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Detroit Locals Discover Hidden Nature Walks Tourists Miss

Detroit residents turn to quiet trails in neighborhood parks for daily fitness as summer heat builds.

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By Detroit Wellness Desk · Published 10 July 2026, 5:20 AM

2 min read

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Detroit is independently owned and covers Detroit news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Detroit Locals Discover Hidden Nature Walks Tourists Miss
Photo: Photo by trialsanderrors / flickr (by)

Residents on Detroit’s northwest side have increased visits to the wooded loops at Eliza Howell Park this July. The 250-acre site sits along Fenkell Avenue between Southfield Freeway and Telegraph Road, yet most out-of-town visitors head straight to Belle Isle or the RiverWalk instead.

Wellness routines in the city center on accessible green space rather than crowded attractions. July temperatures push people toward shaded paths that stay 10 degrees cooler than downtown sidewalks, and local running groups have shifted weekday workouts away from the main riverfront to these interior routes.

Two spots drawing steady local traffic

Eliza Howell Park offers a 1.8-mile figure-eight trail that starts near the soccer fields and winds through oak and maple stands. Walkers park at the lot on Fenkell and cross under the Southfield Freeway overpass to reach the quieter western section. A second option lies inside Rouge Park, where the 2.4-mile unpaved path begins at the Joy Road entrance near the old golf course and follows the riverbank south toward Outer Drive.

Both parks fall under Detroit Parks and Recreation management. Staff opened new trail markers in Rouge Park last October after volunteers from the Friends of Rouge Park cleared invasive brush along the southern loop.

City data shows neighborhood park use rose 22 percent between May 2025 and May 2026, according to the department’s annual visitation summary released in June. Entry remains free at both sites, though the department charges $5 for reserved parking at Eliza Howell during weekend events.

How to find the routes

Locals recommend starting before 9 a.m. to avoid midday sun and carrying water from the fountains near the Eliza Howell playground. The Detroit Parks and Recreation website lists updated trail conditions each Monday, and the department’s free mobile map marks the less-traveled spurs with blue dots. Runners from the Motor City Striders club meet at the Rouge Park lot on Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. for a guided 45-minute loop that stays entirely inside the tree cover.

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About this article

Published by The Daily Detroit

Covering wellness in Detroit. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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