The National Park Service will waive entrance fees to its more than 400 NPS sites Sunday.
Here are a few examples of park units that usually have an admission fee, but will be free to visit for the day:
The free admission event is a way to commemorate the four-year anniversary of the Great American Outdoors Act, or GAOA, the NPS said. Passed in 2020, the law provided $6 billion to the national parks to fund maintenance and repair projects.
“The Great American Outdoors Act is one of the largest infusions of funding in the history of the National Park Service, enabling us to make long-needed repairs and improvements on everything from iconic buildings to trails, roads, bridges, lodges, campgrounds, utility systems and landscapes,” said National Park Service Director Chuck Sams.
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For example, the GAOA is helping refurbish many park roads that have experienced decades of inclement weather and heavy traffic. Some of those roads include the Foothill Parkway in Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Going-to-the-Sun Road in Glacier National Park.
Funding from the GAOA is also going toward making park units more accessible. Mammoth Cave National Park, for instance, is improving an underground walkway, a heavily used bike path and other trails in the park.
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Other projects benefiting from the GAOA include the replacement of campsite picnic tables and fire rings, smoothing out tent surfaces, clearing vegetation and upgrading restrooms and water lines at Mount Rainier and other national parks.
Iconic buildings are also being preserved through this legislation. One of those buildings is the historic Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park, which served as a hospital during World War II.
“GAOA investments are directly influencing public enjoyment and satisfaction of their national parks,” the NPS said. “With dozens of projects already completed or under construction, visitors are already benefitting from improved facilities nationwide and will continue to do so long into the future with proper care and maintenance.”
More information about how the GAOA is impacting the national parks can be found here.
After Sunday, only two free admission days to NPS sites remain: Sept. 28 which is National Public Lands Day and Nov. 11 which is Veterans Day.