15] He claimed that the timing of the study was politically-motivated.[24] Costantino subsequently became town supervisor,[25] and the caboose had its paint replaced and was repaired at a total cost of $4,500.[26] A second caboose, dating from 1926, is located at the trail's parking lot on Haviland Road.[23]
Lloyd's police department became the first in the county to purchase aSegway,[27] in 2007,[28] for the express purpose of patrolling the rail trail.[27] The trail had , been occasionally vandalized.[29] Lloyd'sPolice Chief felt that use of such a vehicle would enable officers to patrol the trail for longer periods of time, and that it could also be used to patrol other areas of the town. Seven officers were expected to use the Segway, which contains anautomated external defibrillator,[28] and can go as fast as12+1⁄2 miles per hour (20.1 km/h).[27]
In March 2009, Ulster County received almost $21 million instimulus funds. The funding included a $3.16 million project to complete the trail between Lloyd and the Poughkeepsie Bridge.[30] Some funding for the architectural and engineering aspects of the project came from the reserve fund created after the town's fiber optic deal.[31] The Rail Trail Association also received a $1,500 grant from apublic-benefit corporation, the Hudson River Valley Greenway, to print brochures.[32] Construction for the 1.28-mile (2.06 km)[16] section was underway by that September.[33] In March 2010, a portion of New Paltz Road was closed pending the replacement of a bridge over the trail.[34]
The officialgroundbreaking ceremony took place on May 4, 2010,[35] and the trail was expected to be completed by October.[36] The bridge over Vineyard Avenue was opened to pedestrian traffic on July 16, 2010. The only remaining obstruction was the placement of a bridge[25] carrying Mile Hill Road over the trail,[16] which was expected to be completed in August.[25] The crossing at US 9W had been remedied; the new section let "users to cross either over or under" the highway.[35] To celebrate the opening of the Vineyard Avenue bridge, Route 44–55 throughout Highland (whichincludes Vineyard Avenue) was shut down for the day.[37] The eastern expansion does not deviate from the original route of the corridor,[38] and officially opened on October 2, 2010.[39]
Between June 23 and 24, 2011, parts of the trail werespray-painted with "dozens of [...] words and images".[29] Volunteers who removed some of thegraffiti believed that different types of paint were used. Lloyd's highway superintendent noted similar vandalism elsewhere in the town, and Town Supervisor Ray Costantino stated that the incident would cause Lloyd residents to feel a personal connection to the trail and become outraged.[29]
As part of theEmpire State Trail project, the trail was extended 2 miles (3.2 km) to the west, ending just past theNew York State Thruway inNew Paltz. The state also constructed an on-road connection between the Hudson Valley Rail Trail and theWallkill Valley Rail Trail.[40] Prior to this construction, there has never been a direct link between the Poughkeepsie Bridge and theWallkill Valley corridor.[41] Other plans include the development ofcommercial zones along the trail,[42] and a project to connect the trail toIllinois Mountain.[43]
The east–west trail begins at the Poughkeepsie Bridge, by Haviland Road.[23] The 1.28-mile (2.06 km) Poughkeepsie Bridge was opened as a pedestrian walkway in 2009.[44] The bridge is aNational Recreation Trail, and connects to theDutchess Rail Trail to the east,[45] creating a contiguous 18.2-mile (29.3 km) rail trail system that spans both Ulster andDutchess counties.[46]
The Hudson Valley trail continues 0.5 miles (0.80 km) west from the Poughkeepsie Bridge to a bridge over Mile Hill Road, then another 0.1 miles (0.16 km) to a crossing at US 9W. At the 1-mile (1.6 km) mark, the trail reaches a bridge over Vineyard Avenue. About 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the bridge, the trail crosses under New Paltz Road. Almost 0.5 miles (0.80 km) from this road, the trail reaches the Black Creek Wetlands Complex.[23] Black Creek is one of the two "principal streams" to run through Lloyd; it bisects the town as it flows north and pools in a pond.[47] The wetlands complex itself is important for water drainage.[48] Part ofNew York State Department of Environmental Conservation region 3, the complex contains Plutarch Swamp and one of the region's largestdwarf shrub bogs, hosting a variety of rare species. The complex also includes the Swarte Kill,[49] Lloyd's second major waterway.[47] The trail continues an additional 0.5-mile (0.80 km) past the beginning of the complex to Tony Williams Park.[23]
The trail was extended about 2 miles (3.2 km) west as part of theEmpire State Trail project. This section parallelsNew York State Route 299, ending just west of theNew York State Thruway inNew Paltz. On-road connections are available connecting the western terminus to theWallkill Valley Rail Trail.
There are five parking areas along the trail,[50] by Haviland Road, Commercial Avenue, the Rotary pavilion, at Tony Williams Park, and along Route 299 in Lloyd.[23] The trail is 12 feet (3.7 m) wide and 4 miles (6.4 km) long; it ispaved withasphalt and suitable for hiking, bicycling, horseback riding, roller blading, and cross country skiing.[50]
In 2018, Hudson Valley law firm Mainetti & Mainetti, P.C. published an updated bicycle map that showed the proposed route of the Hudson Valley Rail Trail, and how it links the Walkill Valley Rail Trail and River-to-Ridge-Trail with the Dutchess County Rail Trail.[51]
I said, 'how would you like to sell me the bridge for a dollar including the right of way between the shore and the New Paltz over pass of the Thruway, if I could find somebody that responsively with insurance, with maintenance, you know without having it become a dangerous derelict,' what we call in legal terms an attractive nuisance ... 'We just want to sell it to the first warm body,' that's direct (sic) quote as relayed to me by [a lawyer in Conrail's real estate department] ... they sold the bridge for $1 dollar along with the right of way which I negotiated out to the Thruway over past New Paltz, to a convicted bank swindler- felon named Gordon Schreiber Miller who operated out of a taxi cab office...
41°43′24″N73°58′11″W / 41.72342°N 73.96983°W /41.72342; -73.96983