Bronx River Parkway Reservation
Park Overview:
One of the first linear parks in the country and Westchester County's oldest, the reservation was created as an adjunct to the Bronx River Parkway. It extends 11.6 miles from Bronxville to the Kensico Dam in Valhalla.
Park Description:
This picturesque trailway runs through the heart of southern Westchester County and is a favorite place for cycling, walking, or running. It features ponds, wooden footbridges and hundreds of varieties of native trees and shrubs.
When completed in 1925, the Bronx River Parkway was part of a wooded reservation, with a pathway running along the parkway for its entire length. In 1967, a 1.8-mile section from Hartsdale to Scarsdale was obliterated as part of a project to improve the parkway, but the remainder of the 11.6-mile stretch from Valhalla to Bronxville remained intact. The Hartsdale-to-Scarsdale section of the pathway was restored in 2021, so it now, once again, is possible to walk the entire length of the pathway from Valhalla to Bronxville. Except for a 1.1-mile section north of Hartsdale, the pathway is paved for its entire length. Although it parallels the parkway, it is often located some distance from the roadway, and it closely parallels the river for much of the way..
Trails Overview:
Click on the Web Map "Bronx River Parkway" link near the top of this page to examine the reservation's three paved sections which include: the Oak Street Loop (1 mile) separating Yonkers and Mount Vernon; the Bronxville to Scarsdale section (4.6 miles); and the Hartsdale to Kensico Dam Plaza section (5 miles) in Valhalla.
Click for a detailed description of a hike in the reservation.
Park Acreage:
807.00 acresMunicipality:
Bronxville to ValhallaOne of the first linear parks in the country and Westchester County's oldest, the reservation was created as an adjunct to the Bronx River Parkway. It extends 11.6 miles from Bronxville to the Kensico Dam in Valhalla.
This picturesque trailway runs through the heart of southern Westchester County and is a favorite place for cycling, walking, or running. It features ponds, wooden footbridges and hundreds of varieties of native trees and shrubs.
When completed in 1925, the Bronx River Parkway was part of a wooded reservation, with a pathway running along the parkway for its entire length. In 1967, a 1...