Looking west along River Street to theTalmadge Memorial Bridge from in front of theJones and Telfair Range, 2013 | |
![]() Interactive map of River Street | |
| Namesake | Savannah River |
|---|---|
| Length | 2.0 mi (3.2 km) |
| Location | Savannah, Georgia, U.S. |
| West end | North and East Lathrop Ave |
| East end | East Bay Street |
River Street is a commercial street and promenade inSavannah, Georgia, United States. It runs along the southern edge of theSavannah River for 2 miles (3.2 km), from the merging of North and East Lathrop Avenues in the west to EastBay Street in the east. Its most well-known section runs from theTalmadge Memorial Bridge, then belowCity Hall andYamacraw Bluff, to its eastern terminus. It is West River Street up to where theHyatt Regency Savannah spans it. It is here, around 40 feet (12 m) below Bay Street, that it becomes East River Street. The street is one-way (westbound) fromMartin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
Today, East River Street consists largely of restaurants, cafés and craft shops, and is one of the city's major tourist attractions. Its half-mile-long pedestrian promenade, theJohn P. Rousakis Riverfront Plaza, is named for Savannah'slongest-serving mayor (1970–1992).[1]
At its downtown stretch, the street's southern side is populated by terraces of formerKing Cotton warehouses, the industrial rear portions of the more fashionable Bay Street frontages.Factors Row, a bluffside row of red-brick buildings where cotton brokers bargained during the product's heyday, helps preserve this industry in its name.Factors Walk is "built on the middle level of a sloping bluff with warehouses beneath and Bay Street above."[2] The warehouses were also used as holding cells forAfrican slaves.[3]
TheRiver Street Streetcar, aheritage streetcar line, served six stops betweenMontgomery Street andEast Broad Street from 2009 to 2015.[4][5] The lines, set into the street'sBelgian block paving, were originally used byhorsecars, thenstreetcars (between 1890 and 1946).[6] TheNorfolk Southern Railway had owned the River Street branch line for years, operating theRiver Street Rambler, a local freight train, until 2003. The City of Savannah purchased the River Street Branch lineright-of-way fromNorfolk Southern in 2004[7] for approximately $600,000.[8]
Old Town Trolley Tours has a stop (number 10 of 15) on River Street below Factors Walk.[9] Old Savannah Tours has two stops on River Street: one close to Old Town's stop and the other at the marketplace further east.[10]
There are no city bus stops on River Street. The nearest ones are at Congress and Jefferson, Johnson Square, and Lincoln and Congress, which are all served byChatham Area Transit's fare-free DOT (DowntownTransportation) "downtown loop" (route 7D) service. Lincoln Street ramp leads down to East River Street beside the western end of Factors Walk.
Severalriverboats are berthed beside River Street, including the Belles Ferry, thePSGeorgia Queen and the PSSavannah River Queen.
Largetankers andcontainer ships proceeding to and returning from thePort of Savannah west of the city sometimes pass within yards of the promenade.
In 2020,Plant Riverside District, a largescalemixed-use development, opened on the west end of the street.
River Street is a location visited in the 2012 video gameThe Walking Dead.[11]

The following buildings, while having frontages on Bay Street, have businesses working out of their River Street elevations. Ordered from west to east:[12]
Long before the site became occupied by the Hyatt Regency in 1981, two ranges of buildings —Bolton Range and Habersham & Harris Range — stood on the lot.[13] These buildings were replaced by the Neal Blun Building, which stood between 1889 and 1969, and (to the west of it) the Moses Ferst and Company grocery store.[14][15]
The 1890 Commercial Row, and its adjoining structures, were knocked down around 1970. What had been the most tight-knit block of River Street, it subsequently lay empty for all of the 1970s, eventually filled by the John P. Rousakis Riverfront Plaza and the Hyatt Regency.[16]