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Sunday Video: Did Seattle Just Build the Best Pedestrian Bridge Ever?

Doug Trumm - January 05, 2025

Dave Amos of City Beautiful recently visited Seattle’s new Overlook Walk pedestrian bridge and appears to have fallen in love, as his video title puts it up there as one of the best pedestrian bridges ever. Amos gives it high marks for the seamless, scenic connection it creates between Pike Place Market and the expanded Seattle Aquarium and the high quality public spaces it creates along the way. It’s big step up in pedestrian infrastructure and park space.

Not everything about the new Seattle Waterfront Park worked out perfectly. The waterfront bike facility turned out narrower than originally promised and is delayed and yet to open. The wide surface-level Alaskan Way highway partially recreates the barrier that was removed by tearing down the hulking Alaskan Way Viaduct.

Civic boosters have sought to make the four-billion-dollar SR 99 tunnel they dug under downtown as inevitable and a prerequisite for the waterfront improvements, overlooking the viable grassroots effort to remove the viaduct and use transit, bike, and pedestrian improvements to carry the load instead of more highways. Tying the project to the SR-99 Tunnel also delayed it by many years, which was greatly exacerbated by the world’s largest tunnel-boring machine breaking down, forcing a multi-year effort to extract and repair it.

There’s also the issue of the failure to pedestrianize Pike Place — despite wide public support — which means people drawn to the Overlook Walk are shunted into an unsafe and unnecessarily car-choked street.

Nonetheless, the Overlook Walk is a shiny example of the good that come of investing in pedestrian infrastructure and placemaking. We should do it far more often. The end result is spectacular and will be beloved for many generations.

Overlook Walk Finally Opens as the New Seattle Waterfront’s Centerpiece
The new pedestrian connection, park, and gathering space all in one was envisioned as a key component of Seattle’s new waterfront since work started on the project over a decade ago.
Surface Highway Undermines Seattle’s Waterfront Park
The Seattle Times editorial board recently published a take on the Seattle Waterfront, and, while the Blethen gang being wrong isn’t news, it’s also a great opportunity to talk about what actually makes a great street and public space. Spoiler: It’s not nine lanes of traffic. But that’s what parts of the new Alaskan Way … Continue reading Surface Highway Undermines Seattle’s Waterfront Park