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Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park

Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park

Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park

About The Park

This beautiful 5,271-acre parkland is on the oak-covered ridge overlooking Pleasanton and the Livermore Valley from the west. It is planned as the core of a Ridgelands Regional Park to be acquired over a period of many years. Parkland development has been intentionally limited to preserve the pastoral atmosphere.

The park occupies Pleasanton Ridge and beyond. To the northwest it spills down off Pleasanton Ridge into upper Kilkare Canyon, where it continues up onto Sunol Ridge, finally terminating at its westernmost corner in Stoneybrook Canyon. Inside the park, elevations exceed 1,600 feet.

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Park Activities

From the main staging area on Foothill Road you can follow a multi-purpose trail system, which accommodates hikers, equestrians, and bicyclists, provides canyon views and ridgetop vistas, and access to remote, deep-canyon streams. Back to top

ADA accessibility iconPark Accessibility

There are one paved disabled parking and one wheelchair accessible portable toilet in the Foothill staging area. The two old redwood type drinking fountains would allow a wheelchair to get under but there is no smooth surface under these facilities. The park will install an upgraded fountain this summer for wheelchair-bound visitors in an area by the disabled parking. There is one picnic table that can accommodate two wheelchairs and is also next to the disabled parking. The trails in the park are all multi-use dirt trails so they are more suitable for visitors who use electric wheelchair.

Trail Accessibility Report

Oak Tree Trail: Download PDF format | Download Word format

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To Reach The Park

From I-680 in Pleasanton, exit at Castlewood Drive and go west. Turn left (south) onto Foothill Road, towards the town of Sunol. The Foothill Staging Area is about two miles from Castlewood Drive, on the right.

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Trail Map

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Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park trail map

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Podcast

  • Pleasanton Ridge Podcast (duration: 4 min 45 sec): Park introduction, then description of 5.8-mile moderate-to-challenging hike: Oak Tree Staging Area to Oak Tree Trail, to Thermalito Trail, to Ridgeline Trail, to Woodland Trail or Oak Tree Trail, to Oak Tree Staging Area.
This is a place holder for Pleasanton Ridge podcast.

You can also save the podcast to your computer in MP3 format.

Download Podcast (mp3, 4.45 minutes, 4.3 MB) Back to top

Park Info

Address
Foothill Road
Pleasanton, CA
Download Brochure
Phone Numbers
925-862-2963
Toll Free: 888-EBPARKS (888-327-2757), option 3, extension 4549
Local Weather
podcast icon Podcast
Maps
View Trail Map
Download PDF Map
Yahoo Map
Park Hours
Open between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m. unless otherwise posted or permitted
Park Events
Click here for upcoming events
Parking Fee
No fee
Dog Fee
No fee
Camping Reservations
No reservable campgrounds
Picnic Reservations
No reservable sites
Emergency Number
911
EBRPD Headquarters
1-888-EBPARKS or 1-888-327-2757

Park Update

Park Update
On Saturday, December 6, 1,067 acres of open space located on the north end of 4,085-acre Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park will open to the public. The property includes undeveloped, steep, wooded ridges that rise to elevations of more than 1,600 feet above the San Ramon Valley and Livermore plain. The new addition adds 5.18 miles of multi-use trails, open to hiking, horseback riding, and biking through oak/bay woodland, grassland-covered rolling hills, and valleys with meandering, tree-lined creeks.
Connections to the new property are from the Foothill Staging Area via the Ridgeline Trail, which passes through the City of Pleasanton's Augustin Bernal Park. North Ridge Trail and Sinbad Creek Trail then continue into the new property, providing a loop.
Until a revised park map can be made available, please be attentive to all signs designating trails, and do not enter adjacent private property.
Grazing Update
Cattle and sheep have been removed for the summer months at Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park. Cattle will be introduced back onto the land in early December, and the sheep typically return in late January. If drought conditions continue, it will have an effect on how long grazing animals remain at the park.


Source URL:
http://www.ebparks.com/parks/pleasanton