What Does That Actually Mean? Green Crescent Trail “15×30” Campaign Explained
You may have heard us talk about the 15×30 Campaign, or seen the phrase “15 miles by 2030.”
But what does that actually mean?
Is the Green Crescent one long trail?
A single construction project?
Something like the Swamp Rabbit Trail?
Not exactly.
In this article, I want to clarify what 15×30 includes, how the pieces fit together, and what kind of Green Crescent Trail network is being built across Clemson, Central, and Pendleton.

Click on a link to an interactive version of the map below to see how the pieces fit together: https://shorturl.at/0Yzpz
A Simple Definition
At its core, 15×30 is the plan to connect Clemson, Central, and Pendleton, along with three university campuses, into a safer, more usable trail network by 2030.
That network is designed for everyday life. Walking to school. Biking to class. Getting to a park. Moving between downtowns. Connecting neighborhoods to places people already go.
It is not a single rail trail.
It is not one continuous off-street path.
And it is not starting from scratch.
A Network, Not a Single Trail
One of the most important things to understand about the Green Crescent Trail is that it’s a network.
That means it’s made up of different types of facilities working together as one system:
- Separated multi-use paths
- Side paths along roads
- Low-stress neighborhood streets
- Some upgraded sidewalks
- Some on-street bike facilities, where appropriate
You can think of it as a tapestry rather than a single thread.
This approach isn’t a compromise. Our communities are already built. Roads, neighborhoods, campuses, and waterways shape what’s possible.
A connected network allows progress where opportunities exist, while still improving safety and comfort over time.
What Counts Toward the 15 Miles
The 15 miles in the 15×30 goal are not defined by one design type.
They are defined by usefulness. A mile counts if it:
- Helps people safely move between meaningful places
- Contributes to a continuous, legible route
- Strengthens the overall connectivity of the system
Some miles will feel like traditional greenways. Others will feel more downtown or campus-oriented. Many will continue to improve with better crossings, signage, and design upgrades.
The goal is not uniformity. The goal is safe, connected movement.
Where We’re Starting Today
The Green Crescent Trail already exists in pieces.
Today, there are nearly ten miles of trail segments across the area that people can use. Some are well known and heavily used. Others are easy to miss. Most don’t yet feel like part of a single, intuitive system.
That gap between “existing” and “easy to understand and use” is part of what 15×30 is meant to address.
Building new trail matters. But making what already exists work better together via signage, trailheads, and maps matters just as much.
Why Connection Is the Core Idea
Every trail segment is valuable. Many were hard-won and took years of effort.
At the same time, a mile of trail creates the most value when it connects us to places we want to go.
Connections multiply usefulness. A short link can:
- Complete a safe route to school
- Bridge a gap between a neighborhood and a park
- Turn two isolated segments into a daily transportation option
This is why 15×30 focuses on closing gaps and stitching segments together, not just adding mileage in isolation.
How to Read the Map
If you’ve looked at the 15×30 map, you may notice something important: it shows more than 15 miles of trail. That’s intentional.
The map shows:
- What’s open and usable today
- What’s realistically planned or feasible by 2030
- The broader shape of a network that will continue evolving
The 15-mile goal lives inside that larger picture. It focuses effort on the connections that matter most, without pretending the future is perfectly predictable.
You don’t need to understand every line on the map to understand the vision. What matters is the direction: toward a safer, more connected network.
What This Sets Up Next
This article is about orientation.
In the weeks ahead, we’ll explain:
- The values guiding 15×30
- How trails are designed to be safe and accessible
- What it takes to fund and build a connected network
For now, the key idea is simple: 15×30 is about turning individual trail segments into a system that works.
And that work is already underway.
Join the Conversation
15×30 is a community effort, and this rollout is meant to be a dialogue.
What questions do you have after reading this?
Is there a place you’d love to see better connected, or part of the map you’d like us to explain more clearly?
If you’re reading this on our website, you’re welcome to leave a comment below.
You can also reach out anytime through our contact page:
https://www.greencrescenttrail.org/contact/
Your questions and feedback help shape what we share next.


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