DuPage River Trail

Illinois

15 Reviews

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DuPage River Trail Facts

States: Illinois
Counties: Du Page, Will
Length: 33.1 miles
Trail end points: Warrenville Grove Forest Preserve (Warrenville) and E Jefferson St (Shorewood)
Trail surfaces: Asphalt
Trail category: Greenway/Non-RT
ID: 7641252

DuPage River Trail Description

The DuPage River Trail spans over 30 miles across two counties: DuPage and Will. It's currently open in several disconnected segments mainly in parks and forest preserves beginning in Warrenville and traveling south through Naperville, Bolingbrook, Plainfield, and Shorewood. On its northern end, it also connects with the Illinois Prairie Path, a notable 61-mile pathway in the Rail-Trail Hall of Fame.

Naperville's Centennial Park offers a good rest area at the northern end of the trail. Here, you'll find restrooms, a playground, and athletic fields. The city's DuPage River Park also provides another nice stopping point for your ride with picnic shelters, restrooms, wooded areas, and a pond. 

South of downtown Naperville, the trail makes use of city streets. The City of Naperville has posted signs with a safer route that avoids traveling along busy Washington Street and includes less time on Hillside Avenue, which is a thru street.

Heading south from Aurora Ave the route is as follows: Webster Street to Hillside Avenue (crossing Washington Street at a traffic signal) to Melody Lane to Maple Lane to Sunset Drive to Loomis Street and finally to Villa Avenue, where the off-road trail restarts.

A trailside attraction in Bolingbrook is Hidden Lakes Historic Trout Farm. Fishing is allowed in this beautiful park with a permit. The ponds are stocked with trout in April and October, and with catfish from May through September.

The southernmost segment begins at Sunset Parkway, where the trail is almost entirely open and flat across a floodplain of the adjacent DuPage River. Along the way, there’s a trail spur with a decorative waterfall and a small rest area with river overview.

Approaching Black Road in Shorewood, the main trail descends to go under the road bridge, next to the river. There is an alternate grade-level crossing of Black Road just to the west, one that can be used when the lower crossing is closed due to flooding. But traffic is often heavy on Black Road and there is no stop light to make that crossing easier and safer.

Once south of Black Road, the remainder of the trail is in beautiful Hammel Woods. The woods entirely cover the trail here, as it moves forward over some gently rolling hills. It passes by two large park areas, the second of which has a most interesting information plaque and display of its Bat Condos. Arriving at the southern trail end, one can proceed across a short bridge to still another park area or on to a picturesque overlook area next to a small dam across the river.

In summer 2018, a 1.25 mile extension was opened connecting Whalon Lake Preserve to Greene Valley Forest Preserve. The limestone trail begins on Royce Road west of Bollingbrook Drive up to Greene Road & 79th Street. 

Parking and Trail Access

From north to south, parking is available in:

  • Centennial Park (500 Jackson Ave., Naperville)
  • Veterans Park (303 E Gartner Rd., Naperville)
  • Weigand Riverfront Park (2436 S. Washington St., Naperville)
  • DuPage River Park (808 Royce Rd., Naperville)
  • Trout Farm Park (419 Trout Farm Rd., Bolingbrook)
  • Eaton Preserve Park (191 135th St., Plainfield)
  • Renwick Community Park (24550 W Renwick Rd., Plainfield)

Parking is also available at four areas in Hammel Woods:

  • Off Black Road, at Crumby Recreation Area and DuPage River Access
  • On the Route 59 Access, at Hidden Shelter and Grinton Grove

DuPage River Trail Reviews

Beautiful houses and river scene to look at while riding

This trail kinda goes in a couple of directions. We start south at 111th street and Book road and ride north through downtown Naperville. This trail has some short sections that consist of riding on somewhat busy streets but it is safe. Naperville city residents tend to really respect the safety of bike riders. Nonetheless if you have children riding with you, take great care when on the street portion of this trail.
Parking all along the trail is very safe and free parking.
The trail is hard blacktop that is smooth as ice and very well cared for! The lovely and HUGE Naperville homes that line the river and those in downtown Naperville will be of interest to some. If you are interested in Naperville's North Central College, this trail will take you right into the campus so you can view the buildings there also.
If you want to eat while riding, there are so many incredible restaurants in downtown Naperville.
You will also see wildlife while riding this trail so that is a plus. This is a very busy trail with bikers and walkers all year long!

Dupage River Trail-Royce Road access

Trail is in great condition, hardly any bumps and just a small hill climb east of the trout farm.
It can get congested on weekends/holidays.
Very scenic views with forested and open areas.
It is about a 5-mile round trip from Royce Road to Indian Boundary Park.
There is a 2 mile connecting loop from the trout farm that goes around Whalon Lake.

DuPage River trail-Hammel Woods access (Will county)

Rode from hammel woods (on black road) north to trailhead at sunset park in plainfield then south back through woods to trailhead at jefferson street in shorewood, about 10 miles roundtrip.
North of black road the asphalt pavement is flat and in excellent shape. Trail goes from the woods parking lot then north under black road and through a wide prairie along the river with no shade. South of black road the trail winds through the woods with very little slope and asphalt pavement is in good shape. Easy riding all the way.

A Pleasant Trail thru Parks and on City Streets

This trail is a nice one if you are looking for something other than a super straight rails to trails corridor. I parked at the nearby and beautiful DuPage County St James Forest Preserve and took a connecting trail to the start of the officially named West Branch DuPage River Trail that heads south. Most of the route is in Forest Preserves, alongside the West Branch of the DuPage River.
Once you come upon the spectacular Naperville Riverwalk, north of downtown Naperville which does not allow bikes, you must use city streets. That provides a nice variety. South of downtown the trail is again in parks. One can travel all the way south into Will County, with more options for connecting trails.

Accordion

Marvelous variety of habitat

The eastern side of this well maintained trail contains a wide variety of habitat including riverside, prairie, woodland, lakeside, wetland, and urban making this a 4 season ride. We biked through acres of golden rod in bloom which was just magnificent. The trail does get more urban traveling west and has intersections but does a good job of staying by the river.

Great Trail - nice blacktop

Parked at the public parking lot trail access by KLB tax services. This is a perfect distance from Boilingbrook to Naperville, around 8 miles. This trail takes you right along the river. Notable scenic areas are Whalon Lake, Hidden Lakes Trout Farm, beautiful homes in the Knoch Knolls Rd. area and the Naperville River Walk. Seen many ducks, birds big and small, squirrels, ground squirrels, even some deer in the woods right after the Dupage Sports Complex. It takes you through prairie, woods and many parks along the way. Very well maintained. Awesome blacktop surface. You see plenty of people along the trail. Didn’t ride the whole trail past downtown Naperville but hope to another time. Downtown Naperville is super nice. Q-BBQ is amazing, so is the salted caramel gelato at Sweet Home Gelato. Enjoy! - BRB

June 20, 2020 Review

This trail is inaccurately described as asphalt. It is partially asphalt and crushed stone. The trail is poorly marked and has too many interactions with busy roads to cross. Would not recommend for any attempt of a long distance ride as not enjoyable.

Don’t know why we did not investigate this section of the trail sooner.

My husband and I rode this trail for the first time. We rode the Naperville and Bolingbrook sections many times. This section is as good. It has large portions with shade. Several toilets. Picnic tables. A dog park. Picturesque photo op trail branches. One drawback: dog poop. Strangly enough, not near the dog park. The poop is scattered 30 ft or so on either side of access points. No reason for it, because free bags are provided at each access point. Good thing dog walkers are too lazy to walk any farther. We will go back. The poop is not enough to keep us away. Also, we saw a police 🚔 patroling the trail.

Nice now, and will be much better when fully connected

The section beginning near Knock Knolls park in Naperville/Bolingbrook heading north into downtown Naperville is great. The path avoids most interaction with the nearby roads, allowing you to ride on smooth pavement, uninterrupted, for many miles until you hit downtown. The section downtown Naperville is a bit windy through some streets, but downtown is a great place to stop for some food and whatnot.

The trail from Knock Knolls to Lake Whalon in Bolingbrook is also great, with a lot of good scenery and wildlife along the way.

Inaccessiblity

There are points through downtown Naperville that doesn't allow bicycles. Otherwise I nice trail.

Dupage river trail

Great map

disappointed - trial not marked, Joliet not supprting of the trail

From descriptions, we thought we could start from Hammel woods and bike either North or South.
While Hammel woods part of trail is nice, it is small, and once you leave, Joliet doesn't give you any guidance where to go on roads to connect up with next section of trail.
In fact, coming out of Hammel Woods on the North into a subdivision in Joliet, Joliet wouldn't even cut the curt - trail ends abruptly at a curb! If you don't see it coming, easy to bend/bust your rim going hard over the curb.
I'm used to riding on trails where towns care about the trail, bikers, and visitors.
Never will ride in Joliet again, or spend money there.

Beautiful Trail

This trail is divided into several sections so my review will be divided as well.

Downtown Naperville - Knoch Knolls Nature Center
This section is very nice, much of it follows the DuPage River and you are in shade trees. In downtown Naperville you are on streets for a short period and must follow the signs. Then the trail becomes a beautiful paved path along the river. Highly recommended.

Knoch Knolls Nature Center - to Rt 53 and Royce Road
This is a well maintained, beautiful trail through both woods and prairie. I like this stretch because you are away from the road and on a paved trail. It circles a small lake (Whalon Lake), passes by a trout lake and the scenery is beautiful throughout your ride.

Hassert Road (111th) in Riverview Farmstead
Very short, but nice. I live right by this part so I am on it all of the time...probably not worth a trip here because it is so short.

Eaton Preserve Park off Pilcher Rd (135th)
This is just a very short paved loop. Skip it.

Stretch in Plainfield along the DuPage River
I started in a subdivision (GPS location: 1713 Parkview Dr. Plainfiled) This trail is worth the trip. It is a mix of riding through prairie and woods along the river. I went during the week so it wasn't crowded, but I can see where this trail could be busy. Very few hills so it is an easy ride. I rode from my starting point to where the trail ends at route 52 and then back again, only about 7.5 miles. There are points along the river to stop and take in the view. The trail goes under W Black road so you don't have to worry about crossing that busy road. If you don't want to start where I did, there are numerous parking areas in the forest preserve. Very nice.

Beautiful!

My husband and I have a road tandem. This trail was perfect for us. There are very few busy road crossings (watch for cars turning right into your path......they don't watch for you). We rode on a friday and it was perfect. I think it might be busier than we would like on the weekend. A lot of twists and turns, which we like, but would definitely slow you down with more traffic on a weekend. Not many hills (would have liked a few more) but we didn't do the whole ride. The southern most entrance point does not begin on the trail. Avoid that unless you want to travel with GPS through neighborhoods. The next entrance point begins on the trail but if you don't cross the wooden bridge you dead end (we did that... added distance to our trip, but that's OK). I think the trail would benefit from some signs or off ramps that lead to a cafe or restaurant or coffee shop. Overall, this is the best trail we have done yet and we will definitely go back!

A Great Start!

I hope I'm still around to ride this entire trail when it's finished. The first section through Hammel Woods is really delightful! A good, safe underpass at Black Road. Excellent parking and rest areas. Peaceful overviews of the river. A very nice visit with nature.

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