Politics & Government
South Bethlehem Greenway Officially Opens
Phase 4 of the project will extend the Greenway to Saucon Park next year.
Neighborhood residents and City of Bethlehem officials gathered on Aug. 11 at the newly-completed Hayes Street Plaza to officially open the first two sections of the South Bethlehem Greenway, a project that has taken Bethlehem nearly six years to complete.
“We haven't had to tell anyone,” Mayor John Callahan said. “The community is already using it.”
Joined by officials from PennDOT and the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR), who financially supported the project, Callahan thanked them and their agencies, along with a long list of other elected officials, organizations, city employees and individuals who helped further the project, in addition to “every single resident who attended a public hearing or filled out a survey to better help us plan.”
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“This really is a project for the community,” Callahan added.
Cindy Dunn, Deputy Secretary of the DCNR, which contributed $1.5 million toward the Greenway project, attributed the project's success to teamwork between the city and state agencies.
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“This work doesn't get done easily or fast or alone,” Dunn said. "This work takes vision. You set up the vision and then you plug away."
She added that the 1.7-mile trail will eventually connect with others in the area, allowing access by foot or bicycle to points further south, including Hellertown.
Phase 3 of the project is already under way and is projected to be completed by this fall. It will extend the trail another 1,500 feet and include improvements to the existing Parham Park in the 300 block of West Fourth Street, possibly providing outdoor performance space near Touchstone Theater, the mayor said.
Phase 4, which will link the Greenway from East Sixth Street to Saucon Park, is expected to follow by next year.
“The ultimate goal is to get all these trails linked together,” Callahan said, adding that he personally jogs on the Greenway regularly.
The trails will also help encourage economic growth, he said, noting that the new PNC bank across the street has pedestrian access.
