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4-mile trail to open soon in Leechburg, thanks to volunteers' dedication | TribLIVE.com
Valley News Dispatch

4-mile trail to open soon in Leechburg, thanks to volunteers' dedication

Haley Daugherty
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Louis B. Ruediger | TribLive
The Kiski Junction Railroad Bridge in Schenley on Aug 10, 2022. It connects the Tredway Trail to a new 4-mile trail to Leechburg.
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Courtesy of Armstrong Trails website
In 2022, Armstrong Trails purchased Kiski Junction Railroad, which is 14 miles from Crooked Creek Bridge where it enters the Allegheny River to the Kiski River and then four miles from the Allegheny River up the Kiski River to Leechburg.

A 4-mile trail in Leechburg is close to opening after months of work by volunteers.

The trail will link Leechburg to a series of trails that span across Armstrong County from Westmoreland to Clarion counties.

Chris Ziegler, executive director of Armstrong Trails, said her organization bought Kiski Junction Railroad in 2022.

About 10 miles of the old rail line path from the Kiski River to Crooked Creek Bridge — a portion of trail that Ziegler calls the main line — took about nine months to complete and opened for use through the help of four consistent volunteers. The project used about $850,000 in donated equipment, $750,000 in donated time and a $120,000 grant.

“We did $1.5 million worth of work for $120,000,” Ziegler said.

With this purchase, the organization went from overseeing 36 miles of trails to 52.5 miles.

Ziegler said she and two other volunteers have been working the four miles of land connecting to Leechburg since the beginning of May, establishing a path for the 10-foot-wide trail and finding and sometimes adding culvert pipes.

Culverts are embedded pipes that are used to maintain the flow of small, shallow streams, swales or ditches where they are crossed by a trail. Ziegler said the 10 miles from the Kiski River to Crooked Creek Bridge had culvert pipes from when the railroad relaid the tracks. Eight culvert pipes were replaced along the 4-mile trail leading to Leechburg.

Ziegler predicted the latest section of trail would be open for use in September.

Haley Daugherty is a TribLive reporter covering local politics, feature stories and Allegheny County news. A native of Pittsburgh, she lived in Alabama for six years. She joined the Trib in 2022 after graduating from Chatham University. She can be reached at hdaugherty@triblive.com.

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Categories: Local | Valley News Dispatch
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