[leadin]Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Mount Rainier, Zion… these National Parks are icons of the American outdoors experience, each a unique public place preserved and open to anyone willing to hike and explore.[/leadin]
This year, to help celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, REI has committed to a multi-million dollar partnership that includes content, guides, live experiences, and an app, the REI Co-op Guide to the National Parks.
We downloaded the app this week for a first look. In short, the REI Co-op Guide to the National Parks app is an amazing tool for anyone looking to explore little-visited or well-known parks within the NPS system.
It’s free, and we encourage anyone planning to travel to a Park (or even vicariously visit one on their screen) to nab the app now for iOS/iPhone or Android systems.
REI’s stated goal is to help people “go deeper into the National Park System.” This is accomplished by tools that provide maps, descriptions, and a realtime location marker (as long as you have cell/GPS signal) for hikers heading off from trailheads and beyond the drive-up overlooks that get crowded in peak season.
Off-grid, the app works beyond cell networks because content is stored on the phone and the user’s location can be shown via GPS.
Comprehensive ‘Guidebook’ App For National Parks
It was developed by the creators of the popular Mountain Project app, a group which REI acquired in 2015. (Mountain Project has more than 3 million users who consult climbing data on 100,000+ routes.)
The REI National Park Guide & Maps app is the first major new launch post-acquisition, and it was created over the past three and a half months by a small development team. It uses technology and content from the Hiking Project, an existing app with a database that includes more than 47,000 miles of trails.
This past fall, an early prototype of the app was shared with REI employees and with the National Parks Foundation for feedback and contribution. The final version launched this month to the public.