How SDOT plans to connect CID bike routes to the SoDo Trail in 2026

The missing “Georgetown to Downtown North Connection” is marked with blue dots. Map from an SDOT presentation to the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board (PDF).

The Georgetown to Downtown Safety Project officially opened in September, and it is a massive improvement for bikeability through the Industrial District. However, it does have one glaring problem: It doesn’t actually connect to downtown as the name implies.

However, SDOT unveiled a concept they hope to build in 2026 to close the gap between the SoDo Trail’s terminus at Stadium Station and the Chinatown-International District bike routes that connect to the downtown bike network, and it is similar to what Seattle Bike Blog suggested back in September. The city will work with King County and the Salvation Army-operated shelter to open 6th Ave S to biking and walking. Started as a 2020 COVID emergency response, the 250-bed shelter operates out of a series of warehouses and former commercial spaces along 6th Ave S. The shelter will continue to operate here until at least the end of 2027. However, the shelter complex also blocks the entire roadway with a temporary-looking fence, removing the most comfortable biking and walking route between Stadium Station and downtown. The plan is to instead fence off the area around the shelter but allow a pathway for walking and biking and perhaps also some motor vehicle travel.

A presenter noted that designers and shelter operators were talking about the possibility of removing the east fence entirely, which would create more space for biking and walking.

The design drawing shown at the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board (“SBAB”) October meeting shows a 15-foot-wide bike path between two fences. However, the presenter said the design was progressing and might not include the east fencing at all, since the shelter currently only uses those buildings for storage. The drawing lists that fence as “optional.” SBAB members noted the concern that fences on both sides, especially opaque ones like the fences currently installed, may not feel comfortable for users. Because the shelter is a King County project, the county is ultimately responsible for moving the fencing while SDOT is funding the design and bikeway install.

The area around the shelter is in something of a limbo period as Sound Transit tries to figure out whether it will build a station there as part of the Ballard Link Extension, which would include a second downtown tunnel. Dow Constantine, then-King County Executive and now Sound Transit CEO, and Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell both pushed for the agency to support a controversial plan to site a station in this industrial location surrounded by elevated freeway ramps rather than in a location with a transfer connection to the existing Chinatown-International District Station and King Street Station. But with current project cost estimates going far over-budget, it’s unclear how a reduced-cost version of the second tunnel might change this site’s future.

Meanwhile, Mayor-elect Katie Wilson campaigned on the promise to build 4,000 shelter beds during her first term. A previous proposal to expand the number of beds and services at this site was abandoned in 2022 following some pushback.

#SEAbikes #Seattle

Metro studying transit improvements on Route 106

This post is available in multiple languages. King County Metro, in collaboration with the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT), King County Road Services, and the City of Renton, is studyin…

Metro Matters
Lopez Island chef Josh Ratza wrote the book about taking ramen to the next level. In "Elevated Instant Ramen: Inspiration, Ideas, Ideology," Ratza explores the art and nuance of the ramen hack. It turns out, even a brick or styrofoam bowl of instant noodles can become a gourmet meal on a budget if you know where to look and what to add.
https://www.kuow.org/stories/six-tips-to-help-seattleites-elevate-their-ramen-game
#KUOW #News #Food #Seattle #InternationalDistrict #Food
Six tips to help Seattleites elevate their ramen game

Lopez Island chef Josh Ratza wrote the book about taking ramen to the next level. In "Elevated Instant Ramen: Inspiration, Ideas, Ideology," Ratza explores the art and nuance of the ramen hack. It turns out, even a brick or styrofoam bowl of instant noodles can become a gourmet meal on a budget if you know where to look and what to add.

Looking for authentic Asian food? Head down to Seattle’s International District. Home to a wide range of restaurants in Chinatown, Japantown, and Little Saigon, and just a couple of stops south on the light rail from the convention center, this is the place to go for noodles, dumplings, and other Asian fare. The International District is also home to Uwajimaya, a massive Asian grocery store, which includes a food court for fast casual eating, a huge variety of Asian food products, and a large kitchenware section. Uwajimaya has been a Seattle staple for almost 100 years, and is also the home of Kinokuniya Bookstore—a Japanese bookshop selling works in multiple languages, gifts, and stationery items.

Hing Hay Park” by Tracy Hunter is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0.

https://seattlein2025.org/2025/06/11/local-flavor-international-district/

#InternationalDistrict

Local Flavor: International District: Looking for authentic Asian food? Head down to Seattle’s International District. Home to a wide range of restaurants and just a couple of stops south on the light rail from the convention center, this is the place to go for noodles, dumplings, and other Asian fare. The International District is also home to Uwajimaya, a massive Asian grocery store and Seattle institu… (#InternationalDistrict)

Full post: https://seattlein2025.org/2025/06/11/local-flavor-international-district/

Seattle’s Chinatown-International district will become the city's next neighborhood to use a public ambassador program to address safety concerns.
https://www.kuow.org/stories/seattle-s-chinatown-international-district-gets-its-own-public-safety-ambassadors
#KUOW #News #Crime #Crime #InternationalDistrict
Seattle's Chinatown-International District gets its own public safety ambassadors

Seattle’s Chinatown-International district will become the city's next neighborhood to use a public ambassador program to address safety concerns.

A report by Seattle auditors found that the “hot spot” of 12th and Jackson in Seattle’s Little Saigon neighborhood has one of the city’s highest concentrations of drug overdoses and crimes against people, despite efforts to police the intersection and help people suffering from addiction.
https://www.kuow.org/stories/fentanyl-fuels-a-persistent-hot-spot-at-seattle-s-12th-and-jackson-what-will-it-take-to-fix-it
#KUOW #News #Crime #Drugs #Police #InternationalDistrict #Crime #PublicHealth #Seattle
Fentanyl fuels a persistent ‘hot spot’ at Seattle’s 12th and Jackson. What will it take to fix it?

A report by Seattle auditors found that the “hot spot” of 12th and Jackson in Seattle’s Little Saigon neighborhood has one of the city’s highest concentrations of drug overdoses and crimes against people, despite efforts to police the intersection and help people suffering from addiction.

Tai Tung was Bruce Lee’s favorite Chinese restaurant in Seattle, and it’s so cool that it’s still around today. Many celebrities (including Anthony Bourdain) have paid their respects and enjoyed a meal here.

For me, Bruce was an untouchable legend growing up. Even though I’m Filipino and very much not Chinese, but as one of the few Asian leading men in a very white Hollywood landscape, his badassery was an essential part of my confidence growing up. And so it was a real treat to visit a place that maintained his legacy and eat the same food he once enjoyed.

#seattle #chinatown #internationaldistrict #taitung #brucelee

Just got word that a coworker's kid was just evacuated from the #Seattle #LightRail between #SODO and the #InternationalDistrict because of a bomb threat. (They're safe; cops showed, got everyone off the train, they're walking to the ID). I haven't found any news reports or anything online yet.

The only information I've found so far is an alert on the Sound Transit site: "1 Line service is suspended between Int'l. Dist./Chinatown and SODO stations until further notice due to police activity."

Anyone else know anything yet?

https://www.soundtransit.org/ride-with-us/service-alerts/1-line-service-suspended-between-intl-dist-chinatown-sodo-stations

1 Line service is suspended between Int'l. Dist./Chinatown and SODO stations until further notice due to police activity. | Sound Transit

1 Line | ALL trains are departing on the Angle Lake platform side at these stations: -Westlake -Symphony -Pioneer -Int'l.