Dayton Bike Yard: What to know about the completely remade park behind Welcome Stadium

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

The Dayton Bike Yard, the city’s newest recreational amenity, officially opened last week.

It’s a place where bike lovers can gather and celebrate what some people are calling one of the best mountain bike parks across the region and state.

The Dayton Bike Yard was a $1.8 million project that completely remade Welcome Park, which is located at 1437 Edwin C. Moses Boulevard, behind Welcome Stadium in the Carillon neighborhood.

Dayton's newest recreational amenity, The Bike Yard is being called one of the best mountain bike parks in the state. Grand opening is this Saturday. The park is located behind Welcome Stadium. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

icon to expand image

Credit: JIM NOELKER

What are the tracks and trails like?

The Bike Yard has pump tracks, flow trails, slope-style trails, a climbing hill, jump lines and a rock skills trail. There’s also a bike playground for kids and novices.

The Virginia McNeal Perimeter trail is an all-purpose general half-mile trail that loops around the park.

The Bicycle Playground is for kids and beginners. It’s a great place to gain confidence in your skills before moving on to more challenging trails.

The Dayton Mountain Bike Association offers a variety of family-friendly events - Contributed

icon to expand image

Two Pump Tracks are available for those who like the challenge of hills and banked turns that are designed to give you momentum without having to use your pedals.

The Gyroscope and Rover trails are asphalt trails with low “roller” hills that, according to their webstie, “create a roller coaster-like sensations as a rider descends the course.”

The Test Flight and Touch-and-Go tracks are for jumping. Take offs and landings vary in sizes for riders of all skill levels.

The Fantastic Voyage and Funky Worm trails resemble dirt trails with technical elements that mountain bikers are probably most familiar with.

The Rock Skills trail is another natural surface track that included rock gardens, boulders and bridges.

Z Line and Dead Wreckoning are the toughest and most challenging paved trail, designed for intermediate to expert riders.

The park has a mix of paved trails and dirt trails, which means that most of the park will still be usable after bad weather and should be easier to maintain.

Trent Walters of the Miami Valley Mountain Bike Association took a spin at the newly opened first phase of the Dayton Bike Yard.

Credit: Contributed

icon to expand image

Credit: Contributed

Who is out there riding?

The Bike Yard has something for riders of all ages.

Parts of the park are perfectly suitable for young kids on strider bikes (balance bikes without pedals). Most of the main attractions are for older riders and members of the biking scene, but there’s something for people of all skill levels.

Riders of all ages celebrated the grand opening of the Dayton Bike Yard on Saturday. The DBY is the city's newest recreational amenity, one that compliments the region's already robust cycling scene. AIMEE HANCOCK/STAFF

icon to expand image

“People have been enthusiastically using the park since the fall,” Susan Vincent, a city of Dayton planner II, said.

The Dayton Bike Yard already has been attracting visitors from outside the area and other states on a regular basis.

“People drive from great distances around the United States just to visit bike parks,” said Dawn Allen, who served as the president of the Miami Valley Mountain Bike Association from 2020 to 2022. “When people visit, and they come to ride, they stay and spend money.”

Allen said she hopes residents and families who live in the surrounding neighborhoods will take ownership and advantage of the park and will use it frequently.

Shelter and events

The park has a shelter available for special events that can be rented for $50 a day. Reservations are open from April 1 through Sept. 20.