Green Crescent Trail
  • About
  • Maps
  • Get Email Updates
  • Native Garden
  • Store
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • #GOConnect
    Green
    Crescent
    Trails

    The Green Crescent Trail is a growing network of pedestrian and biking trails that improve the quality of life in the greater Clemson, Central, Pendleton area of South Carolina by connecting the place we love.

    Learn more
  • The Green Crescent Pedestrian Bridge

    On Friday November 10th, 2017 the Green Crescent Bridge was officially opened. The pedestrian bridge runs parallel to Berkeley Drive, spans Hwy 123, and is the first segment of the Green Crescent Trail in Clemson.

  • Better walking & biking connections ...

  • will make a safer, healthier, & more vibrant community for everyone!


    See the GCT maps
PreviousNext
1234

GCT Mission

To make the Clemson-Central-Pendleton area a better place to live, work, learn, & play by connecting the places we love with a safe & easily-accessible network of trails and public/alternative transportation options.

Vision

The Clemson-Central-Pendleton area will be recognized as a national model for connectivity and alternative transportation through its system of trails, greenways, sidewalks, complete streets, and public transportation.

Strategy

The Friends of the Green Crescent, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, focuses on three primary activities:

  1. Political Advocacy
  2. Public Relations and Communication
  3. Resource Development (Volunteering, Fundraising, Sponsorship, and Grants)

News & Notes

Articles

Guiding Principles of the Green Crescent Trail

A child should be able to walk to school safely. An employee should be able to bike to work easily. A grandparent should be able to stroll to the park, unhurried and unafraid. Movement should not be a luxury. It should be built into the places we live, work, and play. These are some of the core values that inspired the original idea of the Green Crescent Trail.

As the community embarks on the 15×30 campaign to complete 15 miles of connected trail across Clemson, Central, and Pendleton by 2030, it’s a natural moment to revisit why we started this in the first place.

Safety Comes First

If the most vulnerable users are not protected, a transportation system is incomplete.

Safe crossings. Clear connections. Design that reduces conflict between vehicles and pedestrians.
Spaces where families feel confident, not cautious. Safety is not an enhancement. It is the foundation of a connected community.

Connectivity Is the Key

A sidewalk that stops short is not a network. A trail that does not reach schools, parks, campuses, and downtowns leaves opportunity on the table.

True connectivity links:

  • Neighborhoods to parks.
  • Homes to schools.
  • Campuses to downtowns.
  • Towns to one another.

The goal of the Green Crescent Trail has never been isolated segments. It has been a connected system that improves daily life across our towns. When paths connect, people connect.

Design for People

For many years, transportation systems focused primarily on moving vehicles efficiently. But communities across the country are recognizing the importance of designing spaces that also prioritize people.

Wider sidewalks. Protected paths. Shade trees. Thoughtful crossings.

Prioritizing people prioritizes quality of life. It shapes how downtowns feel, how businesses grow, and how independent children and students can be.

More Than Recreation. It’s Infrastructure.

A connected trail system may be enjoyed as a recreational amenity, but it also functions as essential infrastructure.

It improves safety for daily travel.
It supports physical and mental health.
It strengthens local businesses.
It provides transportation options as our community continues to grow.

As growth brings more traffic and development, alternative ways to move help offset congestion and expand choices for residents and visitors alike. Investment in trails is an investment in long-term community vitality.

Progress Happens Through Partnership

The Green Crescent Trail exists because of collaboration. It began as an idea imagined in a university classroom. Community members advocated for it. City, university, and state leaders prioritized it and helped fund it. Municipal staff planned and built it. Donors and grant-makers accelerated progress. Local businesses, residents, and volunteers continue to lend their support.

Bringing safe connections to life has required years of coordination and shared commitment. Continued progress depends on maintaining that same spirit of cooperation.

Looking Ahead

Today’s built segments form the groundwork for something more complete.

The next step is to finish connecting, signing, and expanding the network to 15 miles by 2030. But the deeper goal remains unchanged:  A community where daily movement is safe, natural, and accessible.

Where students and families move easily between neighborhoods and schools. Where parks, campuses, and downtowns feel connected. Where quality of life is strengthened by thoughtful design. These values have shaped the Green Crescent Trail from the beginning.

And they continue to guide the kind of place we are building – a community where it is easier for people to live, work, learn, and play.

March 9, 2026/0 Comments/by Chad Carson
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Untitled-design-1.png 567 847 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2026-03-09 07:00:262026-03-07 06:14:08Guiding Principles of the Green Crescent Trail
News

A New Creekside Trail Connection Could Link Nettles Park to the Heart of Clemson

Easements nearly complete for the next major section of the Green Crescent Trail If you’ve ever visited Nettles Park, you know it’s one of the area’s most popular destinations - home to sports fields, pickleball and tennis courts,…
October 13, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Map_18mile_creek_v2.jpg 2280 1950 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-10-13 19:49:022025-10-14 12:22:18A New Creekside Trail Connection Could Link Nettles Park to the Heart of Clemson
Articles, Support

How Can You Support the Green Crescent Trail?

The Green Crescent Trail is more than just a path — it’s a growing movement to connect our communities, promote healthy living, and create safe, green transportation corridors through Clemson, Central, and Pendleton. Want to be part…
October 6, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/GCT-using-trail-scaled.jpg 1920 2560 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-10-06 11:44:392025-10-06 11:51:31How Can You Support the Green Crescent Trail?
Articles

How Greenville Transformed Its Main Street — And What the Clemson Area Can Learn

In the summer of 1974, an architectural design firm presented a bold plan to leaders of Greenville, SC. Downtown was in decline. Main Street was a four-lane state highway lined with half-empty storefronts. Shoppers had fled to malls. The heart…
September 21, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Main-Street-Greenville-today-after.jpg 817 1200 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-09-21 16:50:342025-10-06 11:50:10How Greenville Transformed Its Main Street — And What the Clemson Area Can Learn
Articles

The Surprising Story Behind the Green Crescent Name

The name “Green Crescent Trail” didn’t come from a marketing team. It was born in a Clemson University classroom. And it almost disappeared at our first community meeting. Yet a decade later, the name has grown into a local symbol of…
September 5, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Green-Crescent-Clemson-Architecture-Community-1-1.png 481 800 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-09-05 12:40:122025-10-06 11:51:09The Surprising Story Behind the Green Crescent Name
News

Trails We Love: Skardon Trail, A Path of Purpose and Perseverance

Some trails are loved for their views. Others for their peaceful solitude. And then there are those like the Skardon Trail, where every step carries the weight of history and the spirit of a hero. Tucked quietly near the entrance to Clemson…
August 18, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/IMG_20250615_123604-1-scaled.jpg 1920 2560 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-08-18 19:33:162025-08-18 19:33:16Trails We Love: Skardon Trail, A Path of Purpose and Perseverance
Articles, News

A Safer Way to Walk in Central Is Within Reach

What if you could walk safely from your apartment or neighborhood in Central to the library, Town Hall, or your next CAT bus stop … without worrying about traffic, narrow shoulders, or missing sidewalks? What if families could walk together…
August 8, 2025
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Photosim_RecCenterTrailCentral_screenshot-quality.png 561 745 Chad Carson http://www.greencrescenttrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/gct-logo-c-256x300.png Chad Carson2025-08-08 17:05:262025-08-18 19:29:37A Safer Way to Walk in Central Is Within Reach
Page 2 of 6‹1234›»

  • Store
Followon TwitterSubscribeto RSS Feed
© Copyright Green Crescent Trail
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
Scroll to top