Mill Creek Ravine Park is a popular urban green space in Edmonton, Alberta, offering natural creekside trails, mature forest, and diverse wildlife within city limits for year-round outdoor recreation.
Mill Creek Ravine Park is a significant urban natural area located in southeast Edmonton, Alberta. Spanning along the Mill Creek watercourse, the park features a deep ravine carved through glacial sands and clays, creating a distinctive landscape within the city. The park preserves a mature riparian and upland forest ecosystem dominated by native aspen, birch, spruce, and poplar trees. This provides important habitat for wildlife including songbirds, squirrels, beavers, and various amphibians. Historically, the ravine formed a natural barrier and resource area for Indigenous peoples and later Edmonton settlers. It once contained an electric train line, portions of which have been transformed into trail systems. Today, Mill Creek Ravine Park hosts over 14 kilometers of multi-use trails, popular for walking, jogging, biking, and cross-country skiing, connecting neighborhood communities to larger green spaces. The park’s natural creek, wooded slopes, and quiet ambiance offer an accessible outdoor escape from urban life. Key landmarks include the Mill Creek Park Bridge, historic ruins, interpretive signs, and well-maintained picnic areas. The park is a favored spot for local birdwatchers and nature photographers. Its connectivity to adjacent parks like Gold Bar and Rundle Park extends recreation opportunities. With seasonal changes that paint the ravine in vibrant autumn colors and blanket it in snow during winter, the park remains a year-round natural retreat valued by Edmontonians.
Scenic creekside trails following Mill Creek through forested ravine
Diverse wildlife including beavers, songbirds, and amphibians
Historic remnants of early electric train infrastructure
Quiet picnic areas tucked into forested pockets throughout the park
A natural urban creek running the length of the ravine, supporting aquatic life and contributing to the park's riparian ecosystem.
Ruins and interpretive signage marking the trail of the early 20th-century electric interurban train line that once ran through the ravine.
A pedestrian bridge that spans the ravine offering scenic views of the creek and valley.