Most people arrive in Longview expecting a mill town with a few ball fields and call it a day. What they find instead is a parks system built around a 126-acre urban lake that rivals anything in cities twice Longview's size โ a lake with its own arboretum, Japanese gardens, a Solar System Walk, and a 3.5-mile trail loop that locals use year-round. That's the outdoor infrastructure surprise nobody talks about until you're standing in front of the rhododendron gardens wondering why you hadn't heard of this place sooner.
Geography does a lot of the heavy lifting here. Longview sits at the confluence of the Cowlitz and Columbia rivers, flanked by wooded hillsides to the west and flat river bottom to the east. The city was planned from scratch in the 1920s, and that intentional design shows in how green space was woven into the street grid from the beginning. Over 300 acres of parks and open space, 10 miles of maintained trails, and a status as an official Arbor Day Foundation Tree City USA community โ these aren't accidents of sprawl. They were built in from the start.
This guide covers what the Longview parks system actually delivers in 2026: the standout parks worth driving across town for, the trails worth lacing up for, the recreation facilities, and the day-trip options when you want to go bigger. Whether you're a buyer evaluating neighborhoods or a new resident figuring out your weekend routine, here's what you need to know.

| Park | Highlights | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Lake Sacajawea Park | 126-acre lake, 3.5-mi loop trail, Japanese Gardens, arboretum, fountains | Everyone โ walkers, anglers, families |
| Cloney Park (reopening 2026) | Fully inclusive, nature-based redesign; themed play zones, pavilion | Families with young children |
| Gerhart Gardens Park | Boat launch, dog park, volleyball, horseshoe pits, fishing | Dog owners, boaters, picnickers |
| Windemere Park | 15-acre Park Lake, trout fishing, open space | Anglers, casual walkers |
| Archie Anderson Park | Baseball fields, basketball courts, trail access | Youth sports, active adults |
| Altrusa Park | Basketball court, playground, picnic shelter | Neighborhood families |
| Bailey Park | Playground, picnic shelter, hard court | Young children, casual play |
| John Null Park | Playground, picnic area, sports areas | Neighborhood recreation |
| R. A. Long Park | Civic Center location, historic planned-city setting | Strollers, civic events |
| Community Gardens Park | Community garden plots on 32nd Avenue | Gardeners, urban growers |
| Abernathy Creek | Open water access for fishing | Anglers, nature walks |
| Coal Creek Boat Launch | Kayaks and small boats off Hwy 4 | Paddlers, light boaters |
Location: 1119 23rd Ave, Longview, WA 98632
Lake Sacajawea is the undisputed center of Longview's outdoor life โ a 126-acre park wrapping around a lake stocked with largemouth bass, rainbow trout, bluegill, and yellow perch, with a flat 3.5-mile gravel loop trail that connects Japanese gardens, two fountains, the Frank Willis Arboretum, a Solar System Walk, and a totem-pole-anchored Lions Island. Summer evenings bring Concerts at the Lake, and the Fourth of July Go-4th celebration draws the whole city to the water's edge. The insider tip locals share is to arrive before 8 a.m. on weekday mornings โ the trail is nearly empty, the fountains are running, and you have the arboretum essentially to yourself.
Best for: Walkers, anglers, families, dog owners, anyone who wants a legitimate nature experience without leaving city limits.
Location: 28th and Washington Way, Longview
Construction kicked off in spring 2026 on what will be the most significant parks project in Longview's recent history โ a fully redesigned, inclusive play environment funded at $4.37 million through grants and community contributions. The themed zones (Discovery Forest, Sand Bar, and Slide Mountain) draw on Cowlitz Tribal heritage and the region's timber history, making this more than a standard playground replacement. When complete, it will be the only fully inclusive park in Cowlitz County.
Best for: Families with young children, children with accessibility needs, community gatherings.
Location: 200 Freedom Way, Longview
Gerhart Gardens is the park for people who need more than a walking trail โ it has a boat launch, an off-leash dog park, volleyball courts, horseshoe pits, fishing access, a covered picnic shelter, and parking, all along the Tenant Way waterfront corridor. It's where dog owners and boaters tend to land on weekends when Lake Sacajawea feels too crowded. The boat launch makes it a practical access point for casual paddlers who want to get on the water without driving out of town.
Best for: Dog owners, boaters, families with varied recreational interests.
Location: 48th Avenue, Longview, WA 98632
Windemere is quieter and less trafficked than the lakefront parks, built around a 15-acre former gravel pit that the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife now stocks regularly with rainbow trout and grass carp. It's a go-to for anglers who want a low-key fishing spot without the weekend crowds at Lake Sacajawea. The surrounding open space makes it a solid neighborhood escape for the north and west sides of the city.
Best for: Anglers, casual walkers, residents seeking a quieter alternative to the main lake.
Location: Between 21st and 22nd Street, Longview
Archie Anderson handles the athletic side of the parks system โ baseball fields, basketball courts, playground equipment, and direct trail access โ making it the primary destination for organized youth sports and pickup games in the central part of the city. Parents with kids in rec leagues know this park well. Its trail connection also makes it a useful mid-point on longer walks that extend into the Lake Sacajawea corridor.
Best for: Youth sports, basketball, active families with older children.
The Lake Sacajawea Trail is Longview's defining outdoor experience โ a 3.5-mile gravel loop that circles the lake almost entirely at grade, with just 68 feet of total elevation change. The surface is wide, well-maintained, and lit in key sections, which means it functions year-round regardless of Pacific Northwest weather. Access points are distributed around the lake's perimeter, with the most-used entry near 23rd Avenue, where parking, restrooms, and the main playground cluster together.
What you see along the loop changes by season. Spring brings the rhododendron gardens into full color, summer means active fountain displays and evening concert crowds, and fall turns the arboretum into one of the better leaf-watching spots in Southwest Washington. Dogs are welcome on leash throughout. The trail is soft enough for regular walkers but firm enough for joggers and casual cyclists, and it connects organically to the Japanese Gardens and the Frank Willis Arboretum without requiring a separate trip.

Longview's primary aquatic facility is the YMCA of Southwest Washington, located at 766 15th Avenue. The facility runs a main pool and an activity pool, with lap swim available throughout the day โ at least one lane is kept open in the main pool during operating hours. Programs include water aerobics, arthritis and therapy swim classes, adult swim lessons, and pool party rentals for groups up to 25 swimmers. Hours run Monday through Thursday 5 a.m. to 9 p.m., Friday until 8 p.m., and Saturday 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Mint Valley Golf Course (4002 Pennsylvania St) is the city's public 18-hole course, owned and operated by the city itself. It's a legitimate daily-fee course set in the wooded west side of Longview, popular with retirees and working locals who want walkable public golf without driving to Kelso or beyond. The course's location near the Mint Valley neighborhood makes it a real amenity factor for buyers considering that part of the city.
The Parks & Recreation office at 2920 Douglas Street coordinates programming across the park system, including seasonal sports leagues, community events, and facility rentals.
Longview's outdoor amenities genuinely influence where buyers want to be, and that's reflected in how fast certain homes move. Properties near Lake Sacajawea in West Longview and the trail networks around the Highlands tend to generate real competition โ well-maintained homes in those areas often go under contract within days, not weeks. Columbia Heights East has also drawn interest from buyers who prioritize that combination of neighborhood feel and quick access to green space. Most homes in these pockets are priced under $450,000, though well-positioned properties close to parks and trails can climb higher depending on condition and lot.
Before you start touring homes near your favorite trail or park, please talk to a lender first. Your true monthly obligation includes property taxes, homeowner's insurance, any HOA dues, and the loan structure itself โ and that full picture looks meaningfully different from just a purchase price. I always encourage buyers to build a budget they're genuinely comfortable carrying, not simply the maximum a lender will approve. When the right home appears, and in Longview's active pockets it can happen fast, you want to be ready to move with confidence.
| Destination | Distance from Longview | Highlights |
|---|---|---|
| Silver Lake | ~35 miles northeast | Motor boating, swimming, camping, fishing; full resort facilities |
| Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument | ~55 miles northeast | Hiking, lava tubes, Johnston Ridge Observatory, winter snowshoeing |
| Rainier, WA Boat Launch | ~10 miles south | Columbia River access, fishing, flat water paddling |
| Seaquest State Park | ~50 miles northeast | Old-growth forest, Silver Lake access, RV and tent camping |
| Beacon Rock State Park | ~50 miles southeast | Columbia River Gorge hiking, river views, technical climbing routes |
| Lewis and Clark National Historical Park | ~80 miles northwest | Fort Clatsop, coastal estuary trails, Pacific Coast access |
| Julia Butler Hansen NWR | ~20 miles west | Birding, wildlife viewing, Columbia River bottomland |
| Lower Columbia Water Trail | Begins locally | Multi-day paddling route on the Columbia and Cowlitz Rivers |

Local Expert Takeaway: The most underrated outdoor asset in Longview is the combination of Lake Sacajawea's trail system with the city's 10-mile trail network โ it's a genuinely connected greenway infrastructure that most buyers don't realize exists until after they've moved in. If you're torn between Longview and Kelso, this trail network is a real differentiator: Longview has it, Kelso doesn't at this scale. For buyers prioritizing walkable outdoor access at prices well under the Portland metro median, the area within a half-mile of Lake Sacajawea's perimeter is where I'd focus first.
Longview offers a parks system built around Lake Sacajawea Park, a 126-acre urban lake with a flat 3.5-mile trail loop, Japanese gardens, an arboretum, fishing docks, and seasonal concerts. The city maintains over 300 acres of parks and open space total, with neighborhood parks like Archie Anderson and Gerhart Gardens providing athletic fields, boat access, and dog-friendly space.
Is there good fishing in Longview?
Lake Sacajawea is classified as a warm-water fishery stocked multiple times per year with rainbow trout, and also holds largemouth bass, bluegill, and yellow perch year-round. Windemere Park's 15-acre lake is separately stocked by Washington Fish and Wildlife. For river fishing, the Columbia and Cowlitz rivers are minutes from most neighborhoods.
How does Longview's park system compare to nearby cities?
Longview's parks infrastructure is notably stronger than Kelso's at the city level, primarily because of Lake Sacajawea's scale and the planned-city design that integrated green space from the beginning. The 10-mile trail network and over 300 acres of maintained parks for a city of under 40,000 people is a higher per-capita investment than most comparable Southwest Washington communities.
Explore the full Longview series: Living in Longview ยท Is Longview Safe? ยท Cost of Living ยท Best Neighborhoods ยท Schools & Family Life ยท Youth Sports ยท Parks & Rec ยท Retiring in Longview