The walk starts ()(//gent.film.else) in the newly developed
Riverside Exchange quarter of the city, an important area of industrial heritage which was formerly known as Millsands, it was the site of the Town corn mill from the 12th century onwards and was later developed by the
Vickers family as a steel making site. The walk continues on a tarmac path on the south bank of the river passing the Nursery Street footbridge and a stone rectangular column which is the memorial to the
Great Sheffield Flood of 1864. The walk negotiates the Bridgehouses roundabout using pedestrian crossings and continues through the
Kelham Island Quarter passing the associated
industrial museum. The original plans for the walk called for a footbridge to link Kelham Island back to the south bank of the river at the
Brooklyn Works. This was to be a one tenth replica of the
Brooklyn Bridge in New York City to commemorate the strong industrial links between Sheffield and
Brooklyn in the 19th century. However, the
floods of 2007 caused the plans for the bridge to be put on hold and even though new flood defences were installed around Kelham Island and the bridge design was modified accordingly, it was never built. Reports from 2016 now say that permission has been granted for the building of a 20 metre long bridge with a simple contemporary appearance. The absence of the bridge forces the walk to use the public roads of Alma Street and Little Kelham Street (pedestrianised) passing the industrial heritage sites of the
Green Lane Works and
Cornish Place before crossing to the north bank of the Don by the
Grade II listed Ball Street Bridge and going left by a riverside path to reach the suburb of
Neepsend. There are no riverside paths through Neepsend and it is necessary to follow the busy Neepsend Lane for roughly 750 yards to reach Hillfoot Bridge. Club Mill Road is then followed for one and a half miles, first a quiet road through an industrial estate and then as a path passing through the disused
Wardsend Cemetery to reach the suburb of
Owlerton. The next one and a half mile section to reach
Beeley Wood is once more on
asphalt roads, there are two recommended routes, one goes via Middlewood Road with the route leaflet recommending a visit to the Niagara weir at the bottom of the Winn Gardens estate, however the weir was damaged in the 2007 floods and is now only half of its original height of 10 feet and not so impressive. The route then continues through Middlewood Park to the closed Middlewood Tavern to enter Beeley Wood by the Rocher footbridge. The alternative from Wardsend goes by Herries Road South, Clay Wheels Lane and Beeley Wood Lane. The final mile of the walk through Beeley Wood is on a hard surfaced path which can be used by cyclists and is much used by runners and dog walkers. The path emerges in the centre of Oughtibridge (). (//silk.mock.spring) ==Further expansion==