From Interstate 40
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg.
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441.
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood.
From Gatlinburg To Dollywood
Dollywood is located at the doorsill of Gatlinburg‒less than 10 miles from the heart of the batch town .
- Take 441 N
- Turn right onto Dollywood Ln./Veterans Blvd. and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Sevierville To Dollywood
Sevierville is Dolly ’ s hometown and Dollywood is less than seven miles from Sevierville ’ s downtown .
- Take TN-449/Veterans Blvd. to McCarter Hollow Rd. in Pigeon Forge
- Follow McCarter Hollow Rd. and Dollywood Parks Blvd. to your destination
From Nashville To Dollywood
It only takes about 3.5 hours to drive from Nashville in center Tennessee to Dollywood in East Tennessee .
- From Nashville center – Take I-40 E/I-65 S
- Stay on I-40 E for 197 miles
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Atlanta To Dollywood
It ’ s a amazingly easy ( and beautiful ) drive to get to Dollywood from Atlanta.
Reading: Directions and Destination Map
- From Atlanta get on I-75 N/I-85 N
- Keep right to continue on I-75 N
- Stay on I-75 N for 206miles
- Keep right to continue onto I-40 E/Knoxville
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Charlotte To Dollywood
A fortune of visitors travel from the Charlotte area to get to Dollywood. here ’ s how to do it :
- From Downtown Charlotte get on I-277 N
- Continue on NC-16 N
- Turn left to merge onto I-85 S toward Gastonia
- Take exit 10B to merge onto US-74 W toward Kings Mountain/Shelby
- Take the left exit onto I-26 W
- Keep left at fork to continue, follow signs for I-40 W / Canton / Knoxville
- Merge onto I-40 W
- Take exit 432A to merge onto US-25W N/US-411 S/ US-70 W toward Sevierville
- Turn left onto US-411
- Turn left onto TN-449/Veterans Blvd. and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Birmingham To Dollywood
Visiting from Alabama ? here ’ s how to to get to Dollywood from Birmingham :
- From Birmingham get on I-20 E/I-59 N
- Keep left at the fork to continue on I-59 N
- Stay in I-59 N for 130 miles
- Take the right exit onto I-24 E toward Chattanooga
- Take exit 185B on the left for I-75 N toward Knoxville
- Keep right to continue on I-75, follow signs for I-40 E/Knoxville
- Continue onto I-40 E
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Roanoke To Dollywood
only a short four-hour drive separates the historic township of Roanoke from Dollywood Parks & Resorts .
- From the town of Roanoke take I-581 N/US-220 N
- Take exit 1S on the left to merge onto I-81 toward Salem/Bristol
- Stay on I-81 for 219 miles
- Take exit 1B to merge onto I-40 toward Knoxville
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood
From Cincinnati To Dollywood
If you are heading to Dollywood from Cincinnati, point your circumnavigate south and follow these directions :
- From Downtown Cincinnati take I-71 S/I-75 S ramp to Louisville/Lexington
- Merge onto I-75 S
- Stay on I-75 S for 246 miles
- Keep left to continue on I-275 S, follow signs for I-640 E/Asheville
- Take exit 3 to merge onto I-640 E
- Take the exit on the left onto I-40 E toward Asheville
- Take Exit 407 toward Sevierville / Pigeon Forge / Gatlinburg
- Follow TN Hwy. 66 South which becomes US 441
- At Traffic Light #8 in Pigeon Forge, turn left and follow the signs to Dollywood
I am broadly interested in how human activities influence the ability of wildlife to persist in the modified environments that we create.
Specifically, my research investigates how the configuration and composition of landscapes influence the movement and population dynamics of forest birds. Both natural and human-derived fragmenting of habitat can influence where birds settle, how they access the resources they need to survive and reproduce, and these factors in turn affect population demographics. Most recently, I have been studying the ability of individuals to move through and utilize forested areas which have been modified through timber harvest as they seek out resources for the breeding and postfledging phases. As well I am working in collaboration with Parks Canada scientists to examine in the influence of high density moose populations on forest bird communities in Gros Morne National Park. Many of my projects are conducted in collaboration or consultation with representatives of industry and government agencies, seeking to improve the management and sustainability of natural resource extraction.