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Central District light rail: Judkins Park Station slated to break ground mid-2017

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As U-Link light rail moves from weekend novelty to weekday workhorse, Sound Transit is preparing for its next major expansion in the region that will include bringing light rail to the Central District.

In 2023, the fully-funded and almost completely designed East Link light rail line is planned to connect Bellevue, Redmond, and Seattle across the I-90 bridge. It will also include one stop in Seattle smack-dab in the middle of I-90 just south of Judkins Park. Construction on Judkins Park Station is slated to begin by mid-2017. It will be the western-most station on the 10-stop East Link line which is expected to carry 50,000 riders by 2030.

Just as light rail connections at the UW and Capitol Hill have expanded notions of what is “close by,” the Judkins station is poised to do the same for the Central Area.

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Planned travel times from Sound Transit — Click to view

The station will be a 10-minute, half-mile walk from 23rd and Jackson, where high-density development activity is laying the groundwork to bring thousands of transit riders in the near future.

From there, it would be a breezy 12-minute ride to Broadway via the bus-reduced downtown transit tunnel vs. the 30-minute time investment of taking the perennially late 8.

In February, the Paul Allen-backed Vulcan sealed the deal for a 570-unit, mixed-use development on the southeast corner of 23rd and Jackson. The Seattle real estate giant announced it paid $30.9 million to acquire the Promenade 23 shopping center and the commercial area surrounding Starbucks across the street.

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The Sound Transit 2-funded East Link will replace I-90’s current center-running express lanes to cross Lake Washington and connect with Central Link. Demolition of the lanes at Rainier Ave will make way for a street-level entrance below the platform while another entranced will be located to the east at 23rd Ave. In December, the City of Seattle announced it had won an award for station improvements, including added bike facilities. Meanwhile, artists Barbara Earl Thomas and Hank Willis Thomas have been selected to create the art program for the station with part of the work “visually represents passing one’s presence onto future generations” via windscreens located on the station platform.”

The Judkins station should also bring some welcomed streetscape improvements to the immediate area. While the site of the future station is surrounded by a string of lovely parks and green space, the area under and around the cavernous I-90 overpass is a pedestrian dead zone.

East Link will connect with the Central Link at the International District Station. Riders heading south towards the airport will need to transfer while a single seat ride will take you to Roosevelt Station and beyond.

Due to its location in the midst of I-90, there is no planned development to surround the station like on Capitol Hill.

East Link will break ground in Bellevue later this year.

Meanwhile, the Sound Transit Board is expected to release its final plan Thursday for the next massive investment in regional rapid transit. With the potential to raise $27 million over 25 years if voters approve the ballot measure in November, Sound Transit 3 could fund a West Seattle to Ballard extension, expanded light rail through Kent and Federal Way, and a bus rapid transit line on E Madison through Capitol Hill.

UPDATE: It’s probably just cruel to include the so-called “Metro 8” light rail proposal because Sound Transit isn’t officially studying it. But some in the city’s transit advocacy community argue that a route connecting Belltown, South Lake Union, Capitol Hill, and the Central District at Judkins would be one of the best ROI choices Sound Transit could make for the upcoming ST3. Doesn’t look likely for the darkhorse — maybe ST4?

Ballard Spur and Metro 8 Subway Serve Seattle Better Than Interbay Light Rail
One of the biggest things the Interbay alignment brings to the table is a station in Uptown and either Belltown or South Lake Union (perhaps both with a somewhat squiggly alignment). The Metro 8 Subway could do the same thing for less money. The most important stretch connecting Uptown to Madison Street would be about 3 miles. It takes another 0.8 miles to reach Cherry Street and 23rd Avenue closer to the heart of the Central District. Since the length is about the same as the Ballard Spur, the cost should be similar.

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Timmy73
Timmy73
8 years ago

Gotta say, I’m pretty excited to see the expansion plans with many new stations just a few years away.

Long overdue but better late than never. I hope this is a game changer for our region and traffic congestion.

yeah
yeah
8 years ago
Reply to  Timmy73

Yeah, getting Link across the lake is going to be a huge improvement. Even just with the Husky Stadium station, one of my coworkers has a drastically reduced commute, by taking the 545 across 520 to Montlake and then switching to Link to get to downtown.

Gordon
Gordon
8 years ago

This can’t come soon enough. Hope they manage to open early like U-Link!

jsteez
jsteez
8 years ago

Station proposal looks beautiful.

Does anyone know how Sound Transit plans to use bits of land left over from station development? I know specifically by my place of residence on Beacon Hill, there is a sliver of land directly adjacent to the station that would be too small to build on. It would make the perfect addition to the station as a small park, not to mention enrich that area of the neighborhood with its numerous coffee shops and planned community center. I’m actually not aware if ST owns this particular piece of land, but I’d be surprised if they didn’t.

If anyone has more information on this process or whom to reach out to, I’d love to engage with that organization. Thank you.

Morgan
Morgan
8 years ago
Reply to  jsteez

Unfortunately, all of the remaining parcels of land surrounding the Beacon Hill Station are owned by a single private owner. And from what I have heard that owner has been stubbornly refusing to do anything with the land or to sell it.

It would be so nice to get that block filled out, especially with El Centro de la Raza’s project getting close to finishing up.

Marc
Marc
8 years ago

I appreciate inclusion of the Metro 8 subway line in the discussion. It is the natural next step in expansion of the urban light rail system and it is important to keep it in the public’s mind as it gets fine tuned.

The 23rd Ave corridor is a key arterial connecting a very dense area that is continuing to grow. Further connecting it to South Lake Union is the way to go.

Noah
Noah
8 years ago

@Bryan Cohen: when you say “bus-reduced downtown transit tunnel” what is the timing on that? Are you saying mid-2017 when the Judkins stop opens? Because I thought there hadn’t been commitments from Sound Transit or Metro on the timing to reduce buses in the tunnel. And 2017 is well earlier than I’d read people were guessing. More like 2019-23 range?

Bobby
Bobby
8 years ago
Reply to  Noah

Correct me if I’m wrong, but we’re going to see some sort of bus reduction as early as this Saturday, aren’t we? The 70/71/73 routes will all no longer go downtown, thus will no longer be going through the tunnels.