Natural AttractionBlack Canyon of the Gunnison National Park Sign
2,700 ft deep slot canyon; base as narrow as 40 ft, carved in 2-billion-year-old rocks.

From Island Peaks Overlook the canyon walls of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison drop away below the rim, and the view is the whole point of the short walk out. Getting there is simple mechanics: a short walk on an unpaved trail from the parking area to the viewpoint. The National Park Service classifies this spot as a scenic view and photo spot, and it is open to the public. Wear real shoes for the uneven tread and keep your attention on your footing near the rim.
Scenic Overlook
Short walk on an unpaved trail
Rim-side viewpoint into the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, reached by a short unpaved trail.
The canyon of the Gunnison River from a rim viewpoint designated by the NPS as a scenic view and photo spot.
Gravity is the hazard here: this is a canyon-rim viewpoint reached by an unpaved trail. Stay behind any barriers, keep back from the edge, watch for loose gravel underfoot, and keep kids and pets close.
Per the National Park Service, the overlook is reached by a short walk on an unpaved trail from the road. Official page: https://www.nps.gov/places/overlook_islandpeaks.htm
The designated overlook at the end of the short unpaved trail is the viewpoint itself.
The NPS flags this overlook as a scenic view/photo spot; shoot from the designated viewpoint at the end of the trail.
The overlook platform at the end of the short unpaved access trail.
Other named overlooks in the park include Big Island Overlook, Painted Wall Overlook, Chasm View Overlook, Cedar Point Overlook, and Sunset View Overlook at Black Canyon.
Access is a short walk on an unpaved trail, so surfaces are uneven natural tread rather than pavement. The NPS does not list this overlook as wheelchair accessible.
The walk is short, but it ends at a canyon rim. Hold hands with small children near the edge and stay on the trail.
" Documentation on this overlook is thin: the NPS confirms it is an open-to-the-public scenic view and photo spot reached by a short unpaved walk. Visitors treating it as a quick rim stop between other overlooks will have the right expectations."
If you are already driving the rim, yes β it is a designated scenic view and photo spot, and the access cost is only a short walk on an unpaved trail. Skipping it saves you just a few minutes.
No permit is required. The overlook is covered by the standard park entrance fee β $30 for a private vehicle (7-day pass), $25 for a motorcycle, or $15 per person on foot or bike.
Not quite β the NPS describes the access as a short walk on an unpaved trail. It is brief, but it is real dirt tread, not a paved path from the car.
It can be, with supervision. The walk itself is short, but the destination is a canyon rim, so keep children within arm's reach and stay on the trail and behind any barriers.
The access trail is unpaved, so wheels will face uneven natural surface. The NPS does not list this overlook as an accessible route; travelers who need pavement should plan on other stops in the park.
The NPS lists it as open to the public, but seasonal road and trail conditions in the park vary. Check current park road status before a winter or shoulder-season visit.
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