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 this rim-edge platform you look straight down into one of the tightest visible pinch points of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, where dark Precambrian walls squeeze the river far below. The canyon here is the work of the Gunnison River, which has been sawing downward through extremely hard crystalline rock for millions of years. Getting to the view is simple by canyon standards: a short, unpaved trail leaves the parking area, delivers you to the overlook, and loops back. Bring a wide-angle lens and a healthy respect for the edge.
Geological Formation
Short walk on an unpaved loop trail from the parking area
Rim-edge view into the Black Canyon of the Gunnison at a visibly narrow stretch of the gorge; designated scenic view and photo spot.
The river-carved canyon of the Gunnison from the rim -- steep crystalline walls dropping toward the river below.
This overlook is positioned where the canyon narrows -- hence the name -- letting you read how tightly the Gunnison River has confined itself while cutting downward.
This is a canyon-rim overlook: the hazard is gravity. Stay on the trail and back from the edge -- the gorge below is deep and the rock is unforgiving. If you encounter large wildlife, the park asks you to keep 100 yards from bears and 25 yards from other wildlife. The approach trail is unpaved, so watch your footing.
This overlook is positioned where the canyon narrows -- hence the name -- letting you read how tightly the Gunnison River has confined itself while cutting downward.
The overlook frames one of the canyon's visibly narrow sections, a direct display of how the Gunnison River incised downward through hard crystalline basement rock rather than widening its valley.
The overlook is reached on foot: an unpaved trail leads from the parking area to the viewpoint and loops back to the lot.
An unpaved loop trail runs from the parking area to the overlook and back.
The overlook trail is a self-contained loop that returns to the parking area.
The overlook platform itself is the viewpoint; the short unpaved loop trail delivers you to it from the parking area.
The NPS lists this spot as a Scenic View/Photo Spot; frame the converging canyon walls from the overlook.
Shoot from the overlook itself -- it is the designated photo spot on this stretch of rim.
Other named overlooks in the park include Painted Wall Overlook, Chasm View Overlook, Pulpit Rock Overlook, Gunnison Point Overlook, and Balanced Rock Overlook.
Access is on foot via an unpaved trail that loops from the parking area to the overlook -- expect a natural-surface path rather than pavement.
The loop walk from the parking lot is short, but the destination is a canyon rim. Keep children within arm's reach at the overlook and on the trail near the edge.
" Most visitors treat rim overlooks like this one as quick photo stops, but the name is the lesson: this is where you can actually see the canyon pinch tight. Those who pause long enough to trace the walls down toward the river come away understanding why this gorge is famous for depth relative to its width."
Yes, and it is a cheap stop time-wise: the walk is a short unpaved loop from the parking area, and the payoff is a view into one of the visibly narrowest stretches of the canyon.
No. It is a walk, not a hike -- an unpaved trail leads from the parking area to the overlook and loops back. Wear closed shoes for the dirt surface and you will be fine.
Yes, with supervision. The trail itself is easy, but the destination is a canyon rim, so keep children close at the edge and on the final approach.
No. It is covered by the regular park entrance fee -- $30 per private vehicle for a 7-day pass, $15 per person on foot or bike, or an $80 America the Beautiful annual pass.
Take your photos from the overlook itself -- it is the designated scenic view and photo spot. Do not scramble past it; the drop into the gorge is the real hazard here, and the unpaved surface can be loose.
Because from this vantage you are looking at a stretch where the canyon visibly pinches tight -- the Gunnison River cut downward through very hard crystalline rock instead of carving a wide valley, and this overlook shows that squeeze clearly.
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