Three Creeks Trail
decorative water tower with symbolic 3 for Three Creeks Trail
Length0.9 miles (1.4 km)
LocationSan Jose, California
Surfacepaved

The Three Creeks Trail is a 0.9-mile (1.4 km) pedestrian and bicycle trail that runs through the Willow Glen neighborhood in San Jose, California, from Los Gatos Creek by Lonus Street to the Guadalupe River, as the western alignment. The western section of the trail has been paved since late 2018.[1] An eastern alignment is planned, but not funded, to extend the trail to the Coyote Creek Trail.

History

The trail was previously a Western Pacific Railroad line as part of the Willow Glen industrial lead of the San Jose Branch line.[2] A trestle bridge, the Willow Glen Trestle, was built in 1921 and crossed the Los Gatos Creek near Lonus Street.[3] A train used to travel to and from the Del Monte cannery. In the early 1980s the Union Pacific purchased the Western Pacific, the Union Pacific abandoned the line in the early 2000s

There are three large remnants of the line, a trestle built in 1921 (demolished), a girder bridge over the Guadalupe River, and a stretch of the line from the former Williams Street yard at the intersection of 23rd Street and William Street to the BART right of way with the Bayshore Highway girder bridge. Some remains of crossings over Las Plumas Avenue just south of the end of track for BART still exist along with two industrial spurs crossing Lenfest Road

As of 2013 the trail was under development. Most of the western alignment was usable although mainly as dirt track.

In June 2017 construction began on the section between Coe Avenue and Minnesota Avenue. It re-opened as a paved trail in August 2018.[4]

The route

Diagrammatic map of Three Creeks Trail western alignment, San Jose, California

The trail crosses or accesses the following roads.

  • Lonus Street
  • Coe Avenue
  • Leona Court, as access
  • Broadway Avenue
  • Willow Street, near the Bird Avenue intersection
  • Bird Avenue
  • Dorothy Avenue, as access
  • Delmas Avenue and Milton Way, as access
  • Minnesota Avenue
  • Falcon Place passing Kyva Park

References

  1. "Three Creeks (was Willow Glen Spur)". Trail Systems. City of San Jose. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
  2. "Abandoned Rails of San Jose". Retrieved 2013-08-17.
  3. Leeta-Rose Ballester (June 13, 2014). "Friends of the Trestle get demolition reprieve". Retrieved 2014-07-05.
  4. "Where will the future lead for Willow Glen's Three Creeks Trail?". San Jose Mercury News. 2018-08-30. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
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