| ALAMEDA | Public walkway or promenade lined with trees, especially poplars; from Spanish (7) |
| PERGOLA | Garden walkway or eating area constructed from timber and vines (7) |
| TOWPATH | What to broadcast about opening of public walkway (7) |
| AVENUES | Wide streets sometimes lined with trees (7) |
| PARKWAY | Landscaped highway lined with trees etc. |
| ARBORED | Lined with trees |
| GROVE | Road lined with houses and often trees, especially in a suburban area. (5) |
| PLEACH | Word meaning to braid, entwine, interlace or weave branches to form a fence, screen or walkway; or, according to Shakespeare, to fold the arms (6) |
| GALL | An abnormal growth on trees, especially oaks, in response to fungi or mites (4) |
| PIER | Also called a landing-stage, jetty or promenade, a platform projecting from a shore into a sea or a river (4) |
| BOULEVARDS | Wide streets in a city or town typically lined with trees (10) |
| BOULEVARD | A broad street, especially in France, lined with trees (9) |
| STOA | Covered walkway or colonnade in classical Greek architecture, from which the Stoic school of philosophy took its name (4) |
| INDIARUBBER | Elastic material obtained from the latex sap of trees (especially those of the ficus and hevea genera)! (5,6) |
| REDCEDAR | Any of several coniferous North American trees, especially the juniper Juniperus virginiana or the cypress Thuja plicata (3,5) |
| CHAPARRAL | In the SW US, a dense growth of shrubs and trees, especially evergreen oaks (9) |
| PROMENADE | A public walkway typically along the seafront at a resort (9) |
| AVENUE | A broad street, often lined with trees (6) |
| PATH | Walkway or track |
| ESPLANADE | Public walkway |