During my recent travels, I have seen a number of notable walkways along waterfronts, beside city streets, and through urban and suburban parks. Well-designed pedestrian ways have ample width for movement and social interaction, and include visually-unifying elements throughout, such as a continuous paving pattern and repeated furnishings and plantings. These promenades should also be designed to correspond with the character of their surroundings, as well as provide a pleasant and safe experience for pedestrians.
The transit mall in downtown Portland, Oregon, has wide sidewalks with decorative pavement, beside streets that have traffic lanes reserved for light rail and buses. The walkways include these attractive clear transit shelters.
A boardwalk runs along NW 10th Avenue in Portland, Oregon for 4 blocks between two parks. It’s unusual to see a wooden walkway along an urban street. This section, which is adjacent to Jameson Square, is wide enough for a double row of trees – a pleasant place to take a stroll.
Eye-catching pavement pattern along a portion of Northern Avenue, adjacent to the Fan Pier Public Green in South Boston, Massachusetts
Fayetteville Street in Raleigh, North Carolina, was turned into a pedestrian mall in the 1970s, but the street was added back in 2006 along with these wide sidewalks with decorative planters, benches, lights, and other features. This corridor’s revitalization is reported to be a success in terms of bringing in more business.
The Church Street Marketplace, in Burlington, Vermont, has been in place since 1981, and is one of the few continuously successful pedestrian malls in the U.S. This lively promenade is full of retail stores and restaurants with outdoor seating areas.
This park in Clayton, Missouri, includes a linear lawn space extending between two streets, bordered by two walkways. Seating areas and plantings line the edges of the promenade. Not many people were outside on this cold day in late October.
A simple but attractive pavement design along a street in Clayton, Missouri
This beautifully-patterned brick walkway winds its way through Walnut Street Park in Cary, North Carolina.
This curvilinear promenade runs along part of the ocean in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It is surfaced with concrete in contrasting colors and textures.
Waterfront Park in Burlington, Vermont, is bounded by a boardwalk which includes nautical-style lighting, granite bollards, and swinging benches.
The Mall in Central Park, New York City, is an example of a historic promenade with lovely old trees.
Photos by Alice Webb
That’s a really good variety of walkways from the very formal to the meandering. I like much of the patterning of the pavement.
Nice photos and interesting points. There’s also a pedestrian shopping mall in Cape May, NJ with longevity. Three blocks long, used to be a main street. Cars were removed at least since 1975. There is parking on the other side of the buildings along the mall. There are a few public benches to sit in each block. Also a few sidewalk cafes. Also receptacles for trash.
Thanks for pointing this out – I looked at it on Google Maps. I would imagine that tourists help to keep this mall alive — many downtown malls elsewhere in the U.S. failed to thrive and therefore have been converted back to streets in recent years.
Nice photos and interesting points. that’s a really good variety of walkways from the very formal to the meandering.
Thanks! There are many more great examples, but these are the places that I have visited and photographed. I hope to see more in my future travels.