Northgate is a light rail and bus station in the Northgate neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, United States, and part of 1 Line on Sound Transit's Link light rail system. The transit center, located adjacent to the Northgate Mall (now named Northgate Station), has four bus bays served by 22 routes. The station also has parking for 1,475 vehicles.
Link light rail station | ||||||||||||||||||
General information | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | 10200 1st Avenue Northeast Seattle, Washington United States | |||||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 47°42′11″N 122°19′41″W / 47.70306°N 122.32806°W | |||||||||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | |||||||||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | |||||||||||||||||
Train operators | Sound Transit | |||||||||||||||||
Bus routes | 6 | |||||||||||||||||
Bus stands | 4 | |||||||||||||||||
Bus operators | King County Metro | |||||||||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||||||||
Structure type | Elevated | |||||||||||||||||
Parking | 1,475 spaces | |||||||||||||||||
Bicycle facilities | Lockers and racks | |||||||||||||||||
Accessible | Yes | |||||||||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||||||||
Opened | June 6, 1992 October 2, 2021 (light rail) | (buses)|||||||||||||||||
Passengers | ||||||||||||||||||
9,807 daily weekday boardings (2023)[1] 3,319,412 total boardings (2023)[1] | ||||||||||||||||||
Services | ||||||||||||||||||
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The transit center opened in June 1992 as a major hub for North Seattle buses and was prioritized as a light rail terminus during planning later in the decade. Construction on the light rail extension to Northgate began in 2012 and station construction began in 2017. The extension of the 1 Line, including Northgate station and a pedestrian bridge over Interstate 5, opened on October 2, 2021. Northgate remained the northern terminus of 1 Line until the Lynnwood Link extension opened in August 2024. It was once proposed as a bus rapid transit terminal and is an area with potential for additional transit-oriented development.
Location
editNorthgate station is located along the east side of 1st Avenue Northeast on the southwest side of the Northgate Station shopping mall in northern Seattle. It is directly east of Interstate 5 and the terminus of its reversible express lanes, which intersect 1st Avenue Northeast at Northeast 103rd Street. To the west of the freeway is the North Seattle College campus, connected via the John Lewis Memorial Bridge to the station's mezzanine level.[2] The station and its parking lots are adjacent to medical clinics, offices, and the Thornton Place retail and housing complex.[2][3] In 2013, the Puget Sound Regional Council estimated that the area within 1⁄2 mile (0.80 km) of the station had a population of 5,453 residents and was home to 9,273 jobs.[4]
History
editBus station
editThe Northgate Transit Center opened on June 6, 1992, at a cost of $15.8 million to construct.[5] It was planned in 1978,[6] as part of King County Metro's "MetroTRANSITion" program, becoming the last of eleven transit centers built under the plan.[7][8] The Northgate area was historically served by the Blue Streak express bus to downtown Seattle from 1970 onward;[9] by the end of the decade, Metro Transit had made Northgate into a regional hub for buses using a park and ride on the north side of the mall (closed in 2008 and converted into Hubbard Homestead Park).[10][11] Construction began in 1990 with the demolition of a Group Health clinic and relocation of a segment of Thornton Creek.[12]
The transit center was sited adjacent to the mall and an access ramp to the Interstate 5 reversible express lanes.[13] It consisted of six bus bays that served a reverse-direction street for buses with extra space for layovers and passing lanes.[14] The passenger waiting area was covered by large white canvases held aloft by steel towers, designed by ZGF Architects.[5] It featured several passenger amenities, including public restrooms, pay phones, an ORCA card vending machine, bicycle parking, and a baby changing station.[5] Several sculptures at the transit center were designed by Cris Bruch and cost $50,000 to install as part of the agency's public art program.[15]
The park and ride at the transit center initially consisted of 284 spaces in the west lot before it underwent two expansions. In 2001, the parking lot was expanded to 950 spaces after the $7.6 million purchase of 3.9 acres (1.6 ha) from Simon Property Group.[16] The completion of the Thornton Creek development in April 2009 brought 350 additional parking spaces to be added to the transit center,[17] mostly used to replace a 500-stall park and ride north of the mall.[11] By 2016, Northgate Transit Center had over 1,000 total parking spaces that normally filled before 9 a.m. on weekdays.[18]
Light rail planning and construction
editThe Northgate area had been considered in several rapid transit studies in the late 20th century as a suitable terminus or major station.[19] The Northgate Link project was proposed as part of the "Sound Move" ballot measure in 1996, pending additional funding,[20] but was deferred until the voter approval of the Sound Transit 2 package in 2008.[21][22]
Construction of the Northgate extension began in 2012.[21] Absher Construction was awarded a $174 million contract in August 2016 to build Northgate station and the elevated guideway leading to the tunnel portal.[23] On January 13, 2017, Sound Transit broke ground on the station, beginning construction with the demolition of two parking lots.[24] By July, installation of the station's support columns and platform-level girders were underway.[25][26] Construction on the station was declared substantially complete in February 2021, shortly after powered testing of light rail vehicles had begun.[27][28]
As part of the project, parking capacity at the transit center was reduced by spaces eliminated for the station and a new bus station to the west of the original one.[29] A partially below-grade parking garage with 450 spaces was opened in November 2018 on the southwest corner of the Northgate Mall parking lot.[30] A larger garage with up to 900 vehicles was proposed but rejected after outcry from community and neighborhood groups.[31][32]
Northgate station and its adjoining pedestrian bridge to North Seattle College were opened on October 2, 2021, a day after the formal ribbon-cutting.[33] Bus service was transferred to the new bus bays under the light rail station on the same day, including new routes serving Snohomish County on Sound Transit Express and Community Transit that debuted on October 4.[34] The public restrooms at the station's mezzanine level were closed in mid-2022 due to vandalism and security incidents; they were replaced by portable toilets for a year while undergoing renovations.[35]
Beyond the station, a 400-foot (120 m) pocket track was built to the north for train storage and reversal, as well as accommodating the Lynnwood Link Extension.[36] The extension beyond Northgate to Lynnwood Transit Center opened on August 30, 2024.[37] Sound Transit estimates that Northgate station will have 15,000 daily boardings by 2030.[36]
Station layout
editPlatform level | Northbound | ← 1 Line toward Lynnwood City Center (Shoreline South/148th) |
Island platform | ||
Southbound | 1 Line toward Angle Lake (Roosevelt) → | |
Mezzanine level | Ticket vending machines, pedestrian bridge (Exit C)[38] | |
Street level | North entrance (Exit A), South entrances (Exits B1 and B2), bus bays, kiss and ride, park and ride[38] |
Northgate station is located on the east side of 1st Avenue Northeast between 103rd and 100th streets on the southwest side of Northgate Mall. It consists of a single island platform elevated 25 to 45 feet (7.6 to 13.7 m) above ground level with an intermediate mezzanine.[21] The mezzanine has ticket vending machines and public restrooms and is connected to both the platform and entrances via stairs, escalators, and elevators.[2][38] It has four entrances: Exit A, at the north end adjacent to the parking garage; Exit B, with two entrances leading to the bus bays at street level; and Exit C, which connects the mezzanine directly with the John Lewis Memorial Bridge, which crosses Interstate 5.[38][39] At street level, Northgate station has a bicycle parking station, on-demand lockers, and free racks.[38]
The station's four bus bays lie under the mezzanine and platform and run along 1st Avenue Northeast and a parallel access road to the east. The former bus platforms to the east of the station are now used for layovers.[40] A designated pickup and drop-off area is located near the south entrance on the east side of the access road.[38] Northgate station has a total of 1,475 parking stalls that are divided between five facilities: a four-level garage with 443 stalls, a western surface lot with 139 stalls, an eastern surface lot with 263 stalls, a mall-owned garage with 280 stalls available on weekday mornings, and 350 stalls in the Thornton Place garage available on weekday mornings.[41][42] The garages and lots include reserved parking for carpooling high-occupancy vehicles and other users with the use of a pre-registered permit.[43] The upper level of the Sound Transit parking garage at the station and several nearby lots provide paid parking for the light rail station.[44][45]
Northgate Station was designed by Hewitt Architects, a Seattle-based firm that also worked on Roosevelt station.[39][46] The station features several pieces of public art that was funded by the "STart" program, which allocates a percent of construction costs for art. Seattle-based artist Mary Ann Peters created Darner's Prism, a set of painted glass murals inspired by the green darner dragonfly, the official state insect of Washington, laid over representations of the nearby freeway noise and Thornton Creek.[47] The larger mural spans 100 feet (30 m) above the platform's west clerestory and a smaller companion is located in the north stairwell;[48][49] both were produced by German glassmakers Franz Mayer of Munich.[50] Cris Bruch created two new sculptures for the station's plaza and north entrance to complement his earlier work at the original transit center. The plaza work is a 23-foot (7.0 m) steel sculpture with nine "trunks" with clusters of aluminum "blossoms" that hang from their curved branches, while the north entrance has several polyhedrons mounted to the screen wall on the station's façade.[51][52]
Pedestrian bridge
editThe John Lewis Memorial Bridge is an overpass for pedestrians and bicycles crossing Interstate 5, connecting the mezzanine of Northgate station to the North Seattle College campus and Licton Springs neighborhood.[2] It opened alongside the light rail station on October 2, 2021, and was dedicated by city leaders.[33] The bridge is 1,900 feet (580 m) long, with a 1,338-foot (408 m) main span over the freeway using a Vierendeel truss and a ramp connecting to a protected cycletrack at street level on 1st Avenue Northeast.[53][54] It was officially named in honor of former U.S. Congressman John Lewis of Georgia by the Seattle City Council in August 2021 to recognize his civil rights activism amid criticism for not choosing a local namesake.[55][56]
The bridge and its connection to the station were first proposed in 2007 by the city government and studied by King County in 2011.[57][58] It was tentatively approved by Sound Transit in 2012 as a replacement for a larger parking garage, with the agency and the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) agreeing to each fund $5 million towards its construction, estimated to cost $20 million at the time.[59] Several designs were considered, including a cable-stayed bridge, a tied-arch bridge, and an enclosed tube with hexagonal sections proposed by LMN Architects that was chosen by the city government in 2015.[60] The tube design would require additional structural supports, including a steel deck under the walkway, raising the project's costs to over $60 million.[60] The city applied for a $15 million grant from the federal government in 2015 that was rejected,[61] but the project instead received funds from the state government and a local transportation levy passed in 2015.[60][62]
The bridge project was put on hold in 2016 due to the rise in projected costs and a new design team was assembled by SDOT, to be led by VIA Architects.[63] The simpler design, estimated to cost $37.5 million in 2017, replaced the enclosed design with an uncovered tied-arch bridge that would be 16 feet (4.9 m) wide.[53][63] The main Vierendeel truss span was originally planned to use a proprietary lighting system for the handrails until the initial bids were $8 million over the estimated budget, leading to a redesign.[64] Construction on the bridge began in February 2020, with project costs estimated at $56 million.[65] The prefabricated trusses were manufactured in Tacoma and trucked to the bridge site for assembly and installation, which was delayed to May 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[66][67]
Transit-oriented development
editIn anticipation of light rail construction, the area around Northgate Mall was identified by the city as an "urban village" in 1993,[68] with heavy potential for transit-oriented development. In 2007, the city rezoned the Northgate area to support an increased height limit of 125 feet (38 m).[68]
In 2009, one of the mall's surface parking lots was converted into a mixed-use, transit-oriented development called "Thornton Place", with 109 condominiums, 278 apartments (including affordable units), a movie theater, and 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) of retail space.[69] The complex, which also includes a community park and a daylit section of Thornton Creek,[70] was heralded as one of Seattle's first true transit-oriented developments.[71]
The city of Seattle published an "urban design framework" for the Northgate area in 2013, outlining a vision for the redevelopment of the neighborhood into an urban center, based on the 1993 urban village designation. The report focused on maximizing transit-oriented development around the transit center and light rail station by building mixed-use infill development in the surface parking lots south of the mall with open spaces and plazas.[57][72] The draft "Seattle 2035" comprehensive plan, written in 2015, anticipates at least 1,600 residential units and 6,000 jobs to be added to the Northgate area by 2035.[73] Simon Property Group announced a major redevelopment plan for Northgate Mall in 2018, proposing the addition of office space and 1,200 apartment units on the 55-acre (22 ha) site.[74] The redevelopment also includes a hockey center that serves as the training facility for the Seattle Kraken, which opened in September 2021.[75]
In 2019, the Seattle Housing Authority acquired Northgate Commons, a 1950s apartment complex on the north side of the mall, with the intent of redeveloping it into a mixed-income public housing complex. The agency announced plans in 2021 to build six new buildings on the site with 1,400 total apartment units that would include affordable housing.[76] King County Metro announced a 75-year lease agreement with Bridge Housing and Community Roots Housing in 2022 to develop a seven-story apartment building with 232 affordable units and a childcare center. The building will be constructed on the north half of the surface park-and-ride lot adjacent to the former bus bays;[77] construction began in 2024 and is scheduled to be completed in 2025.[78]
Services
editNorthgate station is served by the 1 Line, which runs between Lynnwood, the University of Washington campus, Downtown Seattle, the Rainier Valley, and Seattle–Tacoma International Airport. It is the fourth southbound station from Lynnwood City Center, the northern terminus, and eighteenth northbound station from Angle Lake, the southern terminus. It is situated between Shoreline South/148th and Roosevelt station stations and is the northernmost stop in Seattle. Trains on the 1 Line serve Northgate station twenty hours a day on weekdays and Saturdays, from 5:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.; and eighteen hours on Sundays, from 6:00 a.m. to midnight. During regular weekday service, trains operate roughly every eight to ten minutes during rush hour and midday operation, respectively, with longer headways of twelve to fifteen minutes in the early morning and at night. During weekends, 1 Line trains arrive at Northgate station every ten minutes during midday hours and every twelve to fifteen minutes during mornings and evenings. The station is approximately 16 minutes from Westlake station in Downtown Seattle and 54 minutes from SeaTac/Airport station.[79]
Bus routes
editThe station is also a major hub for buses in North Seattle with routes operated by King County Metro and Sound Transit Express.[79][80] Northgate station has four bays for buses around the perimeter of the light rail station, with access from Exit B.[40] King County Metro operates six bus routes that provide all-day connections to Ballard, Green Lake, Roosevelt, the University District, Lake City, and Shoreline. A peak-only commuter route from Shoreline and Northgate station provides further connections to First Hill and South Lake Union.[40][81]
From 2021 to 2024, Northgate station was also the terminus of several express routes from Snohomish County that had previously served Downtown Seattle and the University of Washington campus. Four Sound Transit Express routes from Snohomish County provided all-day connections to Everett, Lynnwood, and Mountlake Terrace.[34][82] Community Transit truncated its entire University District commuter network to Northgate station when it opened, providing peak-only service to Lynnwood, Edmonds, Mukilteo, Everett, and Marysville.[40][83][84] These routes were eliminated or truncated in September 2024 following the opening of light rail stations in Lynnwood and Mountlake Terrace.[82] Sound Transit previously operated express buses to Northgate from Everett on routes 505 and 506 from 2002 to 2003.[85]
Route | Bay(s)[40] | Termini[81] | Via[81] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
40 | 4 | Northgate station, Downtown Seattle | Ballard, Fremont, South Lake Union | |
61 | 1, 4 | Greenwood, Lake City | Licton Springs | |
67 | 1 | Northgate station, Seattle Children's Hospital | Roosevelt, University District | |
75 | 1 | Northgate station, University District | Lake City, Sand Point, University of Washington | |
303X | 3 | Aurora Village Transit Center, Cherry Hill | Shoreline, South Lake Union, First Hill | Peak-only commuter route |
345 | 4 | Northgate station, Shoreline South/148th station | North Seattle College, Bitter Lake, Shoreline, Haller Lake | |
348 | 1, 4 | Northgate station, Richmond Beach | Jackson Park, Shoreline South/145th station, North City | |
365 | 4 | Northgate station, Shoreline North/185th station | Haller Lake, Shoreline | |
512 | 2 | Everett | Lynnwood Transit Center | Sunday evenings only |
Bus rapid transit
editNorthgate Transit Center had been planned as the terminus of a bus rapid transit line under development by the Seattle Department of Transportation as part of the RapidRide+ program. The program was funded by the November 2015 "Move Seattle" levy and consisted of seven corridors throughout the city, including upgrades to Route 40 from Northgate to Ballard, Fremont, and Downtown Seattle.[86][87] The Northgate–Fremont project was downgraded in 2018, replacing its bus rapid transit elements with smaller-scale improvements to transit speed and reliability set to be completed in 2026.[88][89]
A second corridor, later named the RapidRide J Line, was originally scheduled to open in 2021 and planned to connect Northgate and Roosevelt to the University District, Eastlake and South Lake Union neighborhoods.[90] The project was scaled back to terminate near U District station due to budget shortfalls resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused a reduction in ridership and tax revenue, and completion was delayed to 2027.[91][92]
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- ^ "TIGER FY 2015 Grant Application: Northgate Non-Motorized Access to Transit and Education" (PDF). City of Seattle. 2015. p. 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 2, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
- ^ a b c Metro Transit System: Northwest Area (Map). King County Metro. September 2024. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- ^ a b Deshais, Nicholas (September 13, 2024). "Seattle neighborhoods get 6-minute bus service with RapidRide G Line". The Seattle Times. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- ^ Watanabe, Ben (September 13, 2021). "Faster trips, more service in store for Community Transit". The Everett Herald. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
- ^ "Bus Service to Northgate Station". Community Transit. Retrieved October 6, 2021.
- ^ Hadley, Jane (May 8, 2003). "Sound Transit bus routes get a tweaking". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Archived from the original on September 24, 2016. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
- ^ Lindblom, Mike (October 18, 2015). "Move Seattle levy: Better bus service or a bunch of 'guesstimates'?". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on April 8, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
- ^ Lindblom, Mike (November 3, 2015). "Voters saying yes to Seattle's big ask for transportation". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on October 3, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
- ^ Sanders, Al (May 24, 2024). "Construction on Route 40 Transit-Plus Multimodal Corridor project set to begin". Metro Matters. King County Metro. Retrieved September 3, 2024.
- ^ Gutman, David (November 29, 2018). "Move Seattle relaunch: After a year of study, SDOT has new plan to deliver $930 million levy". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
- ^ "Roosevelt to Downtown High Capacity Transit (HCT)". Seattle Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on August 12, 2016. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
- ^ "RapidRide J Line: Frequently Asked Questions about the Shortened Route" (PDF). Seattle Department of Transportation. February 11, 2021. pp. 1–4. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
- ^ Lewis, Brandon (January 29, 2024). "FTA awards Seattle DOT $64.2 million for RapidRide J Line BRT". Mass Transit Magazine. Retrieved September 3, 2024.
External links
edit- Media related to Northgate Transit Center at Wikimedia Commons
- Station information from Sound Transit