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Links & Media

* Seattle Channel's City Stream: Seattle Stairways (2016) 

* KPLU 88.1 "Tourist in Your Own Town" - Mount Baker Stairway Walk (2013)

* KING 5 Evening Magazine - Discover the Secret Stairways of Seattle (2013)

* KUOW News - The Hidden Legacy of Seattle Stairways (2013)

* AAA Journey - Last Stop: Stair Attraction (2012)

* Seattle Times - Guidebook Authors Show Ups and Downs. . . (2012)

Feet First - Seattle Walkability Advocates

* Sound Steps - Great Walking Groups for Over-50s!

* WalkOn inBellWa! - Walking Routes in Bellevue's Parks and Neighborhoods

Inventory of Seattle Stairs of 100 Steps or More website by Doug Beyerlein

* All Stairs Seattle Guide website by Susan Ott & Dave Ralph

* Year of Walking Seattle's Parks blog by Linnea Westerlind

*KOMO News - Year of Mapping Seattle's Stairs (2011)

*Seattle Times -  Queen Anne Stairways Map (2009)

* Washington Trails Association Magazine -  Urban Hiking (2007)

* Seattle Times - Seattle Stairways: Taking Time to Learn More About the City (2003)

* Seattle Weekly - Stairway Weekend (1999)

The Mountaineers as well as our publisher, Mountaineers Books

Seattle Stairway Walks: An Up-and-Down Guide to City Neighborhoods 

by Jake & Cathy Jaramillo

* The only guidebook to stairway walks in Seattle
* Explore Seattle neighborhoods in a new way with these interesting walks in Seattle
* Written for people of all ages who want to get outside, exercise, and explore
*Learn more --> 


ORDER TODAY

Friday
Dec092022

A New Stairway Downtown

The transformative replacement of the old Seattle Viaduct with Waterfront Park is going fast. The project has its detractors, mostly people who dislike the numerous traffic lanes along the southern end. For us, the benefit is a downtown Seattle freshly opened up to Elliott Bay with greenery and art, rather than shut away by a barrier of double-decker concrete and the endless din of heavy traffic. 

Today (December 9th, 2022), we attended the official opening of a new combined walkway/stairway at Union Street and Western Avenue. It's the final link in a pathway from the Union Street-end at 1st Avenue, across from the Seattle Art Museum, all the way down to the waterfront. There's also an elevator between Western and Alaskan Way, although the initial stretch from the top at 1st Avenue down to Western Avenue is not accessible.

The new stairway is graced with two sculptures by artist Norie Sato, which are visible in the pictures below. These stairs are definitely worth a visit! Here's the Seattle Times story on the stairway opening. 

For us, the most exciting part of the Waterfront Park project is the Overlook Walk, which is still to come. It will take pedestrians from Pike Place Market all the way down to the waterfront without touching foot on Alaskan Way's traffic lanes. You can see a rendering of the future overlook below, from the City's Waterfront Seattle website, along with recent pictures of the ongoing construction. It will be a grand edifice with sweeping stairways and numerous places for walkers to pause and view the waterfront and bay. The Overlook is expected to be completed in 2025.

We're looking forward to 2025!

 

The polished steel "fence" along the left side of the walkway, and the arching fern-like steel form at the bottom, are sculptures by Norie Sato.

 

 

 

A rendering of the future Overlook Walk.

 

Construction of the sweeping Overlook Walk across from Pike Place Market.

 

 

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