About

Fire pits closed until further notice to discourage crowding

Picture a perfect summer day, and chances are your thoughts will take you to Alki Beach Park, a long beach strip that runs roughly from 64th Place SW to Duwamish Head on Elliott Bay. It's a great spot for a long walk any time of year, and in the summer draws joggers, rollerbladers, volleyball players, sunbathers, bicyclists and strollers out to enjoy the sun. The water temperature ranges from 46 to 56 degrees Fahrenheit depending on season.



The widened path accommodates a lot of folks, and there's plenty of parking along Alki Ave. SW. There are picnic tables, a bathhouse housing an art studio, and a restroom at the south (Alki Point) end of the beach, where you'll find the monument to the arrival of the first white settlers on November 13, 1851.

The north end of the beach is protected by a bulkhead and flanked by cottages. The whole beach offers spectacular views of Puget Sound, the Olympic Mountains, and the flotilla of ferries, sailboats, steamships and other craft that ply Puget Sound waters.



At a small seawall-surrounded square that used to be the site of Luna Park, an amusement park, be sure to stop and see the old 2.5-ton anchor dredged up by the Nor'West Divers Club and secured at the site.

Hand-carry boat access is on the east beach shoreline between 53rd Ave. SW and 55th Ave. SW, and on the west beach shoreline at the western property line and extending northwest for 200'.

Current Project

Alki Beach Comfort Station 57

Summer 2020 Update:

Seattle Parks and Recreation has completed the design for the renovation of this comfort station. We have received our permit approvals and are finalizing our construction documentation.

We anticipate construction starting mid-summer 2020.

This project will provide three new all gender restroom facilities, each with individual access and the structure will be designed to meet standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

The Seattle Park District provides funding for this renovation.

Thank you to everyone who stopped to talk with us on that beautiful March 30th Saturday when Seattle Parks and Recreation presented the proposed project to replace the existing two-stall restroom with a three stall, individually accessed, all-gender facility located at Alki Avenue SW and 57th Avenue SW. A lot of people were out enjoying the park and staff talked to about 100 people about the improvement project. Most were very happy to see that a new facility is coming and welcomed the all-gender, individual units. Many were pleased that an additional unit would be included, and that the outdoor shower would also be replaced, while a few were concerned about construction costs. Overall, most visitors were positive about the change and appreciative that Parks was informing the park users of the anticipated construction.

View the following 3/30/2019 Open House documents below.

March 30, 2019 Open House Poster

March 30, 2019 Open House Presentation Boards

For questions about the project or if you need a translator or accommodations please contact:

Emily Griffith

Emily.Griffith@seattle.gov or 206-615-0075

History

Alki Beach is the site of the landing of the first white settlers in Seattle on a cold, stormy day in November of 1851. Chief Seattle and his tribe greeted them and helped them build their cabin to stave off the cold, wet winter.



The beach enjoys minus tides that reveal a wide expanse of sandy beach. Partly protected by a seawall, Alki Beach is a summer park destination. The park begins at Alki Point and extends 2.5 miles to Duwamish Head, the mouth of the Duwamish River. ("Duwamish" comes from a Chinook word "duwampsh," meaning "many-colored river," and was one of the first names proposed for the city that is now Seattle.)



By 1902 the beach was so popular that it became the destination of the new electric street railway line, "all the way from Seattle."



To add attraction to the beach, Chas. Looff built an elaborate amusement park on pilings at Duwamish Head (you can still see the pilings at low tide!), and called it Luna Park after its Coney Island, NY namesake. The park, completed in 1907, included the "Powers Natatorium and Bathhouse" with several heated saltwater pools, a huge German carousel, a Ferris wheel, a roller coaster, a restaurant, and a boat chute into a "tub" of water.



In 1910 this section of beach became the first part of the park, and was also the first municipal saltwater beach on the west coast. The Alki Bathhouse, built in 1911, was the first of its kind.



In 1908 L. G. Mecklem flew Seattle's first flight: an air balloon ride from Luna Park to the Meadows Race Track in Georgetown. A fire razed Luna Park in 1931. In 1945 the City acquired the site, and in 1954 filled it in.



The Statue of Liberty, a small replica of the original "Liberty Enlightening the World" in New York City, was a gift from Reginald H. Parsons and the Seattle Council of the Boy Scouts of America in 1952. The statue has become such a symbol of liberty and courage that it became a place to mourn, to reflect, and to leave mementos after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.



Since 1973, a marker has commemorated the 45 lives lost when in 1906 the steamer Dix collided with the steamer Jeanie off Duwamish Head, a somber reminder of the power of the sea.

Beach Volleyball Court Use

Individual courts must be reserved by calling the volleyball scheduling office at 206-684-7204, or even better, email Christopher.Powell@seattle.gov well in advance of the desired date. The per court fee is $8/hr, per court. Players must bring their own nets and ball. Court use is high in summer and scheduling well in advance is advised.

Alki Beach Park has 8 courts; one of these is set aside for free drop-in play on a first come, first served basis. The drop-in court is just west of the comfort station.



