Riding the GAP Trail
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Rob and Nikki Fleming came with friends from Tarpon Springs, Florida. Tom and Carolyn Cassell made the trip from Tucson. And Jeremy Cline travelled from Connecticut. Each year, bicyclists come to Pittsburgh from across the country and beyond to ride the 150-mile Great Allegheny Passage (GAP).
Last year, that number reached 1.4 million, according to an analysis by Dr. Andrew Herr of St. Vincent College. And the GAP’s 2019 economic impact was $121 million for the five counties it passes through:
Allegheny, Westmoreland, Fayette, Somerset, and Allegany, MD. It’s estimated that $75 million of the $121 million is direct spending by tourists, who come from all 50 states and 35 countries.
The GAP trail begins in Pittsburgh’s Point State Park and goes east through Pittsburgh’s South Side, Homestead, McKeesport, West Newton, Connellsville, Ohiopyle, Confluence, Rockwood, Meyersdale, Frostburg, MD, and Cumberland, MD. In Cumberland, it connects with the C&O Canal Towpath through Hancock, MD, Williamsport, MD, Shepherdstown, WV, Harpers Ferry/ Bolivar, WV, Brunswick, MD and Washington, D.C.
Jeremy Cline, a landscaper from Beacon Falls, CT, poses on the Great Allegheny Passage at The Waterfront in West Homestead while on his four-day ride from Cumberland to Pittsburgh. Cline said he made the trip, complete with 50 pounds of gear on a trailer, because he wanted to camp along the river.
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