Greenway open, cyclists hit trail, folks just mingle

FAYETTEVILLE -- The morning was warm and bright as cyclists wearing vivid jerseys and smelling of sunscreen clustered along Fayetteville's Frisco Trail near West Dickson Street. By 9:30, they numbered around 100. Half an hour later, there were almost twice as many.

Natalie Becknell pointed her bike north as the crowd gathered, ready to ride to Springdale with her 2-year-old son, Robert, strapped into a seat mounted behind the handlebars.

"I'm getting goosebumps," Becknell said happily, as her husband and daughter also waited nearby. "We have so many people who bike for pleasure and to get places. To be able to go all the way from south Fayetteville to Bella Vista -- it's huge."

More than 1,000 Northwest Arkansas residents celebrated Saturday the official completion of the Razorback Greenway, a trail threading almost 37 miles through the metropolitan area that officials praised as a shining achievement of regional cooperation.

Under sunny skies, people enjoyed food, free train rides and history walks at several points along the trail. For many, the best way to mark the occasion was simply to bike the trail from end to end.

"Don't want to miss an inch of it today," said Jim House, a former state representative from Fayetteville.

His wife, Nan House, looked a bit nervous at the prospect, saying her husband was the more serious biker. But she smiled with excitement nonetheless.

"It's a beautiful trail with a whole lot of private and public investment," Jim House said.

Cities and regional planners had discussed and planned the $37 million project for a decade. Federal money and a $15 million grant from the Walton Family Foundation gave it life, and builders broke ground in June 2012.

"This is a dream come true," John McLarty of the Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission told hundreds at Shiloh Square in downtown Springdale, where a ribbon-cutting was held at noon.

He noted that roughly 150,000 people live or work within half a mile of the trail.

"The workload on this has been worth it," he said.

The mayors of Fayetteville, Springdale, Rogers, Lowell and Bentonville spoke at the event, praising the completed trail as a boon to the area's economy and quality of life. Dozens of miles of smaller trails branch off the Greenway, they said, and all residents can use it no matter their income level or experience.

"The Greenway's the catalyst we needed to really begin the revitalization of downtown Springdale," Mayor Doug Sprouse said to applause from the crowd. "This has been a great day already."

The speakers thanked several people and organizations involved in the project, including the Alta Planning and Design firm and the state Highway and Transportation Department.

The Springdale gathering had a festival-like feel. Multicolored flocks of cyclists cruised past the square throughout the day, winding among pedestrians as pop music played from the stage. Workers in neon-green vests kept a watchful eye on hundreds of bikes leaning on metal racks on Emma Avenue. Nearby food booths and trucks sold tacos and lemonade.

"It's awesome, honestly, to see our community just come together and be active," said Diane Velasquez, 22, of Rogers who rode with church friends and family members who called themselves Cycology FOW, which stands for "friends on wheels."

Velasquez said she had been a member for only three weeks, but the group planned a full 37-mile ride for the day.

"It's a killer," she said with a laugh. "I'm like, 'you all are pros; I'm just going to keep up.'"

Metro on 05/03/2015

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