Boardwalk

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File:Swampy But Pretty Bog In Fiordland NZ.jpg
Typical nature boardwalk, carrying walkers over wetlands on the Milford Track, New Zealand.
File:A wooden walkway through the lake.jpg
A wooden boardwalk allows passage through a lake, such as this one in National Park Plitvice Lakes, Croatia.
File:Hüpassaare raba.jpg
This boardwalk provides a dock in Soomaa National Park, Estonia.
Boardwalks are used in parks and protected areas to reduce negative effects of foot traffic on the environment, such as in Horicon Marsh.
File:Lambi boardwalk.jpg
Boardwalk to the Lambi Beach on the Greek island of Kos.
File:Pyhä-Luosto National Park.jpg
Boardwalks help walkers navigate difficult terrain as at Pyhä-Luosto National Park in Lapland, Finland.
File:Mukri raba matkarada.jpg
A boardwalk enables those on foot to cross a bog in Estonia.

A boardwalk (board walk, boarded path, promenade) is a constructed pedestrian walkway along or overlooking beaches, usually built with wood boards; or as walking paths and trails over bogs and wetlands and above fragile ecosystems.

Boardwalks along intertidal zones are known as foreshoreways in Australia. A boardwalk along a river is often known as a riverwalk and a boardwalk along an oceanfront is often known as an oceanway. Aside from their obvious pedestrian usage, boardwalks have been used to create commercial districts and enable commerce along waterfronts where conventional streets would have been more expensive because of a beach or other waterfront feature. Although boardwalks can be found around the world, they are especially common along the East Coast of the United States.[citation needed]

Many of the original boardwalks in the United States have developed to be so successful as commercial districts and tourist attractions that the simple wooden pathways have been replaced by esplanades made of concrete, brick or other construction, sometimes with a wooden facade on the surface and sometimes not. Indeed, in many parts of the U.S. today the term boardwalk often carries more the connotation of a waterfront, pedestrian, entertainment district than the original meaning of a wooden path.[citation needed] One of the earliest such boardwalks was designed in New Jersey and opened June 26, 1870, in Atlantic City.[1]

See also

References

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External links

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