Just wait. You’ll soon be able to get to the White Rock Park Loop Trail via the planned Lake Highlands Trail, which was originally routed to run north along Skillman by the LH Town Center and cut east by LH High School. Construction could begin by the end of this year according to Michael Hellman, park planning manager for the Dallas Park Department.

This isn’t the only trail in the works. In all, the city plans to increase the total number of city trail miles from 111 to 284. Dallas has, and will have, a lot of great trails, city leaders say.

Sign up for our newsletter!

* indicates required

Once that happens, how can the city make the trails easier to use and encourage people to use them?

A  team of designers, engineers, city leaders and other creative minds tackled this question through the GOOD Ideas for Cities effort. No studies have been conducted on how trafficked the trails are already, according to Hellman, but this team is looking to get people out of cars and onto trails. (Take a look at our March cover story for thoughts on bike culture and etiquette.)

After two months of thinking and spending time on the trails, the “Connect the Dots/ Bike Hike Trails” team presented possible solutions.

Their main idea includes creating an umbrella brand to market the trails, which would connect the White Rock Creek, White Rock Park Loop, Lake Highlands and other individual trails with an overarching identity. Other ideas are to put up signs to clearly mark intersections, and design an app that would allow users to map journeys via trails and alternate transportation. The app, which still needs a developer, would also help you track your progress and find nearby amenities such as bike repair shops. The team is now hoping to gain approval from the Dallas Park Board soon so they can put their ideas into action.

Samuel Stiles, director of development for the Dallas Parks Foundation, says he hopes the umbrella brand will not overshadow the existing trails but instead simplify messaging and ease marketing. For example, you might see more ads for the example brand GO: Get Outside Dallas, rather than individual ads for each trail. Though he has not heard from representatives of all the existing trails, Stiles says several have given him positive feedback.