There are city parks, and then there are places that genuinely make you forget you are standing inside one of the fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the country. Oak Point Park & Nature Preserve, tucked along the eastern edge of Plano near the Spring Creek corridor, is firmly in the second category — and if you have not made the drive out to Parkwood Boulevard to experience it for yourself, you are missing one of North Texas’s most quietly spectacular green spaces.
I have walked a lot of urban trails in my time covering this city, and Oak Point has a way of pulling you in from the first step. The preserve spans over 800 acres, which means there is genuine room to breathe. The moment the parking lot disappears behind a tree line, the hum of traffic fades and you are left with birdsong, the gentle rush of Spring Creek, and the particular kind of silence that only mature Texas hardwoods can provide. Post oaks, elms, and cedar elms create a canopy dense enough to offer real shade even on a July afternoon — a minor miracle in this part of the world.
The trail network here is extensive and well-maintained, totaling roughly 8 miles of paved and unpaved paths. Whether you are a serious trail runner looking for a solid long route, a family pushing a stroller looking for a peaceful Saturday morning, or a birder with binoculars and a life list to pad, Oak Point delivers. The Spring Creek Greenway connector links into a broader trail system, so ambitious cyclists and hikers can extend their adventures well beyond the preserve’s boundaries.
What makes Oak Point especially worthwhile is how thoughtfully the city of Plano has developed it without overdeveloping it. There are picnic pavilions, restrooms, a lovely fishing pond, a disc golf course, and a spray park for the kids near the Recreation Center side of the property — but step just a few hundred yards onto the natural trail system and all of that infrastructure quietly disappears. It is a genuinely rare balance.
Spring and fall are the sweet spots for a visit. Wildflowers push up through the creek bottom meadows in March and April, and autumn brings a surprising amount of color to the canopy for a Texas park. Early mornings in any season are magical — mist settling over the creek, white-tailed deer picking their way through the underbrush, the occasional great blue heron standing motionless in the shallows.
Pack a lunch, bring comfortable shoes, and plan to stay longer than you think you will. Oak Point Park has a reliable habit of turning a quick one-hour outing into a full, unhurried half-day — and nobody ever seems to mind.