Removal of Pike Street cherry trees on pause after community feedback
Mar 7, 2023, 3:00 PM | Updated: 6:06 pm

The cherry trees along Pike Street between First and Second Avenue were granted a stay of execution today by Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell. (Feliks Banel/成人X站 NewsRadio)
(Feliks Banel/成人X站 NewsRadio)
Update 3/7 2:00 p.m.:
The City of Seattle stated they are hitting the pause button on the removal of the linear grove of Pike Street cherry trees.
“The removal of the cherry trees has been temporarily postponed to listen to the perspective of community members and to fully consider their concerns,” a spokesperson for the Office of the Waterfront and Civic Projects wrote in an email to 成人X站 Newsradio.
The spokesperson also later confirmed for 成人X站 Newsradio that Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell鈥檚 office was involved in the decision.
鈥淭he Office of the Waterfront, in collaboration with the mayor鈥檚 office, made the decision to delay the removal of the trees,鈥 the spokesperson wrote. 鈥淲e are going to be meeting with a handful of stakeholders in the next couple of days to listen further to their comments prior to advancing our work.鈥
Save the Market Entrance, the community group advocating for preservation of the trees 鈥 which asked Mayor Harrell for a “stay of execution” 鈥 also commented on the Tuesday announcement.
鈥淲e are so grateful to Mayor Bruce Harrell for looking carefully at what can be done,鈥 said Save The Market Entrance president Ruth Danner when reached by phone by 成人X站 Newsradio Tuesday afternoon. 鈥淎nd we appreciate Councilmember Lewis for getting involved.鈥澛
This is a developing story.
Original
If a cherry tree falls along Pike Street 鈥 or if a total of eight of them fall 鈥 will anybody hear?
As reported聽by David Kroman in a few days ago, a linear grove of cherry trees more than four decades old in downtown Seattle is slated to be cut down to make way for bike lanes and wider sidewalks.
The Pike Street cherry trees were planted in 1980, and they blossom briefly every year, just like the beloved trees on the UW campus and in so many yards and parking strips around the city. There were originally 12 or 13 trees in total, planted on each side of Pike Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Over the decades, four or five have died or been damaged and later removed.
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That block is slated to get wider sidewalks and a bike lane in each direction as part of a project to better connect downtown and Capitol Hill. This means the trees have been marked for removal 鈥 and that removal could be happening as early as Monday morning.
鈥淐onstruction on this block will begin on March 6, and the tree removal [will] likely be one of the early steps in construction,鈥 according to an email from Lauren Stensland, a consultant to , a City of Seattle project working to redevelop the waterfront and adjacent areas of downtown Seattle.
There was a public process that weighed, among other things, the future of the urban grove, Stensland wrote, but the cherry trees did not make the cut for being kept and nurtured along what many consider to be one of the most picturesque blocks in downtown Seattle.
鈥淪DOT [Seattle Department of Transportation] has involved the community on the development of the new streetscape on this block,鈥 Stensland wrote. 鈥淭here was a desire for trees with a longer lifespan that will eventually arch over the street below and frame sightlines to the Pike Place Market sign and clock and not block the existing pedestrian lighting.鈥
And that鈥檚 a shame, said Ruth Danner, president of a non-profit group called .
鈥淭hose trees line the entrance to Pike Place Market,鈥 Danner told 成人X站 Newsradio early Monday morning. 鈥淲hen you go from the city into Pike Place Market, you know that you are going someplace special and different, [and] all of First Avenue there by Pike Street is a unique step into the past.
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鈥淚’ve lived in that neighborhood,鈥 Danner continued. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a place for people to come together and get a breath of fresh air and a change from the city pace.鈥
Danner said volunteers from her group visited Pike Street on Sunday and tied yellow ribbons on the eight remaining cherry trees 鈥 ribbons made from yellow and black caution tape.
Save The Market Entrance said that, counter to what some have claimed, the cherry trees are not diseased and don鈥檛 need to be removed. Danner said that with proper care 鈥 which is actually the responsibility of the adjacent property owners, not of the city 鈥 the cherry trees could live for 80 years or more, according to author and Seattle tree expert Arthur Lee Jacobson. Danner also said plans are to replace the cherry trees with elms, which she said will require even more maintenance and watering than the trees currently along Pike Street.
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Danner also said she knows of no plans to transplant or otherwise save the trees for relocating elsewhere, even though Daniel Beekman of recently reported a net loss of 255 acres of tree canopy in Seattle in the five years ending in 2021.
Save The Market Entrance is not interested in pursuing a legal strategy, but Danner said the Pike Street cherry trees mean a lot to countless people who won鈥檛 fully realize what鈥檚 been lost until the trees are gone for good, and springtime arrives downtown without the trees and their blossoms.
As long as the trees are still standing, Danner said her group won鈥檛 give up.
鈥淲hat we really want is for Mayor Harrell to issue a 鈥榮tay of execution,鈥欌 Danner said, 鈥渟o that we can find alternatives 鈥 whether the trees can remain there or be re-gifted to a low-income neighborhood that would cherish them and honor them.
鈥淲e just need more time,鈥 she said.
You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News, read more from him鈥here, and subscribe to The Resident Historian Podcast聽here. If you have a story idea or a question about Northwest history, please email Feliks鈥here.