$32 million in new upgrades renovate famed waterfall area, construct new visitor center

Before they see Half Dome, Yosemite Falls, giant sequoias or other jaw-dropping attractions, the first stop for millions of visitors as they enter Yosemite National Park is Bridalveil Fall.

Yet for generations, the amenities at the base of the thundering, 620-foot waterfall on the western edge of Yosemite Valley have been a raging disappointment: Foul-smelling pit toilets dating back to the 1960s, crumbling asphalt pathways, a crammed dirt parking lot and narrow, slippery trails.

But now all of that is a bygone memory. Crews have finished a $19.3 million renovation, constructing a larger parking lot, modern flush toilets, interpretive signs, viewing platforms, wooden boardwalks, and wider hiking trails with more accessible features designed in the classic granite and timber national park style of the 1930s.

Visitor Lars Weber from Germany looks at Bridalveil Fall from one of the renovated trails at Yosemite National Park, Calif., on Tuesday, April 23, 2024. The park recently completed a $19.3 million dollar project that renovated trails, restrooms, viewing platforms, and interpretive signs. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

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