Skip to content

Seattle Culture

Fixing Third Avenue, One Step At A Time

New lighting is part of a broader effort to revitalize the street

By Rob Smith March 21, 2025

A person crosses an empty city street along Third Avenue, lined with buildings and string lights. Buses and storefronts are visible in the background, hinting at ongoing improvement efforts in the area.
Photo courtesy of Downtown Seattle Association

Third Avenue has long been the scourge of downtown Seattle. It’s been sketchy for at least the better part of two decades.

It may not seem like much, but festive lighting has been installed along the “Spark Block,” between Stewart and Pine streets on Third Avenue. The enhancement includes striking catenary lighting and builds on a similar effort launched last fall.

The Downtown Seattle Association (DSA) has long pushed for major improvements to Third Avenue. Six years ago, DSA — an advocacy group representing 1,100 members — released a plan called the “Third Avenue Vision,” a plan that proposed four potential transportation options that called for converting the street to a two- or three-lane transitway on what DSA calls “the gateway to downtown Seattle.”

The report notes that Third Avenue has a lack of public or private open spaces, high pedestrian volumes and unengaging facades. Potential changes include creating a three-lane street; adding a median in the middle of the road where pedestrians could catch buses; adding a transit shuttle and hub; and diverting some bus traffic to Second and Fourth avenues.

The plan generated interest at the time, but funding was and still remains elusive.

“The future of Third Avenue is critically important. In a lot of ways, Third Avenue is universally loathed,” DSA President and CEO Jon Scholes told Seattle magazine in 2023. “Our hope is that the city and county commit to a joint-financing strategy, just like they’ve done in Denver and Minneapolis, to rebuild the street in a way that makes it great for folks who may live or work on Third.”

Third Avenue is still home to too many open-air drug markets, and people who work downtown often tell me they avoid the street if possible due to safety concerns. The new lighting may not seem like much, but it’s a start.

“These lighting improvements contribute to a greater sense of safety and activation,” says Jennifer Casillas, vice president of public realm & ambassador operations for DSA.

Fair enough. Let’s hope that this represents a cascading effect of positive change along Third Avenue. People often unfairly criticize downtown Seattle (and I’ll make the case that the street is getting better), but there’s still much to be done.

Follow Us

Downtown Seattle Again Draws More Workers, Visitors

Downtown Seattle Again Draws More Workers, Visitors

The number of visitors approaches pre-pandemic levels

Downtown foot traffic hit yet another milestone last month. The Downtown Seattle Association says March averaged 101,000 daily workers, the highest average since March 2020. The figure is still only 60% of foot traffic in March 2019 as employees continue working remotely, but is a 12% increase from a year ago. More than 2.5 million…

Curvy Cactus, Chub Rub Launch Seattle’s First Fat Mall

Curvy Cactus, Chub Rub Launch Seattle’s First Fat Mall

The new pop-up marketplace highlights local makers and body-affirming fashion

Seattle Fat Mall — the city’s first-ever  — will turn the Curvy Cactus storefront on Fourth Avenue into a monthlong pop-up marketplace for plus-size fashion, art, and gifts from local makers. “We envision Seattle Fat Mall as more than just a retail space. It’s a celebration of our community,” say Amber and Alyss Seelig, sisters…

New Federal Rules Hit Eastside Youth Services

New Federal Rules Hit Eastside Youth Services

The Kirkland nonprofit is forced to scale back in response to shifting federal policy

In a region already struggling to meet the needs of unhoused youth, one of the Eastside’s most prominent youth service providers is cutting key programs in response to a rash of federal funding restrictions. Friends of Youth will no longer accept certain federal funding, citing recent executive orders and new restrictions tied to U.S. Department…

Would You Go See the Tulips… at Night?

Would You Go See the Tulips… at Night?

Night Bloom returns with a few new surprises

It’s still cold out. But that’s part of the charm. Throw on a puffer and a beanie and go see the tulips after dark. Tulip Valley Farms in Mount Vernon is running Night Bloom again this year, and it’s exactly what it sounds like: glowing tulip fields lit by lasers, Edison bulbs, and interactive stomp…