There is a moment, about halfway down the winding path that threads through Elmwood Park, when the noise of the city just disappears. The canopy closes overhead, the creek murmurs somewhere below the bluff, and you realize that this graceful, sprawling park in the heart of midtown Omaha has been quietly waiting for you to show up and pay attention. I am so glad I finally did.
Elmwood Park sits in the Elmwood neighborhood, roughly bounded by Dodge Street to the north and Center Street to the south, with the park’s main entrance easily accessible off 60th Street. It is one of Omaha’s oldest and largest municipal parks, designed in the early twentieth century by landscape architect Horace Cleveland, the same visionary behind Minneapolis’s grand park system. That pedigree shows. The grounds feel intentional and unhurried, like a place that was built with genuine affection for the people who would one day use it.
The park covers more than 200 acres, and every one of them has something to offer. The centerpiece is the open meadow at the park’s heart, where local families spread blankets on weekend afternoons, kids chase each other through the grass, and the occasional spirited game of frisbee breaks out without anyone planning it. It is the kind of spontaneous, community-driven energy that you cannot manufacture, and Elmwood has it in abundance.
For those who like a bit more structure with their fresh air, the trail system is outstanding. Several miles of paved and unpaved paths loop through the park’s wooded ravines, crossing small footbridges and climbing gentle ridges that offer surprisingly lovely views of the surrounding neighborhood. The trails connect to the greater Omaha trail network, so serious walkers and cyclists can extend their route considerably. Early mornings here are particularly magical — the light filters through the old-growth trees in long golden shafts, and you will likely share the path only with the occasional dog walker and a chorus of birds.
Elmwood also borders the University of Nebraska Omaha campus, which lends the area a youthful, intellectual energy. After your walk, it is worth venturing just outside the park to the stretch of Dodge Street nearby, where you will find good coffee shops and casual lunch spots perfect for refueling before a second lap.
The park includes picnic shelters that can be reserved for gatherings, open tennis courts, and a beloved disc golf course that draws enthusiasts of all skill levels on weekends. If you have never tried disc golf, this is an excellent place to give it a go — the wooded holes are challenging enough to be interesting but forgiving enough for beginners.
What makes Elmwood Park genuinely special, though, is not any single amenity. It is the feeling of the place — that rare civic generosity of a park that was designed to give people room to breathe, to wander, and to remember that green space in the middle of a city is not a luxury but a necessity. Omaha got that right here, a century ago, and the park has only grown more beautiful with time.
Pack a lunch, bring your walking shoes, and give yourself a full afternoon. Elmwood Park will not rush you, and that, more than anything, is the point.