Lakeridge, West Hill
Lakeridge is a hillside neighborhood near Lake Washington located mostly in unincorporated West Hill in King County, Washington and partially in the southeast portion of the City of Seattle's Rainier Beach neighborhood. Its boundaries extend from Seattle's Rainier Beach neighborhood on the north, to Lake Washington on the east, to unincorporated Bryn Mawr on the southeast and unincorporated Skyway on the southwest.[1]
History and plats
In 1928, developer E. S. Goodwin filed a plat for part of a hillside and uplands above the southwestern shore of Lake Washington and called it Lakeridge. The Seattle Planning Commission adopted that name for the neighborhood in 1947.[2] Plat maps identify four divisions: Lakeridge Division #1 is the easternmost and closest to Lake Washington. Divisions #2, #3, and #4 are located successively higher up the hillside to the west and continue over the ridge top. Division #3 spans the border of unincorporated King County and the City of Seattle. The Seattle portion of Division #3 and all of Division #4 make up part of Seattle's Rainier View neighborhood.[3] Two hundred and forty-one Lakeridge tax parcels are located inside the Seattle City limits.[4]
Architecture and aesthetics
Lakeridge is characterized by winding streets and mid-century modest architecture. The lake views, mature vegetation and curving streets give an appealing aspect to the neighborhood. In some spots, the lake views are breathtaking. Many of the homes in Lakeridge are one-story ramblers, or ramblers with daylight basements, built in the post-WWII period between 1946 and 1959 using the highly functional and frequently seen 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom, and 3-bedroom Ranch House floor plans of the time. These layouts exemplify mid-century modest tract housing and some streets are lined with a number of nearly identical homes. When built, these were made more visually interesting by varying the percentage of brick (from none to 100%) and wood on the exteriors. They have been further varied by later additions of new rooms and sometimes a second story, as well as by mature landscaping and diverse exterior paint colors. A few individually architect-designed mid-century modern homes also are interspersed. Some pre-WWII homes are present and later mid-entry and contemporary modern homes in various styles have been built since 1960 as the original double lots have been divided. Although originally most homes had views of Lake Washington, today only an estimated 50% of homes still retain some view of the lake. Maturing trees, other tall landscape vegetation, and infill construction are gradually blocking the views which currently range from peeks through the trees to unobstructed 180-degree vistas.
Lakeridge Park
Lakeridge Park, on the neighborhood’s northern edge, “occupies more than 35 acres of Taylor Creek and Deadhorse Canyon in southeast Seattle … Taylor Creek is the fourth largest creek in Seattle and is the site of an urban creek restoration program that will attract salmon back to the creek to spawn. On April 19, 2000, under the leadership of Seattle Public Utilities, Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation, Cascadia Quest, and Friends of Deadhorse Canyon, volunteers planted native vegetation. Seattle Public Utilities replaced two culverts and when a culvert is replaced under Rainier Avenue South, salmon fry will be released into the creek. If the efforts are successful, the salmon will return to the creek to spawn.”[2][5][6][7]
Services and utilities
As in many neighborhoods that span incorporated and unincorporated areas, services are provided by various interlocal agreements between jurisdictions and by private entities:
- Seattle City Light provides electricity.
- Renton School District #403 serves the unincorporated Lakeridge Divisions #1 and #2 and the unincorporated portion of Division #3. Seattle School District #1 serves more than 200 homes in Lakeridge Division #4 and in the portion of Division #3 that lies within the City of Seattle.
- The Skyway Water and Sewer District provides all sewer service and draws water from three sources including: The Cascade Water Alliance, which includes the City of Seattle’s Cedar River Watershed operated by Seattle Public Utilities; Skyway's own district wells; and the City of Renton.[8]
- Puget Sound Energy, a private for-profit company, provides natural gas.
- King County Metro provides public bus transportation.
- CenturyLink, Comcast, and ClearWire provide phone, cable television, and Internet services.
Annexation proposal
In 2005, the unincorporated areas of Lakeridge were included in the West Hill potential annexation area (PAA) of the City of Renton.[9] This addition was ratified by King County in April 2006.[10] In November, 2012, the majority of residents of the unincorporated area and surrounding unincorporated neighborhoods voted to reject the proposed annexation.[11] The area remains in Renton's potential annexation area, meaning that the City of Renton intends to eventually make the area part of the city through annexation.
References
- ↑ King County Assessor eMap (http://your.kingcounty.gov/Assessor/eMap/InternetPDF/qs_NW122304.pdf), retrieved February, 2013.
- 1 2 David Wilma (March 21, 2001), Lakeridge Park and Taylor Creek (Seattle), HistoryLink
- ↑ "Seattle City Clerk".
- ↑ "King County Assessor" (PDF). Retrieved February 2013.
- ↑ "Taylor Creek Highlights Urban Creeks Legacy", News Release (Seattle Public Utilities), March 31, 2000
- ↑ William Dietrich (April 16, 2000), "As Once-forgotten Creeks Make a Comeback, Seattle Considers Its Values", The Seattle Times
- ↑ Don Sherwood (1977), "Lakeridge Park & P.G.", Interpretive Essays on the History of Seattle Parks (Handwritten bound manuscript), Seattle Room, Seattle Central Library
- ↑ Frequently asked questions, Skyway Water & Sewer District
- ↑ City of Renton Department of Community & Economic Development (2008), Proposed West Hill Annexation Area Vicinity Map (PDF)
- ↑ GROWTH MANAGEMENT PLANNING COUNCIL AGENDA ITEM II, April 26, 2006
- ↑ "King County Election results". King County Elections. Retrieved February 2013.
External links
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Coordinates: 47°30′23″N 122°14′40″W / 47.50639°N 122.24444°W