
New Hope Creek From Chapel Hill Road to Chapel Hill-Durham Boulevard
(Component 2 of New Hope Corridor Open Space Master Plan)
Map · Photos · Description & Special Features · In the News · Master Plan Text
Photos
Click to enlarge.

Description and Special Features
Durham County has built a 2.5-mile loop trail—the New Hope Creek Bottomlands Trail—between the creek and Sherwood Githens Middle School on the west side of the creek. Click here for a trail map.
The City of Durham is planning a city park between the school and the creek. In January 2007, the NHCCAC passed a resolution urging Durham to relocate a planned soccer field that could negatively impact the creek. Text of the resolution and further information on development of the park are in the minutes of the January 11 meeting of the committee.
In the News
Links to news stories:
Text from 1991 New Hope Corridor Open Space Master Plan
Existing Land Use & Ownership
- Corps of Engineers lands along about half of the New Hope Creek length
- Sherwood Githens Middle School (Durham County Schools)
- Park land, Department of Parks and Recreation, City of Durham
- Residential tracts, medium- to low-density, private ownership
- Commercial and industrial uses to the east along Garrett Road
Future Land Use
Potential for development between New Hope Creek and Interstate 40 to the west is
very high. The Southwest Durham Plan (1989) shows Mixed Use near Interstate 40
and Office near New Hope Creek on the Chapel Hill-Durham Boulevard, and medium-
and high-density residential in the remainder of this area between New Hope Creek
and Interstate 40.
Significant Resources
This component is directly adjacent to the Corps of Engineers mitigation lands. Nine
vegetation sites have been identified in this component, comprising the Patterson Farm
Lowlands and Slopes. Steep slopes exist, mainly along the west
boundary of the floodplain.
Recommendations for Protection & Use
- Protect the entire 100-year floodplain north of the Corps land (130 acres).
- Protect the 200' steep slope buffer west of the floodplain.
- Provide trail access from Sherwood Githens Middle School to the future City
park site and to areas of botanical interest along the floodplain and on the steep
slopes.
- Establish a trail from Chapel Hill-Durham Boulevard to Chapel Hill Road along
the west side of the floodplain. The Durham Urban Trails and Greenways
Commission has recommended a greenway link in this area. Connection to
trails north of the Boulevard is possible underneath the Boulevard at the bridge.
- Incorporate plans for an open space connector into development plans for the
large tracts of land to the west (when they are developed). The connector would
follow the unnamed drainageway that flows across Watkins Road, then toward
New Hope Creek and Sherwood Githens Middle School.
- As the area south of Chapel Hill-Durham Boulevard develops, maintain a
vegetated buffer of at least 50 feet along the Boulevard's edges and incorporate
a bicycle/pedestrian trail leading westward toward Chapel Hill.
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