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(Photos: Cayce Clifford; Andrew Hetherington; Brad Trone)
国产吃瓜黑料 Magazine's Award Winning Travel Journalism

The 20 Most Livable Towns and Cities in America


Published: 

The past year showed us all that having access to the outdoors is essential for our health and well-being. It also magnified the inequities inherent in that access. For 2021鈥檚 Best Towns package, we chose 13 of the country鈥檚 most diverse places and evaluated them according to the factors that matter today: sustainability, affordability, and outdoor equity. Here are the cities of tomorrow.


New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

In the two decades since we began 颅running our annual list of the best places to live, our goal has always been to surprise you. We鈥檝e found little-known towns that were on the verge (yes, there was a time when Bend, Oregon, held that distinction) and helped you see enduring outdoor hot spots in a novel light. We鈥檝e focused on new adventure draws and 颅emerging 颅craft-beer scenes. We鈥檝e made our selections by committee, by submission, and by executive decision fiat. This time, we鈥檙e 颅taking a different approach.

As Americans struggled with challenges brought on by COVID-19, nature became an antidote. 鈥淒uring the pandemic, the wealthy fled urban areas for country homes, while suburbanites spread out in backyards and visited nearby parks,鈥 says , equity director at the (TPL). 鈥淚n too many cities, however, residents without shaded, tree-lined streets and close-to-home public green 颅spaces found it much more challenging to get outside.鈥 This made us ask: How do our most diverse cities fare when it comes to important factors like green infrastructure and outdoor access?

We looked through a few different lenses. First we examined 2020 demographic data from personal-finance website WalletHub, representing the 颅socioeconomic and cultural diversity of cities across the U.S. Of course, how diverse a place is doesn鈥檛 predict how inclusive it is. So we dug deeper, with on-the-ground reporting about how these cities are getting more people of color outside鈥攁nd how they鈥檙e falling short.

Next up: the sustainability lens. There鈥檚 no separating outdoor from green equity. Creating safe and reachable parks is as much an access issue as it is an ecological one. Advancing clean-energy legislation that doesn鈥檛 just benefit white communities promotes environmental justice and supports our climate future. We looked at how the most multicultural cities compare with a recent report from WalletHub that rated the 100 most 颅populated places 颅according to their green policy and investment. Those that scored the highest made it to our second tier. Then we factored in affordability鈥攁nd the pandemic-fueled changes to the housing market鈥攂y only selecting cities with a median home price of less than $600,000.

鈥淲e鈥檝e often said that the pandemic has been an amplifier of inequities that were already there,鈥 says Jos茅 Gonz谩lez, founder of the outreach and advocacy organization . 鈥淚f we take old redlining maps and overlay them with COVID-19 numbers, with lack of park access, with other failing health components, you see a very strong correlation.鈥

Solving structural inequities is a matter of redesigning these maps, says Gonz谩lez. While we鈥檙e seeing signs of this in recent legislation and renewed efforts from local stewards and nonprofits, there鈥檚 still a lot of work to be done. There also needs to be increased emphasis on making these outdoor spaces more culturally inclusive. 鈥淭here might be a great trail system that鈥檚 reachable from the city, but if I go and get this feeling of this is not for you, then that is a barrier. Each of us has a responsibility to change the narrative surrounding who is welcome in the outdoors,鈥 Gonz谩lez says. 鈥擡rin Riley

Our Rating Metrics

Diversity: A 2021 from personal-finance site WalletHub ranked the 501 most populated cities based on the diversity of their socioeconomic, cultural, household, and re颅ligious makeup. The rankings drew on 13 specific metrics, including educational attain颅颅ment and languages spoken. On the scorecards we include for each city, we provide that city鈥檚 WalletHub ranking.

Sustainability: A 2019 WalletHub ranked the 100 most popu颅lated cities according to in颅vestment in green initiatives. It used 28 metrics, including air quality and the ability to get to work using public trans颅portation. Again, on our scorecard, we give the WalletHub ranking.

Affordability: Median home prices are based on projections through May 2021 provided by the real estate website .

Outdoor Equity: In addition to our own reporting, we used data from a 2021 Trust for Public Land on the percentage of each city that consists of parkland, along with the percentage of residents of color who live within a ten-minute walk of a park.

Meet Our Newest 国产吃瓜黑料+ Members

To get a better sense of what outdoor access looks like in these cities, we tapped a local expert in each to provide some intel. From new parks to greater state-level investment, our experts shared highlights of their favorite places and what improvements they鈥檙e seeing鈥攐r not. As community leaders who are actively helping more underrepresented groups get into nature, we鈥檙e excited to welcome them to 国产吃瓜黑料+, a growing community of adventurers who believe in the unifying potential of the outdoors.

Wylie Street in Cabbagetown
Wylie Street in Cabbagetown (Photo: Andrew Hetherington)
Atlanta scorecard

Atlanta, Georgia

If you haven鈥檛 been to the South鈥檚 largest city in a few years, you might not recognize it. From the expansion of the , which will soon be a 33-mile path that connects 45 neighborhoods in the heart of the city, to a $5 million investment in 20 more miles of protected bike lanes, this bustling metropolis is banking hard on livability and open space.

And that鈥檚 just the start of one of the largest urban green initiatives in the country. The 280-acre will open this October, eclipsing Atlanta鈥檚 central by some 100 acres. Along with the soon-to-expand, 2.4-mile that intersects Westside Park, local nonprofits recently completed construction of the , which connects the park to 11 neighborhoods.

On the densely populated southwestern edge, the city purchased nearly 13 acres in 2020, not far from the 135-acre . This new swath will bring parkland to the predominantly Black areas of Cascade, East Point, and Greenbriar, part of mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms鈥檚 campaign commitment that every neighborhood planning unit in the city have its own park. ( from the TPL shows that minority communities have access to 49 percent less park space per capita than residents in neighborhoods that are majority white.) All this upcoming development comes on the heels of the completion of the state鈥檚 first purpose-built singletrack, .

In response to a shortage of affordable housing driven in part by an influx of out-of-staters lured by the growing financial-颅technology industry, the city plans to create grant programs to keep legacy residents in their BeltLine-adjacent homes. While other cities in the region focus on frenzied growth, Atlanta 颅continues to prioritize longtime communities. 鈥擬uriel Vega


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Tammy Shakur, Outdoor Guide

Tammy Shakur
(Photo: Andrew Hetherington)

鈥淎tlanta is actively investing in getting more people outside. After a catastrophic flood in 2002 in the Vine City neighborhood, the Trust for Public Land partnered with the city, local outdoor organizers, and community leaders to construct 16-acre as a way to foster community. Since opening in June, it鈥檚 been a gathering place for this underserved area.鈥


Charlotte scorecard
Downtown Charlotte
Downtown Charlotte (Photo: Cliford Mervil)

Charlotte, North Carolina

No offense to Utahns, but Park City should be a great adventure town. Look at those natural assets. But Charlotte? Charlotte isn鈥檛 even in the mountains. It鈥檚 a banking center in North Carolina鈥檚 Piedmont. Yet the Queen City is rapidly evolving into a hot spot for adventure, thanks to growing greenways.

The heart of the city鈥檚 outdoor community is the , a 1,300-acre recreation area along the Catawba River, which has plans to expand its acreage this year. In addition to rafting opportunities for all levels, the Center also has climbing, hiking, and mountain-biking options.

And while Charlotte isn鈥檛 known for an abundance of greenspace, that will change when the 606-acre opens this fall with 18 miles of new 颅hiking and biking trails. A greenway master plan years in the making aims to build 30 more miles of trails by 2023, including the missing pieces of the , a 26-mile route that runs from South Carolina through the city center to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

But the town鈥檚 sustainability initiatives go beyond new parks and greenways. Charlotte aims to be a living laboratory for the circular economy, which involves gradually stepping away from the reliance on nonrenewable resources. First up is a public-private to create an innovation center that showcases closed-loop recycling systems, and a revamped program that rewards participants who use recycled goods to develop new products. 鈥擥.A.


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Eric Supil, Executive Director of

Eric Supil
(Photo: Eric Supil)

鈥淭his town is full of people looking to get outside. We serve as that first outdoor experience and help people get out of their comfort zone.鈥


Downtown Saint Paul
Downtown Saint Paul (Photo: YinYang/Getty)
Saint Paul scorecard

Saint Paul, Minnesota

With 26 miles of Mississippi River waterfront, the thriving state capital has always had beautiful bones, with distinct neighborhoods and ample greenspace. But its first Black mayor, Melvin Carter, is making impressive strides in building a city that, in his words, 鈥渨orks for all of us.鈥 Increased investment in equitable and dispersed parks, immigrant and refugee resources, and outdoor programming for adults and youth of color are making it easier for everyone to get outside.

In May, the TPL ranked Saint Paul second nationwide, giving the city high marks for accessibility and greenery. To that end, Saint Paul鈥檚 in-progress Highland Bridge neighborhood, a mixed-use development on 135 acres along the river, will feature 55 acres of public land when it鈥檚 completed in the next decade.

A year ago, the Parks and Recreation Department introduced programming both for and led by residents of color, from winter ice fishing on Como Lake to Latino family hiking outings where only Spanish is spoken. In April, the department鈥檚 Decompressing while BIPOC was a popular recurring event that invited people to gather at a park along the river and be in nature.

In partnership with the , Saint Paul developed a , which was adopted by the city council in December 2019. It focuses on achieving carbon neutrality in operations by 2030. To wit: the new development will be 100 percent carbon-free, powered by hydroelectric sources.

For decades, Saint Paul has played the role of humble sibling to Minneapolis. But this laid-back little city has finally hit its stride and in many ways is outpacing its bigger, blingier twin. 鈥擲tephanie Pearson


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

, Saint Paul Coordinator of Environmental and Outdoor Education

Asha Shoffner
(Photo: Russ Stark)

鈥淭he BIPOC Outdoors Twin Cities went from 100 members in June 2020 to more than 1,000 today. It鈥檚 a great way to find folks to recreate with that you know aren鈥檛 going to question your presence.鈥


Albuquerque scorecard
Albuquerque
Albuquerque (Photo: Brad Trone)

Albuquerque, New Mexico

Nestled in the plains just be颅yond the foothills of the Sandia Mountains, Albuquerque has long been a gateway to the treasures of northern New Mexico. But the abundant hiking and horseback riding in , world-class skiing at , and blue-chip trout fishing in the Rio Grande have been largely inaccessible to many of the city鈥檚 residents. It ranks only 40th in outdoor access among America鈥檚 hundred largest cities鈥攊n a state where nearly half the land, some 35 million acres, is public.

City and state governments are well into new efforts to remedy that. About a year before the pandemic, New Mexico鈥檚 颅Economic Development Department established an (ORD) in order to advance its recreation economy (which, at more than 颅$2 billion, has grown faster than the state GDP overall) and to help underserved youth gain wider access to the outdoors via the . The fund prioritizes low-income communities鈥攊mportant for a city whose poverty rate is 60 percent higher than the national average鈥攁nd in 2020 awarded more than a quarter-million dollars to recipients, including nonprofits and grassroots organizations in Albuquerque.

For 2021, the fund鈥檚 budget has more than tripled鈥攅nough to get some 30,000 young New Mexicans outside. The ORD鈥檚 current infrastructure fund also includes some $300,000 to improve 42 miles of the that run through the heart of Albuquerque. Moreover, the city has doubled down on conservation, electing its first sustainability officer and establishing aggressive goals, which include reducing energy usage by 65 percent in the next four years and powering municipal operations solely with renewable energy by 2030. Before, Burque帽os were largely on their own. With these efforts, the city and state are moving closer to bringing the outside to everyone. 鈥擬urat Oztaskin


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Laura Flores, Program Director for

Laura Flores
(Photo: Robin Arellano)

鈥淭he first phase of the initiative involved establishing a task force to advance the use of outdoor classrooms and organizing an outdoor-learning week in late September for thousands of students across the state.鈥


Skyline behind the Schuylkill River Boardwalk
Skyline behind the Schuylkill River Boardwalk (Photo: Jon Lovette/Getty)
Philadelphia scorecard

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Philadelphia might have a reputation for being an industrial city full of rowdy sports fans who exclusively eat cheesesteaks, but those who only see the grit are missing all the green. The quantity of space devoted to parks and recreation is impressive. Not only was the city designed to draw residents outdoors as far back as the 17th century, but it continues to build on that legacy. Two miles northwest of City Hall along the Schuylkill River鈥檚 banks, 2,050-acre is a conservation triumph, established in the 1800s to protect the city鈥檚 primary water source. It鈥檚 composed of hardwood forest, serpentine creeks, and more than 50 miles of trails.

According to the TPL, 95 percent of residents live within a ten-minute walk of a park. In 2020, visits to those spaces spiked more than 50 percent, and it isn鈥檛 slowing down. Nor is investment in the city鈥檚 future as an outdoor hub. More than 40 community organizations are working to complete the , a sprawling multi-use system stretching from downtown Philadelphia into surrounding counties that鈥檚 now more than 350 miles long, and will be 800 miles when it鈥檚 finished. This year in South Philly, the 350-acre , designed by the sons of Frederick Law Olmsted, will get $4.5 million for a welcome center that 颅颅will offer equipment rentals; future financing will go toward preserving the park鈥檚 wetlands and increasing accessibility.

The city is also on its way to a carbon-free future. Its includes the goal of 100 percent clean energy for municipal operations by 2030, and complete neutrality by 2050. 鈥擪ate Morgan


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Jamie R. Gauthier, Philadelphia

鈥淲e have an annual summer program that closes designated streets to traffic to create opportunities for children to play and foster community among neighbors.鈥


Chicago scorecard
Lake Michigan
Lake Michigan (Photo: Mike Killion)

Chicago, Illinois

With Lake Michigan at its doorstep and more than 8,800 acres of green颅space, Chicago is well provisioned for outdoor recreation, especially if you鈥檙e an urban cyclist. Over 300 miles of bike lanes give the Windy City plenty of two-wheel cred, although unmet promises for new paths have irked residents for decades. That鈥檚 finally about to change.

This spring, mayor Lori Lightfoot announced a five-year, $37 million plan for dedicated bike lanes. The initiative鈥檚 latest feat, the , connects the north and south legs of Chicago鈥檚 famed and routes cyclists and pedestrians above and away from road traffic, connecting 18 miles.

According to 2020 by U.S. News & World Report, Chicago is the Midwest鈥檚 most diverse large city, and its park sys颅tem is widely accessible. But bike trails are a different story. In Cook County, which includes Chicago and its suburbs, less than 50 percent of Black and 45 percent of Latino residents live within a mile and a half of a bike trail. The county is preparing its own bike-infrastructure plan to change that. Trail extensions for greater accessibility in underserved communities and safety improvements, such as off-street trails, are part of the plan, which is slated for completion in spring 2022.

In the meantime, these communities are not waiting. , a group for Black Chicagoans that formed last year, draws hundreds to meetups and introduces young people to cycling through after-school programs. 颅颅鈥擲tephanie Vermillion


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Christine Meissner, Chicago Leader for

Christine Meissner
(Photo: Christine Meissner)

鈥淚n February, when we got 21 inches of snow, we utilized the Chicago Park District鈥檚 gear-lending library to borrow snowshoes for a winter hike at the Skokie Lagoons. It was a great success鈥攎ost participants had never been snowshoeing before.鈥


Jacksonville scorecard
A creek near Jacksonville
A creek near Jacksonville (Photo: Courtesy Visit Jacksonville)

Jacksonville, Florida

Over the past decade, Jacksonville experienced one of the largest increases in new residents of any U.S. city, an influx driven by that perennial American quest for more space, a mellow climate, low taxes, a robust job market, and miles of beaches. In a place once lauded for having the most parkland of any metropolis its size, access has changed as a result of that population growth; while 15 percent of Jacksonville is parkland, just 35 percent of residents are within a ten-minute walk of those areas.

But the city is working on changing that. It鈥檚 developing the , a 30-mile biking and walking system that will also link 14 of Jacksonville鈥檚 neighborhoods to urban creeks. The first phase, which connects the historic downtown area of Brooklyn with the 4.8-mile , is set to be completed later this year.

The city continues to add to its public-land acreage. In November 2020, the , located in the city鈥檚 underserved Northside neighborhood, opened with 5,600 acres, seven parks and preserves, and 30 miles of trails. Despite its fast growth, Jacksonville is actively working to regain its reputation as a parks capital. 鈥擪ristin Braswell


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Daryl Joseph, Jacksonville of Parks, Recreation, and Community Services

鈥淛acksonville is the country鈥檚 largest city by area. Much of that land is untouched nature. We鈥檙e working hard to make that accessible to all of the city鈥檚 neighborhoods.鈥


Aurora Reservoir
Aurora Reservoir (Photo: Benjamin Rasmussen)
Aurora scorecard

Aurora, Colorado

Aurora was once written off as a sprawling Denver suburb with a mostly white and aging population颅颅, but this vast expanse of plains ten miles east of the capital 颅has emerged as the state鈥檚 most multicultural city.

Aurora lacks a backdrop of majestic, snowcapped peaks but has a unique, eastern Colorado beauty. You won鈥檛 find a traditional downtown, but there are 8,000 acres of open space, 103 miles of trails, and the white sand and clear water of , which gives landlocked residents a beach fix and access to windsurfing, scuba diving, and paddleboarding.

Those outdoor riches are complemented by diversity that nearly rivals New York City. Aurora is approaching a majority-minority status, with a vibrant culinary scene that includes Burmese, Laotian, and a to fuel active endeavors. 鈥擩en Murphy


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Javi Perez (left), Co-Owner of the in Aurora

Javi Perez
(Photo: Benjamin Rasmussen)

鈥淲e host a run club every Tuesday night, and from the brewery you can quickly reach Bluff Lake Nature Center and run miles of trails surrounded by greenery and wildlife.鈥


North Las Vegas scorecard
Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area
Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area (Photo: Jon Glassberg/Louder Than 11)

North Las Vegas, Nevada

While many people think relocating to Las Vegas is tantamount to moving to Disney鈥檚 Epcot Center, it鈥檚 actually one of the most livable areas in the country. A slew of new arrivals鈥攁ttracted by the city鈥檚 low cost of living, nominal property taxes, and proximity to public lands鈥攈as led to a pandemic-fueled boom. You鈥檒l see plenty of Don鈥檛 California on My Nevada T-shirts around town, as fleeing Golden Staters have instigated skyrocketing housing prices and created a short supply of real estate south and west of the Strip. But less than ten miles north, the smaller hub of North Las Vegas is expanding to meet the demand.

The city sits at the northern edge of Las Vegas Valley, a hot spot of outdoor recreation, from hiking the and kayaking the Colorado River to climbing at nearby , 18 miles west. North Las Vegas has more than two dozen urban parks already, and as of 2019, it began building a network of more than 70 miles of trails to connect them. Its residents, 47 percent of whom are Hispanic or Latino, Black, Asian, Pacific Islander, or Native American, all live within two miles of a park.

While master-planned communities are under construction, which will keep the supply of affordable housing high, those who come here for nature will be happy to know that they鈥檙e not buying into suburban sprawl. Most of the state鈥48 million acres鈥攊s federal land and can鈥檛 be developed. And thanks to a bipartisan bill now making its way through Congress, more than two million acres will likely receive wilderness designation, including a 51,000-acre expansion of the Red Rock area. After all, a real estate boom is great, but a billion-year-old desert landscape is (we hope) forever. 鈥擜ndrea Bennett


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Jerry Handren, Author of

鈥淭he west and northwest areas of Las Vegas, around the Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, have long attracted the best climbers in the world. But there鈥檚 a great deal of unclimbed rock all around the city, with new routes popping up all the time.鈥


Ghent Historic District, Norfolk
Ghent Historic District, Norfolk (Photo: ferrantraite/iStock)
Norfolk scorecard

Norfolk, Virginia

Norfolk is one of the fastest-growing midsize cities in the country. But its location near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, where the James and Elizabeth Rivers meet, has made it one of the most at-risk: the area is bearing more of the brunt of rising sea levels than any other region on the eastern seaboard. To combat this, civic leaders are turning to natural solutions to address flooding.

At the center of these plans is the routinely overflowing Elizabeth River, which threatens low-lying areas, such as the historically Black Chesterfield Heights and Grandy Village neighborhoods. The solution: green spaces capable of absorbing water. The will include a restored tidal creek, as well as wetlands, trails, and a sports field, when it鈥檚 completed in 2023. It will be connected to downtown by the 10.5-mile , a multi-use urban path. 鈥擫eah Small


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Keisha Bachelor, Founder of

Keisha Bachelor
(Photo: Keisha Bachelor)

鈥淩iding around Norfolk, you just see bodies of water and greenery. We have our fair share of commuting trails, but many paths are centered on connecting residents to serene spaces.鈥


Tulsa scorecard
Centennial Park, Tulsa
Centennial Park, Tulsa (Photo: Susan Vineyard/iStock)

Tulsa, Oklahoma

As young workers search for more affordable living, over 900 of them have been wooed by , a program that pays people $10,000 to live and work in the city for a year. As of last fall, 97 percent ended up staying.

With good reason. At , a multimillion-dollar improvement project is in the planning stages and will restore ecology, enhance trails, maximize access, and keep hundreds of acres wild. Later this year, the will link 12 paths that trace 100 miles through six city parks, making it possible to bike all the way from the town of Skiatook in the north to underserved neighborhoods like Springdale and South Peoria.

Of the cities on our list, Tulsa ranked the most resilient to climate change, thanks largely to flood-control efforts from the mid-eighties that created detention ponds to hold water after severe storms. These measures were bolstered last July when Congress passed the , allocating $133.5 million toward improving a 20-mile-long levee system along the Arkansas River, further buttressing the city. 鈥擬att Kirouac


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Michelle Brown-Burdex, Program Coordinator at

鈥, a 66-acre riverfront park, is such an advantage for our community because it鈥檚 so accessible. I鈥檇 like to see similar examples replicated in north Tulsa, where it鈥檚 desperately needed.鈥


Old Sacramento
Old Sacramento (Photo: Cayce Clifford)
Sacramento scorecard

Sacramento, California

As skyrocketing home prices turn people away from many California cities, Sacramento stands apart as a relative real estate bargain. Sure, the state capital doesn鈥檛 have the outdoor cachet of smaller regional destinations like Auburn or Nevada City, but its location near the foothills of the Sierra Nevada and at the confluence of the Sacramento and American Rivers (the latter is hugged by a 32-mile ) makes for easy-access recreation.

Local stewards and nonprofits are working hard on the accessibility of these spaces. The city plans to connect its 450 miles of hiking and biking trails to create a regional network of 800 miles spanning five neighboring counties. In the past few years, local groups have mobilized to protect existing infrastructure. During the pandemic, donated more than 100 bikes to essential workers, and the group has repaired some 4,000 bikes free of charge since its founding. The added 30 miles to , a popular鈥攁nd often overrun鈥攈iking and biking destination.

Although the city鈥檚 population increased by 411,000 between 2005 and 2016, per capita emissions fell 26 percent. In 2017, , a Volkswagen subsidiary, selected Sacramento to implement its Green City zero-emission vehicle plan, a significant step toward the city鈥檚 goal of becoming carbon-neutral by 2045.

The plan, which aims to reduce carbon emissions and the number of single-颅occupant cars on the road, has led to partnerships with several car-sharing services, including , the largest free-floating EV-sharing company in the U.S., and , which sets aside 73 percent of its EV fleet for use in disadvantaged communities, with stations in these areas. 鈥擪atie Rodriguez


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Christa Lindsey, Outdoor Guide

Christa Lindsey
(Photo: Christa Lindsey)

鈥淭he American River Parkway is the heart of recreation in the city. You don鈥檛 need a car to get there. In many neighborhoods, you can walk out your door and within ten minutes be on a bike trail that will take you there.鈥


The Colorado River
The Colorado River (Photo: Grexsys/Getty)
Austin scorecard

Austin, Texas

Austin doesn鈥檛 need to prove its outdoor credibility: 19 state parks, 313 city parks, and over 17,000 acres of greenspace have long made it the adventure capital of Texas. But when it comes to the equity and accessibility of these spaces, Austin has some work to do鈥38 percent of inner-city residents don鈥檛 live within walking distance of a park.

In 2020, the Austin Parks and Recreation Department (PARD) spent $47.8 million to, among other things, upgrade 15 existing parks to make them ADA compliant. The city鈥檚 commitment to accessibility also included drafting a plan for 330-acre 鈥攏amed after the first Mexican-American man on the city council鈥攚hich will be located in a historically underserved area of East Austin. PARD鈥檚 , established in 2020, has ramped up its initiatives, most recently hiring a program manager.

Austin has also strived to be more intersectional when it comes to its sustainability policies. Last fall the city updated its to focus on community-wide input, and introduced local advisory groups to comment on topics like energy, transportation, and access to nature. In addition to increasing Austin鈥檚 electric-vehicle usage to 40 percent and making 25 percent of existing buildings鈥攁long with all newly constructed ones鈥攏et-zero operational-carbon structures by 2030, the updated plan will help create more green jobs, protect more natural areas, and give communities of color a voice in policy-making. 鈥擜lex Temblador


国产吃瓜黑料+ Member Spotlight

Tanya Walker, Owner of

Tanya Walker
(Photo: Tanya Walker)

鈥淎ustin was pure country when I was growing up鈥攖he outdoors consisted only of your immediate surroundings. Today some of the city鈥檚 best adventures are accessible from most neighborhoods by bike and public transit.鈥


Towns on the Rise

Newburgh, New York
(Photo: DenisTangneyJr/iStock)

Newburgh, 颅New York

Population: 34,293

Newburgh was once dubbed the murder capital of New York, and while the small city on the Hudson River still has its challenges, a wave of investment from New York City transplants is driving a revival. A citywide trend is transforming vacant lots into parks and historic buildings into restaurants, boutique hotels, and artist studios. An event space called hosts dinners and art shows in a former undertaker鈥檚 颅office; is a new coworking hub and artist studio in a renovated factory; and ages brews in an old textile plant. The town is also near the region鈥檚 best adventures. 鈥檚 20-plus miles of singletrack are just west of town, the multi-pitch trad routes of the (a.k.a. the Gunks) are 30 minutes north, and the Hudson River offers paddling galore only steps from downtown. 鈥擥.A.

A scenic landscape of the New River Gorge.
(Photo: John_Brueske/iStock)

Fayetteville, West Virginia

Population: 2,806

The state recently began an that pays 颅remote workers $12,000 to move to certain towns鈥攁nd also covers a year鈥檚 worth of outdoor recreation. The smart ones will skip the perks and head straight for Fayetteville. Sitting on the edge of our newest national park, New River Gorge, with a footprint not much bigger than its small town square, Fayetteville has two world-class rivers in its backyard, the New and the Gauley, as well as more than 3,000 sport and trad routes on sand颅stone cliffs, paddling on nearby Summersville Lake, and a growing network of mountain-bike trails that starts on the edge of downtown. 鈥擥.A.

Old Fort, North Carolina

Population: 1,004

Old Fort, surrounded by the and located at the base of the Black Mountains, emptied out when manufacturing jobs were shipped overseas beginning in the eighties. Now some of those buildings are humming with life again. In 2019, renovated a former hosiery factory and moved its operations there. Last year, apparel and gear brand made the same move to town. Other warehouses are being turned into breweries, coffee shops, and CrossFit gyms. And the great outdoors is just minutes away. The tallest mountains in the East rise above 6,000-plus feet starting from the edge of downtown, offering gravel grinds, road climbs, trophy-trout waters, and ridgetop hiking and backpacking. A new 42-mile multipurpose trail system is in the works, and recreation gems like Kitsuma and Catawba Falls await. 鈥擥.A.

Kalispell, Montana
(Photo: miroslav_1/iStock)

Kalispell, Montana

Population: 24,565

Located in the middle of the Flathead Valley, about 30 miles southwest of Glacier National Park, Kalispell has been the region鈥檚 agricultural and industrial hub for decades, but several new projects are shifting to tourism and sustainability. The city recently broke ground on the , replacing old railroad tracks to develop a two-mile-long linear park and multi-use trail. The industrial businesses that used to occupy the town鈥檚 center have moved to the outskirts, making room for stores, restaurants, and multi-family housing. The city wants to keep Kalispell 颅affordable for locals who have called it home for generations. 鈥擥.A.

Ely, Nevada

Population: 5,000

This out-of-the-way place, located at the eastern end of Highway 50 an hour northwest of Great Basin National Park, has a thriving mountain-bike scene that鈥檚 only getting better. To add to the 50 miles of existing singletrack that starts at the edge of downtown, the local trail club and tourism bureau are building 51 more miles: a 30-mile stretch south to 10,936-foot , and a 21-mile system north to the , a rockhounding site. Both projects, funded by a grant from the , are expected to be completed in a few years. 鈥擥.A.

Mount Saddleback
(Photo: zrfphoto/iStock)

Rangeley, Maine

Population: 1,047

A lot of locals left Rangeley, 120 miles north of Portland, six years ago, when the Saddleback Mountain ski resort closed. Those who stuck around focused on diversifying the area鈥檚 outdoor draws and capitalizing on its location along the shores of 6,000-acre . Locals opened a brewery and bike shop, and in December 2020, reopened under new ownership. It now has a lift system that serves a 440-acre area with 2,000 feet of vertical drop and numerous fat-bike trails. If that鈥檚 not enough, , the largest ski resort in the East, is located just 29 miles away and has a 450-acre expansion in the works. 鈥擥.A.

Desert Hot Springs
(Photo: Jared Quentin/iStock)

Desert Hot Springs, California

Population: 28,878

Desert Hot Springs has always been about relaxa颅tion, thanks to numerous mineral-water pools that dot the parched landscape. Recently, it has leaned into another natural form of leisure: 颅marijuana. The historic spa town, 100 miles east of Los Angeles, was the first in California to legalize cultivation. The 颅decision saved it from bankruptcy by generating a viable tax base, and in December the town council voted to lean further into cannabis tourism by legalizing the sale and consumption of weed at entertainment venues and hotels. As for the great outdoors, Desert Hot Springs sits just south of both Sand to Snow National Monument and Joshua Tree National Park, and the brand-new, 颅12-mile connects less-frequented areas within the two sites. 鈥擥.A.

From September/October 2021
Lead Photos: Cayce Clifford; Andrew Hetherington; Brad Trone