The City of Redmond has an extensive park and trail system throughout
the city and portions of King County. There are 23 developed parks consisting of over 1000 acres and 17 miles of developed trails. In addition, the city has
8 undeveloped parks consisting of almost 300 acres and nine miles of undeveloped
trails.
View a simple locator map
of parks and trails.
To
map out directions
for any locations that give cross streets or addresses
Ashford Trail
1/4 mile: Soft surface equestrian and hiking trail linking Hartman Park
with Avondale Road through the Ashford Park development along 180 Ave
NE.
Bridle Crest Trail
2 miles: Soft surface trail for horseback riding, mountain bicycling and
hiking. Connects Bridle Trails State Park to Marymoor Park and Sammamish
River Trail passing through Redmond, Bellevue and Kirkland.East Lake Sammamish Trail (King County)
This 11 mile King County regional trail offers connections from Issaquah to
Redmond along former railroad corridor. It links the cities of Issaquah,
Sammamish and Redmond, and ties in to King County's public access system
for cyclists, walkers and runners. Farrel-McWhirter Loop Trail
1-1/4 miles. Soft surface trail for horseback riding and hiking within
Farrel-McWhirter Park. Connects to the Nichol's Trail on the west side
which extends north to the Puget Power Trail. Hidden Ridge Trail
1/2 mile. Asphalt trail over utility easement and sidewalk. Extends from
NE 104 St. along NE 99 St. to Hartman Park. The trail connects to the
172 Street Trail extending north from Hartman Park. Redmond/Puget Power Trail
3.1 miles: Links Sammamish River Trail to Farrel McWhirter Park. Soft
surface trail for horseback riding, mountain bicycling and hiking. Sammamish River Regional Trail (King County)
9.4 miles: Paved multi-purpose trail for bicyclists, skaters and hikers
with a parallel, soft surface trail for equestrians. Extends from
Marymoor Park to Burke Gilman Trail in Bothell. Tolt Pipeline Trail
15 miles: Extends from the Sammamish River Trail south of Woodinville to
Snoqualmie Valley Road over the Tolt Pipeline corridor. Soft surface
trail for horseback riding, mountain bicycling and hiking. Viewpoint
Open Space Trail
25 miles: Soft surface pedestrian trail through wooded greenbelt
linking NE 24th and Bellevue's Tam O'Shanter Park. Watershed Preserve Trails
7.5 miles: Soft-surface trails for hiking, horseback riding and
bicycling. The Powerline and Gasline Trails are multi-use; Trillium
Trail is for equestrians and hikers; Siler Mill Trail is hiking only.
West entrance is for equestrians and hikers only with parking at
Farrel-McWhirter Park. Parking, restrooms, and ADA accessible boardwalk
(Tree Frog Loop Trail) at south support facility off Novelty Hill Road.
Trout Loop Trail is a short loop adjacent to the parking area. No pets
allowed. Rangers on duty in summer. 172 Street Trail
1 mile: Soft surface trail linking Hartman Park and the Puget Power
Trail. The trail portion along the west side of Hartman Park has not
been built; one must parallel 172 Ave NE across NE 104 St. and follow
the trail along the western border of Redmond High School property
through Abbey Lane III development. Connects to the Hidden Valley Trail
extending east from Hartman Park.
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