HomeMy WebLinkAboutReg 2014-06-02 Item 6D.4 - Resolution - Southcenter Subarea PlanCity of
1
Washington
Resolution No.
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF TUKWILA, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING
THE SOUTHCENTER SUBAREA PLAN.
Attachment D
WHEREAS, the City adopted a new Comprehensive Plan in 1995 to implement the
goals and policies of the Growth Management Act (GMA) of 1990 and the King County
Countywide Planning Policies; and
WHEREAS, the Tukwila Urban Center at Southcenter was designated as one of
the region's urban centers in 1995; and
WHEREAS, per RCW 36.70A.130 the Growth Management Act requires the City of
Tukwila to review and, if needed, revise its Comprehensive Plan and development
regulations by June 30, 2015 to ensure that the Comprehensive Plan and the
development regulations are in compliance with the requirements of the GMA; and
WHEREAS, Tukwila's Comprehensive Plan calls for the Southcenter area to
develop as a high - density, regionally- oriented, mixed -use center; and
WHEREAS, the vision for Southcenter is consistent with Puget Sound Regional
Council's Vision 2040, the adopted regional growth strategy, which provides guidance
to cities for accommodating future growth and preserving resources and rural lands;
and
WHEREAS, under this strategy the majority of the region's employment and
housing growth is targeted to occur in compact, sustainable communities where
housing and jobs are located; and
WHEREAS, Tukwila began a planning process in 2002 to develop a Subarea Plan
and regulations to further support this vision and to retain the urban center's economic
strength in the face of regional competition; and
WHEREAS, Tukwila has held a series of public workshops, open houses, focus
groups and public hearings to gather community input and guidance; and
WHEREAS, notice of the planning effort was provided via direct mailings, postings
on the City website, emails to the broadcast email group, and articles in "The Hazelnut"
and `Tukwila Reporter;" and
W: \Word Processing \Resolutions \Southcenter Subarea Plan adopted 5 -27 -14
NG:bjs
Page 1 of 2
397
WHEREAS, the Southcenter Subarea Plan and its implementing regulations,
codified in Tukwila Municipal Code Chapter 18.28, have evolved during this public
process to reflect the community's vision and priorities as well as the regional goals;
and
WHEREAS, the Planning Commission held a properly noticed public hearing on
August 23, 2012 and after deliberations forwarded their recommended changes for the
Southcenter Subarea Plan to the City Council; and
WHEREAS, on April 4, 2014, the City of Tukwila issued a supplement to the
Tukwila Comprehensive Plan Environmental Impact Statement (previously issued
October 9, 1995), which analyzed the potential impact of various Comprehensive Plan
Amendments pursuant to the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) (Chapter 197 -11
WAC) and the Tukwila Municipal Code, Title 21; and
WHEREAS, notice was provided to the Washington State Department of
Commerce pursuant to RCW 36.70A.106; and
WHEREAS, the City Council held a properly noticed public hearing on April 14,
2014; and
WHEREAS, the City Council reviewed the legislative record, written and verbal
testimony and approved revisions to the Southcenter Subarea Plan to address issues
raised by interested parties, individual Councilmembers, and staff;
NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TUKWILA,
WASHINGTON, HEREBY RESOLVES AS FOLLOWS:
The City Council approves adoption of the Southcenter Subarea Plan, hereby
incorporated by reference as "Exhibit A."
PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TUKWILA, WASHINGTON,
at a Regular Meeting thereof this day of , 2014.
ATTEST /AUTHENTICATED:
Christy O'Flaherty, MMC, City Clerk De'Sean Quinn, Council President
APPROVED AS TO FORM BY:
Filed with the City Clerk:
Passed by the City Council:
Resolution Number:
Shelley M. Kerslake, City Attorney
Attachment: Exhibit A, Southcenter Subarea Plan
W: \Word Processing \Resolutions \Southcenter Subarea Plan adopted 5 -27 -14
NG:bjs
398
Page 2 of 2
Exhibit A
City of Tukwila
Southcenter Subarea
Plan
Final Council Draft
05/12/2014
399
400
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Contents
1.1. Orientation 1
1.2. Community intent 4
1.3. Starting Point: Existing Conditions summary 5
1.4. The VISION for Southcenter 11
1.5. Redevelopment Strategy 30
1.6. Reccommended City actions 37
1.7. Appendix A: existing conditions 55
1.1. ORIENTATION
This Subarea Plan is both an implementation and a policy document, in that it is intended as a
strategy for change and as regulatory policy to guide and govern future development within
Tukwila's urban center, Southcenter. This Subarea Plan establishes a planning and design
framework to further the vitality, functionality, and sustainability of the Southcenter area in
accordance with market forces and the community's vision for its primary commercial district.
Sections 1.2 through 1.4 of the Plan describe the community's aspirations for Southcenter and the
physical outcomes that the Plan is intended to orchestrate as new investment creates change.
Section 1.5 outlines the strategies by which the community intends to support and promote the
realization of the vision of the future Southcenter. Section 1.6 identifies a preliminary set of
recommended actions and investments that the City can take to accelerate the redevelopment
strategies. Appendix A contains a detailed snapshot of existing conditions in the urban center at the
time the Plan was drafted. Finally, The Southcenter Subarea Plan is intended to provide guidance
for actions not specifically covered by the development regulations contained in TMC Chapter
18.28 Tukwila Urban Center District.
Planning Principles for Great Cities; Building Blocks for Redeveloping Southcenter
This plan recognizes a set of integrated principles that have produced the best places and cities
throughout the world. As part of this Plan, these principles are translated into objectives and short
term strategies directing reinvestment and new development that successfully transition
Southcenter from a suburban to a more urban center. The planning principles for great cities are as
follows:
• Make great streets. Street design dictates the form of individual blocks and buildings that
enclose each streetscape. "Complete streets" provide for pedestrian comfort, bicycle safety and
automobile movement according to their location and necessary function in the overall area.
1 Adapted from the Santa Ana Renaissance Specific Plan, 2007
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx 1
5/12/2014
401
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Streets of various types are designed to further improve pedestrian crossing safety and balance
automotive speed with the needs of non - motorized transportation. Where appropriate, streets
have on- street parking in order to provide a buffer between the moving traffic and the
pedestrian, thus diminishing perceived and actual danger. Further, in key commercial
environments, on- street parking plays a critical role in the daily and Tong -term viability of
businesses.
• Break up the super blocks. The most effective redevelopments will be those that retrofit the
streets, blocks and lots to provide a compact, connected, walkable mix of uses and housing
types. Retrofitting the underlying layout of the streets and blocks transitions auto oriented
suburban patterns and behaviors into more sustainable ones. A fine network of interconnected
streets, rather than super blocks and limited number of roadways, encourages pedestrian
movement. Such a network also provides multiple routes that diffuse traffic, increasing the
options for travel to various destinations, improving safety response time and creating
alternatives for emergency access.
• Create a memorable built environment. The buildings, blocks and streets of an area are
interdependent and contribute to an overall pattern of unique and related places. Each one
contains in part the ingredients of all the others. Buildings of a particular quality can define the
block that contains them and the street that surrounds them. Design is the matrix that helps
either to create or destroy the quality and character of a place. Buildings are the smallest
increment of growth. A variety of architectural types, and their relationship to each other,
largely determines the character of a place as they define the streets and open spaces they
face.
• Make great public spaces. Urban areas can be much more than a place to eat, work and spend.
Part of what makes a place more valuable and beloved are the public spaces. Well-designed
public spaces enhance community identity and foster civic pride. Public spaces are the visual
punctuations along the greater public realm of streets that give identity to the various districts
in the area. This will contribute to a unique character, and distinguish it from other regional
centers and commercial areas.
• Live near transit and where you work, shop & play. Adding more residential density in an
urban center is a way to support goods and services and a means to enhance a sense of
community. The opportunity to live above stores and businesses and in close proximity to
transit access points encourages residents, shoppers and employees to drive their cars Tess and
increases their ability to take advantage of the proximity of uses, services, transportation
options, parks and public places provided in such an environment. This increases an area's
appeal while providing for a 24/7 rhythm of uses.
• Get the mix of uses right. A compact mix of transit - supportive land uses such as offices and
housing within walking distance of transit will help generate ridership, reduce the need for
parking, and help reduce the number of automobile trips.
• Get the retail right. Retailers are encouraged to facilitate pedestrian storefront shopping. A
successful pedestrian oriented retail core is typically located around a more urban pattern of
streets accommodating cars and on- street parking. Off- street parking is ideally located in a
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 2 5/12/2014
402
Southcenter Subarea Plan
combination of shared and park -once Tots and structures with buildings to the back of
sidewalks.
• Get the parking right. The compactness, mixed use nature and walkability of an urban area
entices customers to park just once and complete tasks on foot. This reduces the average trips
and parking in a traditional setting by half over strip retail. The transformation of drivers into
walkers is the immediate generator of pedestrian life: crowds of people that animate public life
in the streets and generate the patrons of street - friendly retail businesses. It is this scene that
provides energy and attraction to sustain a thriving environment.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 3 5/12/2014
403
Southcenter Subarea Plan
1.2. COMMUNITY INTENT
The Southcenter area serves many functions for the citizens of Tukwila. It is the city's primary
commercial hub, drawing customers from within the community and all over the Puget Sound
region. It is a workplace center, providing jobs to residents and nearby communities. It is a major
contributor, through property and sales tax, to local government and the services it provides to all
citizens.
It is the intention of the Tukwila community and the purpose of this Plan to bolster, extend and
build upon these valuable functions and to realign the Plan Area as needed with new forces of
change and market demand. More specifically, it is the community's intention to:
1. Bolster the Southcenter area's market position as the primary regional shopping and
entertainment center for South King County.
2. Establish a planning framework that insures that each increment of new investment adds to the
long term sustainability of Southcenter as a part of the city and region.
3. Encourage the eventual redevelopment of underutilized properties and oversized parking lots
into a pattern that connects the project areas' key anchors (such as Westfield Mall) and
overlooked amenities (such as Tukwila Pond and the Green River) to each other and to new
infill commercial, residential and public spaces.
4. Substantially enhance the walkability of the northern portion of the Southcenter area,
augmenting the exclusively auto - oriented environment with pedestrian amenities, transit, and
bicycle facilities.
5. Stimulate pioneering residential and office development in walking distance of the Southcenter
(bus) Transit Center and the Tukwila Longacres Sounder commuter rail /Amtrak Station, and
ensure it is configured to provide safe and comfortable pedestrian routes to and from the
stations and other Southcenter destinations. In the area surrounding the Sounder commuter
rail /Amtrak Station, consider a special opportunity area that could develop at even greater
intensities with a wider variety of uses, such as regional serving entertainment and retail.
6. Enhance the convenience, visibility, accessibility, and visual character of the transit
infrastructure in Southcenter, and integrate it with the pattern of development in the urban
center.
7. Realign policies conditioning development in Southcenter with contemporary consumer and
investor preferences, resulting in buildings and spaces that contribute to an identifiable sense
of place and attract new types and forms of development envisioned by the community.
8. "Unearth" Tukwila Pond and the portion of the Green River that passes through Southcenter,
restoring their natural health and beauty, and featuring them prominently as amenities that
enhance the identity and drawing power of Southcenter.
9. Enhance the visual character of Southcenter to reflect the special landscape and architectural
heritage of the Pacific Northwest region.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 4 5/12/2014
404
� n+� �n� Plan
10' Manage expected growth in a sustainable way, ensuring that the regional benefits of growth
management do not come at the expense of livability, by focusing growth and density in
environmentally suitable areas and adequately servicing it with improved infrastructure,
including non-motorized facilities, transit and enhanced access to parks and natural features.
11. a lue to enhance the drivability of and access to the Com ,rcial Corridor.
1.3. STARTING POINT: EXISTING CONDITIONS SUMMARY
The condition ofthe Plan Area at the time of the Southcenter Plan's drafting is detailed in Appendix
A, documenting and describing the physical and structural conditions of the area that have
informed the recommendations of the PIan. As change occurs, the community intends to measure
those changes to monitor the Plan's success and the degree to which it remains sufficiently current.
A summary of conditions, challenges and opportunities is provided below:
Land Use
� An economicafly successfui regional commercial, shopping
and employment center
� Major contributor to City revenues & locai services
through sales & property taxes
• Suburban pattern of development
• Very Iittle vacant deveiopabie land
• Low density development surrounded by parking points
towards redevelopment opportunities
• No residential or mixed use development — need more
amenities to attract
• Predominantly single-story buildings
• New investment will increasingly entail redeveiopment
of buildings and sfte
North
• Auto-oriented commercial, with retail, office, and lodging
• Large regional shopping Mali surrounded by parking and
rings of associated smaller scale, Iow-rise, surface-parked
commercial buildings.
Regional shopping & employment oen&er
pei
ati
Low density development sunnundedbv
parking provides opportunities for
redevelopment
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 5 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
South & West
• Primarily warehouse and distribution center serving
the mall ®ion
* Some outlets (especialiy furniture), along with some
low-rise office.
Some "big box" retail & super centers along
Southcenter Parkway.
Zoning
• Current zoning is the same for the entire planning area —
�
Nearly every kind of retail, entertainment and restaurant
use permitted
• Commercial services, warehouse & light industrial uses
permitted.
*
Residential uses permitted within 500' of a water body.
406
Primarily warehouse, industrial & big box retail
uses in the southern part of urban center
Supercenter retail along Southcenter Pkw
Existing building pattern
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Transportation & Circulation
• Located at the intersection of 2 major freeways (1-5 &1-405)
• Few access points into Southcenter area
• Limited street network, especially east/west routes
• Street network designed solely for automobile traffic
• Oversized blocks limit internal circulation
• r0e ridership atnew/y expanded bus transit station on Andover Park West
Non'motohzedCirculation
liVAMegg
w Tukwila Trans it Cep fr.4cilitie,5
• The regional Interurban & Green River Trails serve as a pedestrian/bicycle spine through Southcenter
• Biock size too large to walk
m
Lacking bicycle infrastructure/routes on streets
• Long distances between destinations
• Narrow, unprotected sidewalks along highly
trafficked & higher speed corridors
• lnconvenient pedestrian ccess to Sounder
commuter rail station from Southcenter area
• Difficult to find and access parks, trails & open
spaces
m
Little effort made to create site layouts oriented
to pedestrians
• Access (driveways) management needed in key
pedestrian oriented areas
Lacking sidewalks & pedestrian amenities
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 7 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Streetscape
• Site layouts and streetscapes primarily oriented
to needs of motorists
Overall impression is of Iarge, simple buildings
fronted by asphalt
Lacking individual street identity — easy to get
lost
All streets look the same & are orie ted to need of
motorists
Architectural & Landscape Character
• Buildings separated from street by large parking lots, with entrances difficult to find
• Buildings generaily reflective of auto-oriented development
~
Construction before design review implemented (1982):
o
Unarticulated buildings with Iittle ornamentation or design
o
Simply massed buildings with a box-like appearance
m
Buildings don't reflect any design character indigenous to City or region
• Since 1982:
o Well designed buildings are Iost in the overall mix
o Too few well designed buildings to create a visible theme or provide district identity
• No landmarks
Examples of Desired Urban Form
�MWomone
New parki gstructumc—Mo8
1044,01, NAt!it,
5ubareaP|an_[ounci|Finaidocx 8
408
Westfieid Mali Redevelopment
Southcenter Subarea Plan
.}a r .
Claim Jumper — new construction built to the
Corner of Southcenter Pkwy and 180th Street
Acme Bowl — redevelopment of warehouse
405 Baker Blvd. — redevelopment of warehouse Fatigue Technology — redevelopment of warehouse
with public frontage improvements
Warehouse redevelopment on S.180th St
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx 9
Pad building on Westfield Site built to the back of
sidewalk on Strander
5/12/2014
409
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Southcenter Square Shopping Center — built to the back of sidewalk with
plaza spaces and clearly delineated pedestrian paths, constructed two new
half streets
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 10 5/12/2014
410
Southcenter S
n`
bareaTl8y
1,4~ THE VISION FOR SOUTHCENTER
The Southcenter area comprises nf approximately Z5O individual privately he/dpnope
properties, s,
and
nd
over v
e
r
8 miles of public rights-of-way that are under the ownership and control of the City. The
overarching purpose of the Subarea PIan is to orchestrate individual public and private investments
to produce greater value than any separate p jectcou|dpractica|lyachievebyprovidinga
common vision that all investors can rely upon, contribute to, and derive value from. This section
describes the common purpose to which all actions and investments shall be directed: the
realization of a vision of the future that is sufficiently specific to provide a common purpose, yet
loose enough to respond to opportunities and changes in the marketplace that will inevitably arise.
1) District Structure — From Suburban Commercial Area to Urban Center
The forces of market demand and land availability that produced the current characteristics of
Southcenter's built environment have evolved significantly in new directions. The primary driving
forces conditioning the form of new investment in the Plan Area will be:
1) The shopping industry's shift away from internally focused shopping centers in favor of
more open air and amenity-driven formats;
2) Rising gas prices and increasing regional commitment to transit;
3) A rapidly growing demand for walkable urban environments for living, working, and
shopping; and
4) The rising economic importance and value of property in the Southcenter area as a result of
the expansion of the regional mall and the disappearance of easily developed property in
the area.
The implementation of this Plan is intended to enable Southcenter to benefit from these primary
conditioning forces. Responding to these forces of change, the community envisions guiding
development and change to create differentiated areas where the character, forms, types of uses
and activities benefit, complement and support each other (See Figure 1.1. Evolution of E+wi-s4K+H(*i
District Structure and Figure 1.2. E+4*ne4-District KapS#**E=1*+e\.
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
To SeaTac
Airpo
To Seattle
To Renton
•
•LNAO IOU
Sounder
Transit
Station
To Seattle
00, rArlq
To Tacoma
To Tacoma
Figure 1.1.
Evolution of
P-7446464 District
Structure
Southcenter encompasses
a relatively large area
containing a wide variety
of uses. To create a more
coherent urban form and
enhance the Center's
long-term competitive
edge within the region,
the City intends to guide
development and change
to create distinct areas
where the character,
forms, types of uses and
activities benefit,
complement, and support
each other. (City of
Tukwila Comprehensive
Plan)
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 12 5/12/2014
412
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Regional Center
The area in the vicinity of Westfield
Southcenter Mali, wfth easy access to
the new bus Transit Center, will
continue to infill and intensify to a more
walkable and compact form of
development extending southward
toward Strander Boulevard, ultimately
extending to the edge ofTukwila Pond
and eastward across Andover Park
West.
Transit Oriented Development (TOD)
Neighborhood
In response to the region's enhanced
commitment to transit service, a new
Transit Oriented Development
Neighborhood will extend from the
upgraded bus transit center on Andover
Park West, eastward towards the
Sounder commuter rail station. Public
investments that will serve as catalysts
for the redevelopment of this area
include a new pedestrian bridge over
the Green River and frontage
improvements along Baker Boulevard.
Figure 1.2.
Map
Pond Distric
City improvements to public frontage, water quality and pond amenities will help instigate the
"unearthing" of Tukwila Pond Park not only as a public amenity, but as an "amenity anchor" for the
southern edge of the Regional Center and as the center of a new mixed use Pond District.
Workplace
The large southern portion of the Plan Area will continue to provide a wide range of distribution,
warehousing, light industrial, "big box" retail, and furniture outlets, with incremental infill by office
and other complementary commercial uses.
Commercial Corridor
Southcenter Parkway will continue to feature auto-oriented retail and services in a manner similar
to the existing patterns of development in that area. Results of City research into evolving,
successful commercial corridors elsewhere will be applied to ensure the continuing success of the
Southcenter Commercial [orhdot%
SubareaP|an_[ounci|Finaidocx 13
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
The particular characteristics envisioned for each of these districts are provided below:
The Regional Center
The Regional Center portion of this Pian is the primary shopping and entertainment destination for
South King County, and the centerpiece of the Southcenter area. It occupies the highly visible and
accessible northwestern quadrant of Southcenter, which is nestled snugly up against the
intersection of interstate 405 and interstate 5. The Regional Center owes its success to and is
anchored by the recentiy expanded and refurbished Westfieid Southcenter Mali. The drawing
power of this retail powerhouse will continue to bring investment in retail and services oriented to
an expanding regionai trade. Just to the east, Acme Bowi, LA Fitness and i-FIy wiii serve as
complements to the Mall and strong attractors for new entertainment venues in the area. The new
Transit Center with service to the Sounder commuter rail and LINK light rail stations, iocai and
regionai bus routes, and bus rapid transit (BRT) 15 prominentiy iocated between the Mali and
existing entertainment venues.
As new investment continues to flow into the Plan Area, the community envisions the emergence
of an increasingly urban district that uses its progressively more valuable land with greater
efficiency, which can be comfortably explored not only by automobiie but also on foot or bicycle.
The District will likely begin changing from the exclusively parking-lot-surrounded, auto-dominated
development to an increasingly walkable and amenity driven pattern reflecting contemporary
consumer and investor preferences. However, ensuring excellent access for ail modes of
transportation into the Regional Center will be key to its continued success.
Over time, public investments, when combined with market-driven infill, are intended to instigate
new development increasingly characterized by a pattern of walkable-scaled city blocks with key
street frontages lined with visible storefronts and active sidewalks (Photos 1, 2). Buildings may be
oriented to pubiic spaces and sidewaik areas with higher ieveis of amenity (Photo 3). Abundant
and convenient parking will be provided, but will no longer dominate the view from the road or the
sidewalk.
1. Smaller retail with visible storefronts and active sidewalks
SubareaP|an_[ound|Finaidocx 14
414
2. Anchor ret il with visible storefronts and active
sidewalks
Southcenter Subarea Plan
3. Example of buildings oriented to amenities
4. Envisioned mixed use retail/office development
As the RegonaI Center continues to grow in response to the growth of the region, the market
public investment, and escalating property values, the District may continue to intensify with upper
stories containing offices (Photo 4), homes (Photos 5) or hotel rooms. Over the long term, infill
development on the high-value property of the Mall will likely continue the transition from surface
parking to structured parking, and may be increasingly characterized by mid-rise or high-rise
building components built over the retail base. This process of increasing land use efficiency,
development intensity, synergy and mix, will be combined with public and private investments
increasing waikability and accessibility befitting a true regional center. The increased intensity and
vitality can continue the process of broadening the Mall's draw, expanding its "captive audience,"
adding customers, residents, employees and safety to the dynamic center of the region.
6ubareaP|an_Counci|Rnaidocx
5. Example of mixed use residential development
15
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
6. Mali's internal streets ets connecting towards
Tukwila Pond
7. Mall's internal streets connecting to Transit Center
In the long term, the Mall, the entertainment area, and the Southcenter Transit Center will
continue to be the armature for the ongoing escalation of value, activity and investment. The
access points and internal streets of the regional shopping mall will likely be extended, developing
into bustling, high amenity spines that connect shopping anchors and shopfronts southward to the
north shore of Tukwila Pond (ultimately an "amenity anchor", Photo 6) and eastward toward
additional shops in the direction of Southcenter Transit Center (Photo 7).
The Pond District
Southcenter's greatest amenity Tukwiia Pond, which prior deveiopment has rendered virtuaily
invisible, will become the prized center of an entirely new part of Southcenter. Rather than turning
its back on the Pond in the manner of development that has occurred in the past, new
development will ultimately orient toward the pond with active doors, windows, and pubiic
walkways facing the water. Surrounding streets and development will provide not only views to the
water, but clear, legible and frequent connections to enhance public access to Tukwila Pond and its
surrounding park.
Degradation of water quality and natural environment that has occurred will be carefully reversed.
The natural setting and wildlife amenities will be protected, and proximity to and views of the Pond
will add substantial value and character to nearby real estate development.
The Urban Wa t
Along the northern edge of Tukwila Pond, development will take cues from its location adjacent to
the Mall and to the retail corridor of Strander Boulevard, resulting in a more urban environment
focused toward a paved waterfront esplanade-. Over the long-term, the Mall may grow toward the
Pond (Photo 8), making the northern shore function in part as an "amenity anchor".
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 16 5/12/2014
416
Southcenter Subarea Plan
,tleaSTMMININIVIEVESSEtidiaSEI"
8. Envisioned Mall to Tukwila Pond Connection
9. Envisioned waterfront espianade (Cariiion Point, WA)
The waterfront esplanade will ultimately run along the northern Pond shore, featuring restaurants
and entertainment, with storefronts spilling out onto the active pedestrian promenade along the
waterfront (Photos 9, 10). The upper stories of the Pond's north shore development will likely
feature homes, offices and/or hotel rooms (Photo 11) that benefit from the activities below, as well
as from enviable views and access to a loop trail around the Pond, making it one of Southcenter's
most coveted places to live, work, or visit.
10. Esplanade character & elements
11. Envisioned mixed use on Pond's north edge
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 17 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
The Natural Waterfront
The eastern, western, and southern edges of the pond will be characterized by a more natural park
environment, preserving habitat for pond wildlife. A "necklace" of pedestrian paths, floating
boardwalks and sidewalks will connect the edges of the pond. Tukwila Pond Park will provide
benches, overlooks, shade trees and informal landscaping. Buildings will be separated from the
pond by streets along the eastern and southern edges. Building heights will be lower along the
southern edge to insure plenty of sunlight for the Pond itself; buildings will also step down toward
the water to preserve views as well as a park-like character. Ground floors will range from office to
support services, retail, and lunch options for workers, to newer housing types like live-work on the
ground floor, with more private uses like office and residential above (Photos 12, 13, 14).
Envisioned mixed-use development facing south end of Tukwila Pond
12.
''"ItgAINOR,1",
13.
igL
14.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 18 5/12/2014
418
Southcenter Subarea Plan
The Transit Oriented Development (TOD) Neighborhood
Southcenter will continue to evolve as the region continues to embrace smart growth and livable
communities strategies, and deepens its commitment to transit. The northeastern quadrant of
Southcenter will benefit from its enviable location between the Regional Center,, Southcenter
Transit Center and the Tukwila ation, and from the potential amenity value of the
segment of the Green River that runs through the district.
The community will leverage the rail station and bus transit center to bring new investment to the
previously underutilized properties within walking distance of these faciiities. The emerging new
TOD neighborhood district will eventually be increasingly characterized by a compact and vibrant
mix of housing, office, lodging and supportive retail and service uses. Local workers, commuters,
shoppers, and residents will benefit from the easy access and convenience and to an increasingly
wide variety of transit offerings accessible in the urban center.
Parking wili be accommodated by a combination of off- and on-street parking spaces/iots. Compact
and coordinated mixed-use development will provide opportunities for shared parking facilities.
Such faciiities can be shared betvveenpublicBndpriV@teuses — and between different private uses,
As the area redevelops and intensifies, and as the vaiue of land increases, off-street parking may
begin to transition into well-designed parking structures, such as those constructed by the Mali.
A growing network of streets, public spaces and pedestrian connections will provide a fine-grained
scale to the district, and connect it more readily to adjacent areas. A new pedestrian bridge across
the Green River will provide a more direct connection between the Tukwila Sstation and
the rest of Southcenter, and a new east-west pedestrian-oriented corridor along the Baker
Boulevard alignment will complete the connection between the Regional Center and the Tukwila
be*�.gef*,5tation.
The overall structure of the TOD Neighborhood will be characterized by higher development
intensities and buiiding heights close to the Tukwila `�-S Station, lower-rise buiidings along
the river, increasing again to higher deveiopment intensities and heights where the district overlaps
with the edges of the Regionai Center.
Between the Mall and the River, changes will include a more urban mix of compatible uses
spanning retail, high density residential, live-work, office and lodging (Photos 15, 16, 17, 18, 19).
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 19 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Examples of TOD Neighborhood Development
15. Retail/residential uses
1
1,111401!`
17. Residential
16. Live/work
8.Office
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx
420
19. Mixed use retail/office
20
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Examples of active building frontages on pedestrian scaled blocks
���
=
4.0.000/09*��
20.
21.
.11"'"7:T��
22.
The neighborhood's small, pedestrian-scaled blocks will eventually be lined with a mix of uses along
active building frontages (Photos 20, 21, 22) to provide a pleasant pedestrian realm throughout the
district, particularly along primary streets leading to the Tukwila Station. New
development will also contribute to the construction of new public open spaces within the district.
(Photo 23). Also, if City efforts to relocate or remove the Union Pacific Railroad tracks are
successful the area north of the Sounder Station and east of \AL Valley Highway would open up for
redevelopment. There could be a possibility ofassembling properties in the area and crcadng,a
special q[_portunity district with mixed use development (such as housing, office, and regional
ser ' eta(| and entertainment)atgreater intensities than currently proposed
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 21 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
23. New public spaces within the TOD Neighborhood
. .��
24. Envisioned townhomes oriented towards the Green River
Properties lining the segment of the Green River that cuts through the TOD Neighborhood will
want to take full advantage of their unique setting. New uses, including townhomes (Photo 24),
mid-rise housing, offices, and hotels may be oriented toward the river.
East of the river, between West Valley Highway and the railroad tracks, many redevelopment
obstacles are present at the time of PIan adoption. An existing rail spur from the Union Pacific
Railroad renders much of the land in this neighborhood un-developable. An overhead high tension
power line crosses the area. Several underground and above-ground utilities present severe
constraints to subterranean construction, which impacts the amount and intensity of possible
deve|opnnent,_FinaUy, the BNSF and UP rail lines limit access to a significant portion of the land in
the developable area between the tracks. However, a commitment by Sound Transit to support
transit oriented development on the existing station site could kick of a renaissance in the
surrounding area with high-density lofts (Photo 25, 26), mid-rise residential (Photo 27), and offices
oriented towards the station (Photo 28).
25. Envisioned high-density lofts near Sounder/Amtrak Station
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx
422
22
26. Envisioned high-density Iofts
Southcenter Subarea Plan
27. Envisioned mid-rise residential near Sounder/Amtak Station
28. Envisioned TOD Office Development
'
,
'
.'1',;,(.4ANStraaleSilakitaiff
4'11441
0
29. Commercial Corridor retail "power centers"
Commercial Corridor
To insure that Southcenter provides
op
portunitiesforthefuUrangeofshoppingindustry
development types, Southcenter Parkway will continue to serve asSouthcente/scommercial
strip, t
ri
p
,
providing sites for auto-oriented retail and services, including large-scale "power centers" and "big
box" retail, single tenant uses, and uses requiring drive-up and drive-in facilities (Photo 29). As new
development occurs, new improvements will provide modest pedestrian amenities, as well as
beautification with indigenous landscaping. The City will continue to research successful
commercial corridors eisewhere and apply the results of this research to ensure the continued
The Workplace
Much of the southern portion of the Plan Area has been and will continue to be devoted to light
industrial, warehousing and distribution uses (Photo 30), many having located there for proximity
to the state's largest super-regional shopping mall, easy access to highways, its central location in
Puget Sound, iow rent, and available space. The Workplace District will aiso continue to grow its
retail niche of larger-scale goods and to deepen its wide range of furniture outlets (Photo 31).
Higher intensity workplaces like /ow-rise office will bring new workers to the area.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 23 5/12/2014
ct.
Southcenter Subarea T»�
�C�D`'^C�D��7 �D"@��@ ^ ^aD
Underutilized properties along the Green River may take advantage of their unique location along
the water and Green River Trail, and redevelop with mid-rise housing adjacent to this amenity.
"
$1, dilitl‘hrillrirV,,,,,,IPAR
30. Existing light industrial/warehouse
^ • -�,��
__
31. Existing furniture outlet
2) Street Network — From Superblocks to A Fine-Grained Pattern of Streets and
Blocks
The evolution of the suburban commercial center into an urban center will be facilitated by the
maturation of its street and biock structure. As development proceeds, policies for new
investment will insure the emergence of an increasingly fine-grained network of new
interconnected streets and smaller blocks to accommodate by the intensification of the
Southcenter area (See Figures 1.3). New development may need to provide new street connections
to add the capacity that will accommodate the increase in internal district trips, in lieu of widening
the larger through-district arterials. New streets will relieve the pressure on limited arterial
network now handling all the vehicular circulation, by increasing access to development while
distributing the traffic in Southcenter across a number of routes.
In the northern Southcenter area — the Regional Center, TOD Neighborhood and Pond District -
smaller block sizes with compact, mixed use development will make walking and bicycling a much
more viable alternative. Primary corridors, such as Andover Park West, will emerge as the "front
door" areas of the districts. The northern stretches of Andover Park East and Baker Boulevard,
serving more mixed use types of development, including housing, will undergo a "road diet" to
provide on-street parking and bike lanes, as well as auto travel lanes. A traffic impact analysis
would be required to determine if the "road diet" would create (or exacerbate) roadway
congestion or level of service problems elsewhere in the roadway system prior to making changes.
In the Workplace District, new east/west streets perpendicular to the major arterials will
accommodate truck bay access and service functions.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 24 5/12/2014
424
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Figure 1.3 Southcenter Block Patterns
Strander Boulevard will continue to be the most well-traveled east-west thoroughfare and the
gateway for many visitors to the Regional Center, Pond District and TOD Neighborhood.
Ultimately, Strander Boulevard will be extended eastward to provide a new through street to
Renton. This extension will pass underneath the railroad lines and provide direct access to the
Tukvvi|a atiVn from both Tukwila and Renton. Of the several north-south
arterials, Andover Park West provides the most direct connection to and through the Regional
Center, the new Pond District, and the new Southcenterk Transit Center.
3) Transit: Integrated with Urban Center Development
As the region continues to grow gas prices increase, and the demand surges for increasingly
compact, walkable and mixed use formats, a wide range of mobility options, especially rail transit,
will become critical components for economic success, livability and sustainability. These trends
will favor the areas of Southcenter within walking distance of the- Tukwila
*Station and Southcenter Transit Center, which can be expected to capture an increasing share of
regional demand for housing and office development.
In order to realize the full potential of these transit facilities, existing barriers to visibility, access
and convenience will be removed. Development within waiking distance of transit stations will
provide much enhanced connectivity to and from transit facilities as they contribute to
improvements that incrementally add to the network of walkable, safe, and complete street
environments — and in turn, the new transit oriented development will promote system ridership.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 25 5/12/2014
� "�� Subarea 7»l
�()uu�C�O��� °Dufl��� � ^@D
Transit will serve as a backbone for new development throughout Southcenter, and make the most
of its potential to instigate surrounding redevelopment. The most visible, usable example of this
vviUbeanevv"pedestrianspine°connectingSouthcenter'stnansitcenters.TheSouthcenterTransit
Center located at the edge of the Mall property will be seamlessly connected to the Tukwila
commuter rail station along a street designed for walking and biking, making the stations
the focal points of the area's circulation network (Figure 1.4). These two transit anchors will also be
linked via bus routes and ultimately -will decrease the need for a private vehicle in the District.
o
WO
�
*tip. rgqvA
Sounder
Transit
Station
Figure 1.4 Strengthen pedestrian connections between activity centers and transit
The Tukwila ation will be designed tobe attractive, accessible and
interconnected to the workings of the Southcenter as a whole. The station includes a
new plaza, with adjacent multi-modal facilities such as a bus terminal, "kiss-ride" drop off, and a
park-and-ride lot+af-g,afaf��. In addition, the overall network of transit in Southcenter will be
improved, including more frequent bus service and better links between bus, light rail and train
service.
Finaily, the Southcenter bus transit center w4#is be i improved and expandedto provide a
transfer poin that is well-served by and integrated with its surroundings. New
pedestrian paths and public sidewalks w-i-14-lead pedestrians from surrounding areas to the
Southcenter Transit Center. The most heavily used route, from the Transit Center to the Mall, has
already been improved with a covered walkway leading directly to a Mall entrance (Photo 32).
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 26 5/12/2014
426
Southcenter Subarea Plan
32. Mall to bus transit center pedestrian connection
4) Natural and Recreational Amenities — Integrated with the Emerging Urban Center
The emerging "public realm" of Southcenter will be increasingly distinguished by not only new
active urban streets and sidewalks, but by open spaces, plazas, and parks that will be connected to
the interurban and Green River trails, and Tukwila Pond and Christensen Parks. This system of
interconnected spaces will provide access to a range of recreational experiences, provide gathering
places, serve as amenities to attract the types of development envisioned by the community,
especially housing, provide locations for public art, and enhance Southcenter's livability.
Rather than turning its back on the natural assets of the Plan Area, new public and private
investment will "unearth" Tukwila Pond, Minkler Pond and the Green River and feature them as
precious amenities to be integrated with the development of the emerging urban center (Photos
33, 34 and Figure 1.5). New development adjacent to the ponds and river will likely feature
buildings oriented toward the water, and contribute frontage improvements that add to the appeal
and public accessibility of the waterfronts. Key city investments in Tukwila Pond will focus on
improving water quality, preserving its natural habitat for wildlife and plants, and creating a "loop"
route around the Pond for people to stroll and jog.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 27 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Southcenter's hidden amenities
M
e
4 ,
PfiNfl
-4 40:PiP,R
.. -4.7..".. Ir'....
V. ....
34. The Green River
33. Tukwila Pond Park
To
I! . Wfrat.,,r7rw, fJoypwro) T.*
........ ' .'.
rw5 W
'w,wr t,t
101 •
.1
.442.44—
".4
csar.Wr
;111r,
wr
"
Figure 1.5 Integrate Tukwila Pond into emerging urban center development
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 28 5/12/2014
428
Southcenter Subarea Plan
5) Building, Site and Infrastructure Design — Create a great space.
The design quality of buildings, sites, streets and utilities contributes greatly to a community's
identity and sense of place. These elements will be designed to support the overall vision for a
high-quality civic identity.
New and renovated buildings will be embody architectural characteristics that maintain the desired
human scale, rhythm and urban character appropriate for Southcenter, with the goal of building on
the best efforts of previous development and allowing for and encouraging creativity on the part of
developers and designers. No specific architectural or Iandscape style is mandated. However, a
characteristic style that features a mix of contemporary and Northwest-inspired elements will be
recognizable. This includes the use of exposed natural materials and building elements that
respond to the area's climate (Photo 35).
35. Northwes inspired architectural elements
rw
Nirdo
���
VI
36. Pedestrin facilities desgried to provide a safe path
from street to front door through parking areas
There will be a good deal of flexibility regarding how individual property owners develop their
properties. The City's development regulations and design guidelines will ensure that a site's
layout, including buildings, parking, landscaping and other features, achieves the City's vision, while
allowing the freedom for innovative thinking and adaptation to emerging opportunities.
Redeve|opnnentofthcbrge"nnegob|ocks"vviUresu|tininterna|strectsthatsinnu|ateanurban
street grid and add to the overall street grid network, useable pedestrian spaces, and appropriately
sized, located and designed parking areas. Additionally, within a mega block site where commercial
bui|dinOsrnaybeseparatedfrornthepub|icright-of'vvay,redeve|oprnentvviUachieveaninnproved
pedestrian-friendly environment with links to the street and surrounding uses (Photo 36).
Streets will be designed to support the uses they serve. Along shopping streets, on-street parking,
widened sidewalks and pedestrian amenities like streetlights, benches and seating, and special
paving will support street-fronting retail (Photos 37, 38). In neighborhood areas, narrower streets
with pleasant, tree-lined sidewalks will provide the right environment for residences. In addition,
the private development that lines these streets will feature building frontages that match the
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 29 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
street type, with appropriate orientation, setbacks and entrances, and ensure that non-active
frontages, like parking lots, are located in the right places.
Examples of streets designed to support walking, shopping and auto
00, 07.2011
37. Baker Boulevard
1.5. REDEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
38.
To orchestrate growth and change in Southcenter that is in keeping with the community's vision
and redevelopment objectives, the City intends to promote and guide new investment by
intertwining regulatory control with the strategic investment of limited public resources.
The complexity of transforming a suburban pattern of development to a more urban one is such
thatchangecannotbeexpectedorrequiredtohappenaUatonce.More|ike/y,thern jority of the
development within Southcenter over the next 20 years will be as a result of market-driven
renovations and expansions rather than entirely new construction. It is not the intent of the City to
discourage such redevelopment, as new investment should enhance the image and appeal of the
area. Instead, the City's strategy is to move forward in phases, leading with public investments and
implementing a set of regulations that condition redevelopment and result in incremental changes
to the urban form that are in alignment with the community's long term vision. Over time, these
changes will serve as a framework, catalyst, and attractor for the types of development envisioned
for the urban center.
The redevelopment objectives that the City intends to pursue are identified below, followed by the
corresponding Phase 1 implementation measures for redevelopment and public investment. These
measures are important because they form the basis for the standards and guidelines contained in
the TMC Chapter 18.28 and the Southcenter Design Manual. Keep in mind implementation must
always remain sufficiently nimble to respond to unexpected opportunities and to make best use of
resources as they become available.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 30 5/12/2014
430
Southcenter Subarea Plan
As the area evolves, the City will revisit the vision, objectives and redevelopment strategies for the
urban center, and may choose to expand the breadth and geographic application of TMC Chapter
18.28 regulations through future updates.
Putting the Plan into Action:
FUTURE INVESTMENT
Objective 1: Promote investment in the full range of retail and entertainment uses in Southcenter:
create a framework that accommodates the widest possible range of investment while avoiding the
potential Toss of value from inappropriate juxtapositions of different shopping development types.
Identify appropriate areas for pedestrian- oriented, destination types of development, and for auto -
oriented patterns of development.
Objective 2: Build on the presence of major retail anchor uses to encourage the augmentation of
existing shopping assets with the type of urban, amenity- driven, pedestrian- oriented shopping
increasingly favored by consumers and investors.
Objective 3: Provide incentives for higher intensity projects in the northern Southcenter area to
make the most of high development potential of the area.
Objective 4: Improve waikability and begin developing a framework for the longer term
transition to more urban forms of development by providing adequate public frontage space for
future pedestrians and street furniture, and separation of pedestrians from moving and parked
vehicles.
Phase I implementation measures:
o Restructure the Southcenter area into five districts — the Regional Center, TOD
Neighborhood, Pond District, Commercial Corridor, and the Workplace District. Place
the highest priority on actions that support and promote the continued success and
enhancement of the northern half of the Southcenter area (Regional Center, Pond &
TOD). As this area evolves into a more urban pattern of development, the City may
respond by further refining these districts to differentiate between growing mixed use
residential neighborhoods and areas with more of a retail- entertainment focus.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Districts & use table
• Height maximums
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 31 5/12/2014
431
Southcenter Subarea Plan
o Remove warehouse, Tight industrial and auto - oriented commercial entitlements from
properties in the northern portion of Southcenter. These uses are not supportive of an
evolving walkable community.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Use tables
o Make funding projects that are economic development catalysts in the northern part of
Southcenter a high priority for city investments.
Associated measures or actions:
• Development incentives
• Southcenter Plan: City actions and investments
• Relocation of Union Pacific Tracks south of 1 -405
o As redevelopment or new construction takes place on parcels without sidewalks in the
public frontage, require developer compliance with the new public frontage standards.
o As redevelopment or new construction occurs on parcels where existing sidewalks and
perimeter landscaping do not meet the new public frontage standards, use incentives to
encourage developer compliance with the new standards.
o Recognize that public investment in roadway, public frontage and other transportation
improvements may also be necessary.
o Where a more walkable, urban neighborhood is desired, encourage the placement of
buildings at the back of sidewalks by maximizing easily accessible curbside parking with
on- street parking spaces along new streets and key existing streets.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Street master plan & cross - sections
• Public frontage requirements & design regulations
• Parking design /layout regulations
• Setback requirements
• Landscaping regulations
• Developer incentives for public frontage improvements
o Allow developers flexibility in meeting requirements for redevelopment or new
construction, particularly around Tukwila Pond, the Sounder commuter rail station, and
along Baker Boulevard and the Green River, provided that the resulting site plan and
building design supports the community's vision for these areas. Where appropriate,
provide incentives and look for opportunities for public /private partnerships.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Site design regulations
• Building orientation
• Setbacks
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 32 5/12/2014
432
Southcenter Subarea Plan
• Architectural regulations
• Qualitative criteria and /or performance standards and regulations
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 33 5/12/2014
433
Southcenter Subarea Plan
TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT
Objective 5: Leverage the new bus transit center and refurbished Sounder commuter rail station
to stimulate investor interest in developing a transit - oriented, mixed -use housing, retail and office
neighborhood in Southcenter.
Phase I implementation measures:
o Expand land use policies to allow housing throughout the northern portion of
Southcenter within walking distance of the rail and bus stations, and in all districts along
the Green River. When appropriate, provide incentives and explore public /private
partnerships to encourage stand alone and mixed use residential development.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Use tables
• Site design regulations
• Building orientation
• Qualitative criteria and /or performance standards and regulations
• Developer incentives for housing and structured parking
MALL TO STATION
Objective 6: Continue to enhance connections between the Mall, the commuter rail station and
the refurbished Tukwila Pond in order to reap synergies of destination retail, recreation amenities,
increasingly compact housing and office development, convenience and mobility.
Phase I implementation measures:
o Redevelopment consistent with the vision will require market - driven infill development,
incentives, and City investment. Designate the Baker Boulevard corridor as the area that
will serve as the initial catalyst for future redevelopment of Southcenter, where future
City investments will be directed and which will also provide a highly visible
demonstration of the City's commitment to the vision. Require redevelopment and
reinvestment along this corridor to support the City's long -term vision for a well -
designed pedestrian connection between the Mall, the bus transit center, and the
Sounder commuter rail /Amtrak station.
o Recognize that the City may need to participate in construction and funding of public
frontage improvements.
o Identify developer incentives that encourage compliance with new public frontage
standards when existing conditions do not meet the new standards.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Street master plan — street cross - sections and on street parking
• Public frontage improvements
• Maximum height requirements
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 34 5/12/2014
434
Southcenter Subarea Plan
• Building orientation
• Setbacks
• Open space & landscaping regulations
• Parking regulations
• Architectural regulations
• Developer incentives for public frontage improvements
CIRCULATION
Objective 7: Coordinate private and public contributions to the block and street system
particularly for east -west streets, such that each new segment adds to the connectivity and
number of alternative routes through Southcenter. Transportation corridors should be planned
and reserved in coordination with land use.
Objective 8: Improve pedestrian movement throughout the Southcenter area by creating quality
spaces and pathways through and within development sites connecting to the street system and,
where appropriate, public open spaces and parks.
Phase I implementation measures:
o Ensure that new public and private streets are located to break up the "mega blocks"
and provide a more finely grained street network that simulates an urban street grid.
o Require compliance with new street and public frontage regulations where traffic
impacts generated by new development or a significant change in use triggers the need
for mitigation.
o While in some cases the need for new streets may be capacity driven, a finer grid
system may also be needed to support mobility for pedestrians, bicycles and transit.
Design new street cross - sections to support a full range of mobility needs and the
adjacent land uses.
o Recognize that the City may need to participate in construction and funding of new
streets.
Associated regulatory measures:
• New street regulations
• Developer incentives for constructing new streets
• Access management regulations
• Street master plan & cross - sections
o Redevelopment of existing structures should move towards a more walkable community
by providing well defined pedestrian connections between buildings and sidewalks.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Site design regulations
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 35 5/12/2014
435
Southcenter Subarea Plan
OPEN SPACE
Objective 9: Use a combination of development regulations and capital improvements to unearth
the natural features of Southcenter - Tukwila Pond, the Green River and Minkler Pond - as public
amenities.
Objective 10: Create a hierarchy of interconnected public and private open spaces, ranging from
active plazas to Tess formal gathering spaces, quiet residential courts, and natural open spaces, that
are distributed within the Southcenter area.
Phase I implementation measures:
o Through a combination of development requirements, incentives, and public
investment, facilitate the addition of high quality public amenities, open spaces, and
recreation areas to attract housing development, stimulate new levels and quality of
development, and complement the retail and other mix of uses in the northern part of
Southcenter.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Open space requirements, standards & design guidelines
• Design regulations for public and private open spaces
• Housing incentives
• Site design regulations
• Public frontage regulations
DESIGN
OBJECTIVE 11: Continue to enhance Southcenter's "sense of place" reflected in building forms,
development patterns and the public realm.
Phase! implementation measures:
o Adopt new design standards and guidelines that promote high quality architecture, site
design and streetscapes, particularly for development in the northern part of the
Southcenter area, that is consistent with and supports the vision for the urban center.
Associated regulatory measures:
• Development standards, design guidelines
• Design review process
• Roadway standards with streetscape elements
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 36 5/12/2014
436
Southcenter Subarea Plan
1.6. RECOMMENDED CITY ACTIONS
The success of the Tukwila Urban Center will be supported by the recommended City actions and
investments outlined in this chapter of the Southcenter Subarea Plan. Unlike private investment,
City actions and investments can be strategically timed, scheduled and directed to specific areas
and projects to further revitalization. The intertwining of regulatory control with the strategic
investment of limited public resources is intended to accelerate the redevelopment strategies and
add to the appeal and success of Southcenter as a great place.
City actions will be: 1) guided by the Goals and Principles described in the Subarea Plan; 2) flexible
enough to allow for opportunities that cannot be predicted; and 3) clear enough to prioritize
actions and investments on an ongoing basis. As vision becomes reality, new and different actions
may be required and implemented. Planned projects will be undertaken as opportunities and
resources permit.
Recommended Capital Improvement Projects & Actions
The City will invest in capital improvements or will work jointly with the public sector and /or
private sector to create public spaces, new streets, and streetscape conditions that are supportive
of envisioned development, will enhance the pedestrian environment, and create an attractive
setting for the City's urban center.
• The Public Space and Amenity projects are specifically intended to instigate the types of land
use changes in the northern part of the Southcenter area that are envisioned by the
community — attracting housing, stimulating a new level and quality of development within
the area, creating more pedestrian - friendly areas, and strengthening pedestrian connections
between activity areas.
• The actions related to Streets, Circulation and Mass Transit are required to support the goals
of the Southcenter Plan for enhancing access for transit, automobiles, and trucks, breaking up
the mega - blocks in the planned pedestrian- oriented areas, improving circulation within and
access to the urban center, improving transit service and facilities, and enhancing
streetscapes.
• The Bicycle and Pedestrian Facility projects are intended to extend the network of existing
trails and paths within the Southcenter area, connect activity areas (including Tukwila Sounder
Station, the Green River and Tukwila Pond to neighborhoods and shopping areas), and provide
a viable transportation alternative to the car as the area becomes more pedestrian - friendly.
These actions are prioritized in terms of level of need and timing and summarized in Table 1. These
actions should be viewed as a flexible planning tool that allows re- prioritization of projects based
available resources and changing circumstances, needs and conditions. More detailed project
descriptions of the identified capital improvements are provided in the following sections:
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 37 5/12/2014
437
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Table 1. Summary of Recommended City Actions
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx 38
5/12/2014
Public Space & Amenities
Street /Circulation
Mass Transit Network
Bicycle & Pedestrian
Network & Facilities
& Facilities
Facilities
Short Term Actions
Project
1. Pedestrian infrastructure /path between
1. Street /Circulation Network &
1. Capital Improvements
1. Bicycle & Pedestrian
Baker Blvd & Sounder Station
Facilities
Improvements
o Pedestrian Bridge over the Green River
o Initiate a Wayfinding Program to
o Permanent Sounder Station
o Wayfinding program for
o Pedestrian Walkway to Sounder Station
assist drivers & direct auto
constructed
pedestrians & bicyclists
o At- grade, signalized pedestrian walkway
traffic
o Sidewalk improvements -
across W Valley Hwy
o Seek opportunities to add to the
missing sidewalks or those not
street network as
meeting standards
redevelopment occurs
o Seek opportunities to add on-
street parking to Baker Blvd
o Intersection improvements
o Pursue relocation of Union
Pacific tracks
Project
2. Improve Tukwila Pond water quality
2. Service Improvements
o Alum treatment & air circulation pumps
o Support Sounder Commuter Rail
o Improve stormwater treatment on the
service improvements (Sound
north side of the Pond
Transit project)
o Install alternative stormwater treatment
Project
3. Public Parking Structure
o Feasibility & location study
Project
4. Multifamily Housing Incentives
o Developer incentives feasibility analysis
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx 38
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx
W
CO
39
5/12/2014
Mid Term Actions
Project
1. Tukwila Pond Park improvements
1. Street /Circulation Network &
2. Service Improvements
1. Bicycle & Pedestrian
Facilities
improvements
o A path /floating boardwalk connecting east
o Extend Strander Blvd
o Seek route span, frequency &
o Bicycle facility improvements
& west sides of Pond to APW via Pond's
o Extend Trek Dr to APW
routing improvements for those
o Pedestrian signal crossing
north edge
o Construct S. 168`" St. when
routes serving the urban center
enhancements at key
o Park enhancements on west side of Pond —
property redevelops
(KCO Metro project)
intersections
paths, extend viewing platform, add
o New roadway from SCP to WVH,
o APW /Tukwila Pond Park
plantings, wetland restoration
south of S 180th
sidewalk improvements
o Explore feasibility of expanding Park when
o Sidewalk improvements -
redevelopment of property to the south
missing sidewalks or those not
occurs
meeting standards
Project
2. Improve Tukwila Pond water quality
1. Capital Improvements
o Add a variety of aquatic vegetation
o Southcenter Trolley
Long Term Actions
Project
1. Pedestrian infrastructure /path between
1. Street /Circulation Network &
1. Service Improvements
1. Bicycle & Pedestrian
Baker Blvd & Sounder Station
Facilities
improvements
o Pedestrian underpass beneath UP RR to
o WSDOT 1 -405 widening projects,
o Amtrak Service Improvements
o Bicycle access to Green River &
Sounder Station (Tukwila & WSDOT project)
including extent Tukwila Pkwy to
(Amtrak project)
Interurban trails from West
WVH (Tukwila & WSDOT project)
Valley Hwy
o Convert railroad corridors to
trails
o Sidewalk improvements -
missing sidewalks or those not
meeting standards
Project
2. Tukwila Pond Park improvements
2. Roadway Capacity Projects
o Tukwila Pond esplanade
o Intersection improvements
o Extend Minkler Blvd across
Green River to WVH
Project
3. Improve Tukwila Pond water quality
o Monitor water quality & performance of
the stormwater bioswales
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx
W
CO
39
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
1.6.1.Public Space and Amenity Projects
A key element of the Southcenter Subarea Plan is the creation of a strong public realm with a
variety of public places that offer a wide range of experiences and settings to choose from. While
many of these places will be created as a part of new development over time, there are several
open spaces - public parks, plazas, new streets and pedestrian ways— that are critical to the
creation of this public realm.
The Southcenter Plan implements the community's intention to place highest priority on actions
that support and promote the continued success and enhancement of the northern half of the Plan
area. A primary aspect of this is to facilitate the addition of high quality public amenity and
recreation space to attract housing development, stimulate new levels and quality of development,
and complement the retail and other mix of uses in the Southcenter area. As such, the northern
area is intended to be the most public part of the urban center, containing three key destinations —
the existing Mall, Tukwila Pond, and the Sounder Commuter Rail /Amtrak Tukwila &Station.
Improvements will be focused on enhancing and connecting these major destinations, so that they
may be easily accessed and enjoyed.
1) Pedestrian infrastructure /path between Baker Boulevard & Tukwila Station
Short Term Actions
To insure that the neighborhoods and primary anchors of the urban center are well- connected to
transit, the City shall pursue the development of new access ways and pedestrian paths leading to
the Sounder Commuter rail /Amtrak service at Tukwila Station. These new public ways will link
with new and existing streets, to ensure a fine - grained network resulting in improved public access
to the train station from all parts of the urban center.
The City's pedestrian connection between the heart of the urban center and Tukwila Station
consists of three major components - a pedestrian bridge over the Green River, a pedestrian
underpass through the Union Pacific Railroad right -of -way to access the station, and a pedestrian
path connecting the Mall, bridge, underpass, and the station.
The primary components of this network the City will pursue include:
a) Pedestrian Bridge over the Green River
i) Elements:
(1) Location: The bridge must provide a connection across the Green River to link Baker
Boulevard to the Sounder /AmtrakTukwila S station. The bridge shall be directly accessible
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 40 5/12/2014
440
Southcenter Subarea Plan
from the Baker Boulevard /pedestrian path and the Green River Trail. The final location
decision for the bridge will be determined during the NEPA process.
(2) Dimensions: The bridge shall be a minimum twenty (20) foot wide, providing
sufficient space to accommodate pedestrians and bicyclists.
(3) Lighting: Sufficient lighting will be provided to create a safe and pleasant night -time
environment along the bridge, with pedestrian scaled street lights.
(4) Design: Decorative bridge structure and integrated lighting will give the bridge a
distinctive character and will add an attractive local element to the Green River.
b) Pedestrian Walkway leading to Sfes- Tukwila Station
1) Elements:
(1) Location: The pedestrian walkway will link Baker Boulevard, the pedestrian bridge,
and Tukwila Station, terminating at the western entrance to the station. As it leaves
Christensen Road, the walkway should be generally aligned with the Bow Lake Pipeline right -
of -way; however alignment is subject to change to ensure alignment with the pedestrian
bridge and pose the least impact on adjacent properties. The path shall also provide
connections to the Green River and Interurban Trails. See TMC 18.28.070 for Pedestrian
Walkway standards.
(2) The portion of the walkway from the western boundary of the Sound Transit
property to the pedestrian underpass will be constructed by Sound Transit. The City shall
coordinate with Sound Transit to ensure that the walkway is appropriately aligned and
configured to achieve the City's goals.
c) An at- grade, signalized pedestrian connector across West Valley Highway (City of Tukwila
& WSDOT project)
West Valley Highway acts as a barrier to the pedestrian path linking the Mall to the Station. To
span this barrier and facilitate safer and more convenient pedestrian and bicycle circulation, the
City will coordinate with WSDOT about installing an at -grade connector on West Valley
Highway.
i) Elements:
(1) Use jug handle turns on approach, with grade to slow and orient bicyclists toward
threat.
(2) In median, use 45 degree cut to orient trail users toward threat.
(3) Use medians on approach to fully separate directions of travel.
(4) Use lean rails to assist crossings.
Subarea Pian_CouncilFinal.docx 41 5/12/2014
441
Southcenter Subarea Plan
(5) Colorize center lanes for 200 feet before and after median.
(6) Maintain current number of lanes.
Long Term Actions
a) Pedestrian Underpass beneath the Union Pacific Railroad Tracks (City of Renton & Sound
Transit project)
i) Elements:
Should the City be unsuccessful in efforts to relocate Union Pacific Railroad tracks, the City shall
seek a pedestrian underpass beneath the UP tracks. The City will coordinate with the City of Renton
and Sound Transit during the design and construction of the Strander Boulevard Extension and the
permanent commuter rail station to ensure that the pedestrian underpass beneath the railroad
berm achieves the following:
(1) Location: The UPRR underpass must connect the pedestrian walkway under the railroad
tracks, to the station platform access points.
(2) Dimensions: The underpass shall be a minimum twenty (20) foot wide. The length of
underpass below grade should be as short as possible to maximize visibility and safety.
(3)
Lighting: Sufficient lighting will be provided to create a safe and pleasant night -time
environment. Along the underpass, ceiling or wall- mounted lights shall be provided.
(4) Design & Amenities: The underpass shall be well- designed and a sufficient amount of
amenities provided to create an attractive, pleasant, and high quality environment for
pedestrians accessing the platforms.
2) Tukwila Pond Improvements
Tukwila Pond Park is a 25 -acre City -owned park in the middle of Southcenter's retail district. Nearly
23 acres of the park have been left in a natural state and serve as a passive recreation and wildlife
preservation area. The westernmost 2.3 acres have been developed and feature picnic tables,
trails, viewing platforms, green belt and restrooms. About 19 acres of the park are open water,
used by a variety of waterfowl and other birds and wildlife all year round.
In 2006, members of the Tukwila City Council, Planning Commission, Parks Commission, and City
staff participated in an intensive design workshop to generate ideas and a vision for the future of
Tukwila Pond, which were then incorporated into the Tukwila Pond Conceptual Design Report. The
conceptual design is based on the intersection of the urban environment with the natural
environment and the public's interaction with both. The intersection of these two environments
provides an opportunity to explore the edge of each and for people to weave in and out of this
edge. The design encourages pedestrians to walk "on the edge" along the eastern and southern
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 42 5/12/2014
442
Southcenter Subarea Plan
boundaries of the Park; to sit "at the edge" along the northern shore; and be "within the edge" in
the Tukwila Pond Park. Some of the key elements of the design include installation of a boardwalk
across the northern edge of the pond, walkways on the southern end of the pond property,
extension of viewing platforms, and additional viewpoints into the pond and adjacent wetlands.
Improvements to Tukwila Pond Park should be accomplished simultaneously with the pond water
quality improvements described in Section 1.6.1.3 Water Quality.
Mid Term Actions
The City will pursue the following projects in the first phase of Tukwila Pond improvements:
a) A path /floating boardwalk connecting the east and west sides of Tukwila pond to
Andover Park West via the Pond's northern edge.
b) Tukwila Pond Park enhancements on the western edge of the Pond (additional pathways,
extension of viewing platforms, additional plantings, wetland restoration).
c) Explore the feasibility of and implementation steps for expanding the footprint of Tukwila
Pond Park when redevelopment of the property to the south of the Park occurs.
Long Term Actions
The City's final phase of Tukwila Pond related actions include designing and constructing the
enhancements on the northern edge of the Pond. The City will coordinate with developers as new
retail or mixed -use development occurs on parcels adjacent to the park.
a) Tukwila Pond Esplanade
An attractive public esplanade will be designed and funded (in part or in its entirety) by the City.
Once design, engineering and construction funding for the esplanade are in place, and when the
parcels at the northern pond edge choose to redevelop, new construction should be designed with
pond- fronting retail and restaurant activities, providing an active waterside promenade to augment
the shopping, eating and other uses in the urban center. A primary facet of its intended role is its
ultimate envisioned connection to the regional shopping area and the Mall to its north.
i) Elements:
(1) Location: This esplanade shall be located along the pond's northern shore, and stretch
from the park along the western side of the pond to the public sidewalk on Andover
Park West on its eastern end.
(2) Orientation: The esplanade shall be connected to Strander Boulevard and to the Mall
along a street designed with public amenities and preferably with a central median as a
linear open space connection.
(3)
Dimensions: The esplanade shall be a minimum twenty -five (25) foot wide.
Subarea Plan_CounciiFinal.docx 43 5/12/2014
443
Southcenter Subarea Plan
(4) Lighting: Sufficient lighting will be provided to create a safe and pleasant night -time
environment. Along the esplanade, pedestrian height double -head pendant street lights
shall be provided.
(5)
Amenities: Street furnishings such as benches, trash receptacles, kiosks and stands for
vendors, banners, and flowering pots will be integrated into the design.
(6) Design: The northern esplanade is envisioned as an urban water edge, with hardscape,
street trees and lighting, and other street amenities. The creation of a grand monument
at the lynchpin of the Mall connection and the pond edge is recommended as a focal
point and central gathering place. The pond edge beyond the esplanade shall maintain
the pond's riparian environment. The design and materials of the esplanade should
reflect the character of the Pacific Northwest, with wood deck and railings to reflecting
Pacific Northwest design character.
3) Tukwila Pond Water Quality
Tukwila Pond suffers from poor water quality, primarily due to elevated levels of phosphorus,
which cause algal blooms in the dry summer and early fall months. This is due to a combination of
factors that include: lack of freshwater input and air circulation through the pond in the dry
months of the year; inputs of phosphorus from seasonal stormwater run -off, and accumulation of
phosphorus in the sediments of the pond during the year, which serve as an ongoing "source" of
this nutrient to the pond water. In addition, the lack of shade and the shallowness of the pond
allow high water temperatures in the summer and light penetration through the whole water
column, both of which promote algal growth. These conditions also contribute to low levels of
dissolved oxygen in the water, a factor that limits fish and other aquatic organisms and can cause
fish kills. Algal blooms, in addition to being visually unattractive, can cause unpleasant odors and
can become toxic (to pets or humans, if ingested).
Short Term Actions
a) Water quality improvements.
Water quality improvements to be implemented by the City shall include the following
measures (this project is planned for construction in 2013):
(1) Alum treatment (a substance that is pumped into the pond, settles to the bottom and
prevents phosphorus from being released into the water column); and
(2) Air circulation using pumps to push air out into the pond along lines laid on the bottom
to improve the levels of dissolved oxygen in the water.
b) Improve stormwater treatment.
The City will work with all properties discharging surface water to the pond to ensure that
existing storm water collection and treatment systems are properly maintained. Proper
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 44 5/12/2014
444
Southcenter Subarea Plan
maintenance of these facilities will reduce the amount of phosphorus and other pollutants
reaching the pond to the maximum extent feasible under current conditions.
c) Over the very long term, install alternative stormwater treatment as the area on the
north redevelops.
Mid Term Actions
a) Water quality improvements.
Aquatic vegetation plays a significant role in the water quality of ponds. An increased variety
of aquatic vegetation to use excess nutrients, along with the installation of shading wetland
vegetation, would moderate algae blooms in the pond while also increasing diversity for
wildlife enhancement.
The City will work with property owners on the north side of the pond to improve the
retention of phosphorus and other pollutants.
Long Term Actions
a) Water quality improvements.
(1)
(2)
Once the alum injection and air circulation systems are installed, the City will monitor
water quality and will continue to operate the systems during the summer and fall
months to maintain the desired water quality in the pond.
The City will monitor performance of the stormwater bioswales.
f*d €tag6p
4) Public Parking Structure
Short Term Actions
a) Feasibility and Location Study
Currently an adequate supply of parking exists within the urban center. However, as the area
designated for a more urban mix of uses intensifies, and businesses are faced with the physical
limitations of surface lot and on- street parking, there will be a growing demand for an increase in
the supply of conveniently located parking. A public parking structure located on a site in the area
designated for pedestrian - friendly, walkable development north of Strander Boulevard would allow
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 45 5/12/2014
445
Southcenter Subarea Plan
visitors and shoppers to park once and walk to their destinations, and provide additional needed
parking capacity for future growth. The City may prepare a study investigating the overall feasibility
of developing a public parking structure on a site located north of Strander Boulevard, and to
determine the most feasible and strategic site for the structure. The study should include the
following tasks:
• An assessment of current and future parking demand in the area;
• Parking structure site criteria and analysis;
• Recommendation of preferred site(s) for a parking structure;
• An assessment of the potential for integration of mixed uses into the site(s); and
• Preliminary identification of costs and possible funding sources (e.g., public /private
partnership or LID).
5) Multifamily Housing Incentives
Short Term Actions
a) Developer Incentives /Feasibility Analysis.
In addition to investing in amenities that are needed to attract housing (such as enhancing Tukwila
Pond), the City will research the feasibility of implementing financial incentives that would further
encourage multifamily housing development in the urban center. One example of this type of
program is the multifamily tax abatement program, which forgives property tax payments for a
period of time. Other useful tools may include tax deferral and the use of tax credits.
1.6.2. Street / Circulation Network and Facilities
This section describes recommended City actions to improve the capacity and efficiency of the
network of vehicular thoroughfares, in support of existing and new development. In addition to
projects that will improve capacity, this section also lists other projects needed to support adjacent
land uses, improve non - motorized mobility, and act as catalysts for future development. Where a
regional transportation agency is responsible for an identified capital project or service
improvement, the City's role in ensuring that these projects are implemented is described.
1) Street and Circulation Network & Facilities
Short Term Actions
a) Wayfinding Program
The City will pursue implementing a Wayfinding program to assist drivers in finding their way into
and around Southcenter. Signage unique to Tukwila will be placed at key entry points to direct
traffic to key destinations within the urban center. The wayfinding program will also be used to
redistribute traffic off the more congested main north -south corridors and on to alternative routes
within Southcenter.
Subarea Plan CouncilFinal.docx
446
46 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
b) Finely Grained Street Network
Arterials are currently spaced approximately 1,200 to 2,500 feet apart to form a grid pattern in the
Southcenter area. The blocks are very wide, with few collector streets serving the properties within
the blocks. Numerous access driveways and dead -end streets act as collector streets.
New public and private streets will begin to be implemented by the City and /or private developers
on an on -going basis as significant redevelopment occurs, based on the requirements set forth in
TMC Chapter 18.2842-0 New Streets. The added streets will gradually make the urban center's
street grid pattern a more finely grained network, improving capacity and mobility for pedestrians
and autos, including emergency vehicles. New access streets will also reduce the number of curb
cuts needed on the major arterials, thereby reducing the number of traffic accidents. Traffic flows
on the arterials will be more orderly. See TMC Chapter 18.28 for new thoroughfare designs.
c) On- street Parking in the Pedestrian - Oriented Areas
The City will reconfigure existing thoroughfares to provide two lanes of on- street parking, two
travel lanes, and one center -turn lane on Baker Boulevard and on Andover Park East north of
Strander Blvd. These projects will support the City's goals for serving pedestrian- oriented areas and
connections, and ensuring that these streets have the right combination of on- street parking, tree -
lined sidewalks and public amenity to serve their neighborhood. Restriping of these streets to
accommodate bicycle lanes shall occur simultaneously. A traffic impact analysis would be required
to determine if the "road diet" would create (or exacerbate) roadway congestion or level of service
problems elsewhere in the roadway system prior to making changes.
d) Relocate Union Pacific (UP) Railroad Tracks
The City will pursue the relocation of the UP railroad tracks in a manner that opens up the area
north of the Strander Station to 1 -405 and west to W. Valley Highway for redevelopment. This could
create a special opportunity area for uses such as regional serving retail and entertainment, in
addition to transit - supportive mixed use, including housing.
Long Term Actions
a) Extend Strander Boulevard (City of Renton project)
The City will work with the City of Renton to extend Strander Boulevard eastward, under the UP
railroad, to connect with the planned westward extension of SW 27th Street from Oaksdale Avenue.
Both Cities will continue to coordinate with Sound Transit, so that the eastward expansion of
Strander Blvd from West Valley Highway connects with the planned entry to the Tukwila
Sounder /Amtrak rail station. This extension will provide improved access to the rail station for auto
and transit traffic, and additional east -west access between Renton and the urban center. The
underpass should include sufficient sidewalk width to accommodate pedestrians and bicycles.
b) WSDOT 1 -405 Widening Projects
The WSDOT's 1 -405 corridor widening project proposes a number of changes to the local network in
the Southcenter area. The City will continue coordinating with WSDOT to ensure that the following
projects proposed by WSDOT are constructed as part of the 1 -405 project:
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 47 5/12/2014
447
Southcenter Subarea Plan
• Reconstruct the 61st Avenue and 66th Avenue overpasses. These are two of the key entry
points into the urban center, but do not provide good visual aesthetics as gateways, adequate
vehicular capacity, or appropriate pedestrian facilities and amenities. The City will work with
the WSDOT to ensure that adequate vehicular capacity, sidewalk widths and bicycle lanes are
provided as part of the project.
• Extend Tukwila Parkway from 66th Ave S /Andover Park East to West Valley Highway. WSDOT
has proposed a five -lane road. The City will work with the WSDOT to ensure that bicycle lanes
and appropriate sidewalk widths are provided as part of the project.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 48 5/12/2014
448
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Other Actions — DRAFT
a) DRAFT: Roadway Capacity Improvements Needed to Accommodate Forecasted
Growth in Traffic
Based on the draft 2030 land use forecasts for the Southcenter areal, the City identified the
following street improvements as necessary to accommodate the 2030 traffic forecasts and
conditions. (Please note at this point the Transportation Analysis has not been finalized, so these
projects have not yet been prioritized as to timing or funding. This list will be updated when the
Background Report is finalized). These projects will also require additional design and engineering
prior to construction:
(1) Draft: Intersection Improvements
o S 180th and Southcenter Parkway
o S 180th and Andover Park West
o Minkler and Andover Park West
o Strander and West Valley Highway
(2) Draft: Extend Trek Drive westward to Andover Park West.
This will increase network connectivity and improve emergency response times.
(3) Doti-New South 168th Street
The City will pursue the construction of a new street on the south side of the Tukwila Pond
between Southcenter Parkway and Andover Park East. This new street should be designed to
accommodate on street parking on the south side of the roadway, as well as bicycle lanes.
This roadway should be constructed as the adjacent land areas to the south are redeveloped.
This roadway will reduce the projected traffic congestion on Strander Boulevard and provide
local access and appropriate streetscapes for the adjacent properties.
(4) Extend Minkler Boulevard Across the Green River
Extend Minkler Boulevard from Industry Drive to West Valley Highway. The Southcenter area
would benefit from additional connections to West Valley Highway over the Green River.
1.6.3. Mass transit network and facilities
Capital projects and service enhancements related to transit are intended to better meet the needs
of the communities, residents, employers, employees, and visitors to and within the Southcenter
area. Overall goals are to work closely with service providers to improve and maximize usage of all
transit service in the area, make service faster and more efficient, and assist the urban center in
meeting its development potential. Where a regional transportation agency is responsible for an
2 See Background Report for the Transportation Element of the Comprehensive Plan Update, Transportation
Analysis and 2030 Improvement Recommendations, May 2012
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 49 5/12/2014
449
Southcenter Subarea Plan
identified capital project or service improvement, the City's role in ensuring that these projects are
implemented is described.
1) Capital Improvements
Short Term Actions
a) Bus Shelters in Locations with High Ridership (King County Metro project)
The City will pursue having Metro Transit install bus shelters at stops with high ridership where
facilities do not currently exist. Per the City's Transit Network Plan for the Tukwila Urban Center
(Dec. 2004), within the urban center, there are twois one locations where a shelters aeis
warranted; on 14-east and westbound Strander Boulevard just west of Andover Park West.
Mid Term Actions
a) Southcenter Trolley
The City shall pursue the development of a trolley route connecting Sounder Tukwila Station with
other activity areas (including shopping, hotels, parks and employment areas) in the Southcenter
area. A trolley that is frequent (every 10 minutes or better) plus fun (either a modern futuristic
design or a classic wooden trolley replica), will improve frequency of service between the Sounder
Tukwila Station and the Southcenter area, and attract people to park once in the urban center and
use the trolley to visit other destinations. This approach has been used successfully to carry
passengers and enhance the image of other lifestyle centers, downtowns, and suburban shopping
centers.
Because it is unlikely that a Southcenter Trolley will rank highly as part of King County Metro's
overall South King County transit priorities, the City shall pursue public /private partnerships with
local businesses in the urban center as a means of funding.
2) Service Improvements
Short Term Actions
a) Route span, frequency & routing improvements for those routes serving the Urban Center
(King County Metro projects)
To improve mobility and better serve existing and projected travel patterns, the City shall continue
pursuing improvements in span, frequency, and routing for Routes 128, 1'40, 150, 155 and 156
with King County Metro.
b) Sounder Commuter Rail Service (Sound Transit project)
Sound Transit's Sounder commuter rail service currently serves the Tukwila Station with sevefi
both northbound/twe and Tess frequent southbound trains in the morning and sew
southbound to and less frequent northbound trains in the afternoon. The service runs between
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 50 5/12/2014
450
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Lakewood Tacoma and Edmonds, and as far south as Lakewood in the nc\ar future. The City will
coordinate with Sound Transit on ensuring sufficient parking is provided at the station, and with
Metro on providing appropriate transit connections and service, as ridership and commuter rail
service levels increase.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 51 5/12/2014
451
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Long Term Actions
a) Amtrak Service (Amtrak project)
Amtrak Cascades service, running between Eugene, Oregon and Vancouver, British Columbia,
currently serves the Tukwila Station with three trains in each direction daily. The City will support
better service at the Tukwila Station by supporting Amtrak's future plans to increase service to 13
trains per day between Portland and Seattle and 4 trains per day between Seattle and Vancouver,
BC by 2023.
1.6.4. Bicycle and Pedestrian Facilities
The goal for the Southcenter area is for a livelier 24 -hour neighborhood with housing, shopping,
and more employment. With more people- intensive uses, the City will make the area more
walkable through a system of trails that will enhance the street network by connecting parks and
open space with employers, retail and new housing.
The City's Comprehensive Plan and Walk and Roll Plan call for identifying "bicycle friendly" streets
and creating improvements that will allow trips both in the community and outside the city to jobs
or other destinations. These documents expand the idea of transportation from simply keeping
cars and trucks moving to the idea that the urban center's streets should be for everyone, whether
motorist or bicyclist, walker or wheelchair user, bus rider or shopkeeper. This "complete streets"
perspective will ensure that Tukwila residents and visitors can get around as freely as possible with
a range of both motorized and non - motorized choices. In addition, community goals call for
improving bicycle and pedestrian connections to the existing system of regional trails (e.g. the
Duwamish /Green River and Interurban Trails).
1) Bicycle and Pedestrian Facilities
Short Term Actions
a) Way finding program for pedestrians and bicyclists.
The City will provide clear pedestrian and bicycle route information by installing quality way
finding signs at all locations where choices in travel are made, and by publishing system maps.
Signage shall guide pedestrians and bicyclists to key locations, such as Tukwila Pond, Southcenter
Mall, and the Duwamish /Green River and Interurban Trails.
b) Bicycle lanes on existing streets
The City will pursue implementing a network of bicycle routes in the Southcenter area.
Preliminary studies have shown that there is sufficient width on some existing streets to allow for
re- striping to add bike lanes through a narrowing of turn and travel lanes. As a general principle,
there is less need for marked bike facilities when speeds are at 25 mph or below, and a significant
need for facilities if speeds are 30 mph or higher. The need for a facility increases with increased
traffic volume and traffic complexity. As the urban form is built, traffic speeds will decrease. This
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 52 5/12/2014
452
Southcenter Subarea Plan
will gradually eliminate the need for bike lanes along many streets and allow greater width for
walking and parking transitions. The Walk & Roll Plan identifies future bike routes on Baker
Boulevard and Andover Park East between Tukwila Parkway and Minkler Boulevard. However
additional design and engineering is required before these are implemented.
Mid Term Actions
a) Bicycle lanes on existing streets
The City will continue pursue implementing a network of bicycle routes in the Southcenter area.
The Tukwila Walk & Roll Plan identifies future facilities on Andover Park East or Andover Park
West (between Minkler and S. 180th Street), portions of Minkler Boulevard, Tukwila Parkway and
Longacres Way. However, additional design and engineering for these routes is required before
these projects are implemented.
b) Pedestrian Signal Crossing Enhancements at Key Intersections
On wider streets and larger intersection crossings in the northern, more pedestrian - friendly part
of the Southcenter area, sufficient time should exist for pedestrians of all abilities to cross. The
City should pursue installing countdown signals on intersection crossings greater than 40 feet, and
install signals that automatically activate for pedestrians on each cycle at these intersections.
Pedestrian signals should automatically activate on all legs. Push button controls should be used
primarily on streets anticipated to be used less frequently by pedestrians, such as in the
Workplace District.
c) Andover Park West /Tukwila Pond Park sidewalk improvements
Andover Park West sidewalk improvements adjacent to the wetland buffer on the east side of the
Pond should be designed and constructed concurrently with the S. 168th Street project. This
project supports the recommended Tukwila Pond conceptual design and planned improvements.
The sidewalk configuration shall be as follows:
• An 8 foot sidewalk separated from the street by a 10 foot planting strip planted with native
vegetation and with trees 25 feet on center, on average.
d) Other Sidewalk improvements on existing streets (Mid -Long Term)
The City should identify locations within the districts planned for more walkable environment
where sidewalks are missing or not consistent with required standards, and future development
or redevelopment will not likely trigger sidewalk improvements. In these locations, the City will
construct the sidewalks in order to complete the urban center's pedestrian network. For example,
the City may construct a sidewalk along the south side of S 180th Street from Sperry Drive
eastward to the Green River Bridge to fill in a sidewalk gap.
Long Term Actions
a) Bicycle access to Green River and Interurban trails from West Valley Highway
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 53 5/12/2014
453
Southcenter Subarea Plan
High vehicle volumes and speeds along West Valley Highway, combined with narrow shoulders in
spots providing little separation from vehicles makes this stretch of roadway unsafe for bicyclists.
The Interurban Trail and Green River Trails provide cyclists with an off - street north /south route
option. The City should pursue opportunities to access these trails from West Valley Highway.
Options include pursuing an extension of Minkler Boulevard across the Green River, improvements
to the Green River Trail south of S. 180th Street, and a rails -to- trails project if the existing rail bridge
south of Strander Blvd becomes an abandoned corridor. Additional design and engineering is
required.
b) Convert Railroad Corridors to Trails
Track locations within the urban center have been identified previously as opportunity areas for
the construction of multi -use pedestrian and bicycle trails. While it is generally known that some of
these spurs have been abandoned, the City will pursue further research to determine the
ownership and disposition status of each specific spur. Once developed, these trails could extend
the Green River and Interurban Trail system throughout the urban center, and connect to City
neighborhoods. As redevelopment of the parcels of land containing railroad corridors occurs, the
City shall pursue conversion of these corridors to trails.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 54 5/12/2014
454
Southcenter Subarea Plan
1.7. APPENDIX A: EXISTING CONDITIONS
The condition of the Tukwila's urban center, "Southcenter ", at the inception of this Subarea Plan is
detailed in this section. Ultimately, the implementation of the Plan's Phase I strategies will result in
sufficient modification of these conditions as to make this Plan obsolete. At that point, a newly
updated Southcenter Plan will need to be prepared to engage the problems and opportunities
presented by the modified existing conditions. As change occurs, the community intends to
measure those changes against the conditions recorded herein to monitor the degree to which the
Plan remains sufficiently current.
Introduction
The City of Tukwila is located 12 miles south of downtown Seattle, 17 miles north of downtown
Tacoma, and two miles from the Sea -Tac International Airport.
The Plan Area is comprised of approximately 1,000 acres located in the immediate southeastern
quadrant formed by the crossing of lnterstates 5 and 405. It contains the City's primary
commercial center — featuring by far the greatest proportion of the City's development and its
primary source of sales tax revenue. The Plan Area contains a sufficiently wide range of retail
offerings to make it the largest shopping destination serving the South King County region. Its
primary shopping anchor is Westfield Southcenter Mall, the largest mall in the state of Washington.
The Mall recently went through a substantial expansion and renovation.
In addition to the wide range of shopping venues, the Plan Area also contains a substantial amount
of other commercial uses, especially distribution, warehousing, office and lodging.
Context
1) History
The land area of Tukwila has historically been inhabited by the Duwamish, the Native Americans
who made their homes along the Duwamish River. They were followed by Euro- American settlers
in the 1850's who began the development of a small community based on farming and coal mining.
Tukwila was incorporated in 1908, and its development was spurred by accessibility from the
Duwamish, Green and Black Rivers; then by train lines that connected it to the major cities of
Seattle and Tacoma, and finally by the construction of a regional freeway system. Over time,
Tukwila has grown as a center of commerce due to its location at the crossroads of rivers, trails,
highways and railroads.
The majority of growth in the City, and especially in the Plan Area, has occurred over the last fifty
years. The area to be known as the Tukwila Urban Center Southcenter Plan area was annexed to
the City as an industrial park in 1956. The construction of Interstates 5 and 405 in the mid 1960's
opened the area up for commercial development, and instigated a rapid transformation of what
was largely undeveloped open land and dairy farms (see Photo 1). The Southcenter Mall (currently
the Westfield Southcenter Mall) opened in 1968, becoming a commercial anchor for the area. Over
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 55 5/12/2014
455
� "�� Subarea Plan
the subsequent twenty years, more industry and commerce located in the area, providing space for
over 1,000 businesses.
Photo 1.
2) Community
Population in Tukwila has almost doubled in the lost 20 years, due to new residential construction
and a land annexation in the early 1990's, to a current estimation of 19,107 (2010). While growth
has slowed since the 1990's, population is again expected to significantly increase over the next
twenty years. Many of Tukwiia's newer residents are immigrants from outside the country, and
this is expected to continue. Black or African American and Asian are the fastest-growing new
groups. Median family income for Tukwila was $44,530 in 2009, compared to $67,076 in King
County.
3) Regional Circulation
The City of Tukwila is well positioned in the regional transportation network: it is Iocated
immediately along the two primary regional freeways; 1'5 and 1'405 (see Photo 2). It is highly
visible and accessibie to motorists moving through on these major jor regional thoroughfares to and
from downtown Seattle, downtown Tacoma and SEATAC International Airport.
Two regional transit operators provide service within Tukwiia. King County Metro provides both
local bus and paratransit services to Tukwila and the surrounding region. Sound Transit operates a
three-county bus network, and a light rail and commuter rail system. The Sounder commuter rail
line serves the Southcenter area via the Tukwila Station. Sound Transit's 14 mile LINK light rail line
runs between Seattle and the Seattie-Tacoma internationai Airport, stapping at South 154 m Street
and Tukwila International Boulevard, approximately two miles west of the urban center area. King
County Metro provides frequent bus service between the light rail station, the Southcenter Mall
area, and the Sounder Commuter Rail Station. Amtrak passenger train service is also available at
the Tukwila 4794e-r}(-±(-2-5 Station.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 56 5/12/2014
456
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Photo 2. Location at freeway crossroads
LAND USE AND DEVELOPMENT
Southcenter has become a commercial center for the City and the region. Development in the
Southcenter area is exclusively commerciai, with retail, office, lodging, warehouse and industrial
uses. There is minimal residentiai development. Existing development patterns are primariiy
sing|e'story,auto'oriented,cornnnercia|deve|oprnent.ThenorthernportinnofSouthcenteris
dominated by the super-regional Westfield shopping mall (the largest covered mall in Washington
state — See photo 3) surrounded by parking lots and rings of associated smaller scale, surface
parked commercial buildings. The southern portion is primarily a warehouse and distribution
center that takes advantage of the area's highway and railroad infrastructure, with some retail
outlets and office buiidings.
M jordestinationsinc|udetheK4aU,theretai|°poxver"centersUningSouthcenterParkvvay(see
Photo 4) and portions of Strander Boulevard, and big-box retail along Andover Park East in the
southeastern portion of Southcenter (see Photo 5). In addition, many chains that draw on a
regional audience, such as Office Depot, Home Depot and Target, have located within
Southcenter's boundaries.
A large proportion of Tukwila's jobs are located in the Southcenter area. More than half of these
jobs are in retail, with the remainder primariiy oriented towards manufacturing and industrial
work. Boeing's Longacres campus, located just outside of the Southcenter area and directly to the
east of Sounder's Tukwila 17e*+g+epeEi ,i5tation,is forecasted to provide over lO,OOO jobs for the
region.
As a result of Southcenter's role as a popular commercial center, land values in Southcenter are
expected to rise over time. The lower value office and warehouse uses (see Photo 6) that make up
a large part of Southcenter's land area are potential locations for higher-value uses, and various
sites have transitioned to retail use. As a testament to the rising land values, the owners of
Westfield Southcenter Mall intensified their property site with an expansion that increased its size
by another 500,000 square feet, including cinema, an expanded food court, additional smaller
retail stores, new restaurants and the first structured parking garages serving retail to appear in the
Southcenter area.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 57 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
A market analysis conducted in 2002 showed that the development potential for the Southcenter
study area for the near future was projected to include demand for more retail, more restaurants,
and more industrial uses, with more office and lodging to follow in the long term. Market analysis
of land constraints and demand pressures in the area pointed to the possibility of denser
development and structured parking, justified by rising land values. Since that time, due to the
downturn in the economy, many of the stakeholders in the Southcenter area have expressed
concern that much of the draft Plan is based on a market analysis that is now outdated. The City's
consultants agreed that the 2002 analysis is not adequate now for use as a short-run analysis.
Instead, the consultant's conclusions are that the vision is achievable, but in phases and over a
period of time and only with significant, targeted public investments to catalyze and support
development of the type that the City would like to see. Also, given the uncertainty in the current
market, it is not effective use of City funds to do a new, detailed market analysis at this time.
Photo 3. Westfield Southcenter Mall
wark
Photo 5. Big box warehouse retail
EXISTING LAND USE POLICY
Photo 4. Parkway Super Center
Photo 6. Lower value office & Warehouse
The City's Zoning Code is set forth in Chapter 18 of Tukwila's Municipal Code. All of the land area
under study is contained within the area designated by the City's Comprehensive Plan and the
City's Zoning Map as the Tukwila Urban Center (TUC). The stated purpose for this zoning district is
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 58 5/12/2014
458
Southcenter Subarea Plan
"intended to provide an area of high- intensity regional uses that include commercial services,
offices, light industry, warehousing and retail uses. Development is intended to be pedestrian -
friendly, with a strong emphasis on a safe and attractive streetscape." Uses permitted in the district
include an extremely wide range of retail, entertainment, commercial and industrial uses.
Residential uses are conditionally permitted on areas within 500 feet of the Green River, Tukwila
Pond, or Minkler Pond (a maximum density of 22 units per acre; 100 units per acre for senior
housing), and in mixed -use developments within one - quarter mile of the Sounder Commuter
rail /Amtrak Station property (maximum density of 65 units per acre). Most of the uses that support
residential, like churches, schools and recreational facilities, are also conditionally permitted.
Buildings are allowed to a maximum height of 115 feet. There are few policies setting standards for
building design, orientation, massing, location of parking, block size, or the creation of new streets.
The Zoning Code requires design review for all commercial structures larger than 1,500 square feet
and for all structures containing multi - family development, as well as for certain exterior repairs,
reconstructions, alterations or improvements to buildings over 10,000 square feet. Design review
for commercial structures between 1,500 and 5,000 square feet will be done administratively; for
larger structures, by the Board of Architectural Review.
DEVELOPMENT AND REDEVELOPMENT POSSIBILITIES
Southcenter is almost 100% developed, with very little vacant developable land. The few areas that
are untouched by development are either preserved as open space, environmentally sensitive
wetlands and river areas, or dedicated towards public uses, such as utility sites. The most
significant piece of vacant land that is available for new development lies on the eastern border of
Southcenter, north of and adjacent to the Sounder Tukwila Station. However, there are many
obstacles to redevelopment of this area, such as underground and above ground utilities and
limited access.
While there is very little undeveloped land in Southcenter available for new investment, the low -
density nature of its development pattern points toward redevelopment opportunities. Its high -
visibility location at the juncture of two freeways makes it a desirable location, especially since
there is little developable area elsewhere. The other quadrants bordering the freeway intersection
are filled with low- density residential neighborhoods, with little to no land open for development.
With heightened demand for retail space in Southcenter, and the rising land values that result from
this demand, much of Tukwila's industrial and warehouse space is vulnerable to conversion to
office (see Photo 7) or retail. Some of Tukwila's industrial uses have already shifted to retail uses,
(See Fig.A.1) as evidenced by Costco Wholesale, Lowe's Home Improvement, and Home Depot-a-Ret City, all of which are located in former warehouse buildings.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 59 5/12/2014
459
Southcenter Subarea Plan
ir...'...-,-..MMMIIMIMMOIMMMIBMWMOWSWM1DWMEEWMIEM
Photo 7. Fatigue Technology
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx
460
Fig.A.1. Patterns of Development and Change
60
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
LOCAL TRANSPORTATION AND CIRCULATION
1) Vehicular Circulation
Because Southcenter is geographically bounded by the two freeways and the Green River, primary
entrance points into the study area are limited. From the north, traffic can enter over 1 -405 at 61st
and 66th Avenues. From the south, access is limited to Southcenter Parkway, Andover Park West,
and Andover Park East, and West Valley Highway. Traffic from the west can enter from 1 -5 at
Southcenter Parkway, Klickitat Drive and South 4Z41848th Street, and traffic from the east is
limited to Strander Boulevard and South 178/180th Street. Because of this limited access to the
area and the small number of streets serving development, there can be delays at the
entrance /exit ramps to the freeway, and there are frequent bottlenecks at the Klickitat Drive and
Southcenter Parkway intersection and other intersections near Westfield Southcenter Mall. Traffic
on the surrounding interstates is expected to increase in the future. Proposed long -term
improvements include the relocation of the 1 -405 on -ramp from the Southcenter retail area to the
east of 66th Avenue, extending Tukwila Parkway to West Valley Highway, and at the 188th Street
freeway interchange. Also, with tThe recent Tukwila Urban Center access improvement project, has
reduced bottlenecks in the Klickitat area and near the mall are expected to improve.
Major north -south arterials through the study area are Southcenter Parkway and West Valley
Highway; east -west arterials are South 180th Street and Klickitat Drive/ Strander Boulevard.
However, arterial routes are treated no differently than other streets in the network. All of the
streets appear to be the same in width, design, and even in the types of buildings that line their
edges. No priority is given to entrance routes or to important thoroughfares; there are no custom
signs incorporated into the streetscape; and no landmarks or monuments mark special places along
the street lengths.
The street network in the Southcenter area is designed solely for the automobile, and follows an
oversized grid that limits internal circulation. Southcenter is divided into 38 blocks, with an average
block size of 22 acres. The area contains over 14 linear miles of roadways, with an intersection
density of one intersection for each 16 acres. The smallest blocks in the study are 1,000 feet in
length by 1,000 feet in depth, compared to downtown Seattle, with an average block size of 1.5
acres and average block length of 250 feet. East -west streets are particularly limited. With
increased success on this limited street network, congestion within Southcenter is becoming more
common — peak times for congestion are the noon hour during the week, and Saturday's
congestion is even greater around the Mall.
4) Pedestrian Circulation
Pedestrian activity is almost nonexistent in Southcenter, limited to the brief walks taken by people
walking to their jobs or to shopping destinations from transit. There are several reasons for this - a
street network scaled to the automobile creating block sizes that are too large to walk, long
distances between intersections and destinations, narrow unprotected sidewalks along wide highly
trafficked roads, large parking lots, and the fact that there are no residential uses in the area. In
some areas, sidewalks were created as a part of adjacent development and end at the parcel limits,
creating a pedestrian network that is interrupted and sporadic. Pedestrian access to the Tukwila
Sounder /Amtrak station from the urban center is not clearly legible, but this should improve with
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 61 5/12/2014
461
Southcenter Subarea Plan
the installation of a permanent station and a future pedestrian bridge over the Green River. Access
to park and open spaces in the area can be difficult to find on foot, and are often hidden behind
buildings. While Southcenter does not have many pedestrian or bicycle facilities, it does connect to
the Green River and Interurban Trails, which connect to the regional trail system. However, these,
too, are difficult to find and access.
5) Transit
Transit is provided to the area through King County Metro bus service, and Sound Transit's
"Sounder" commuter rail service. King County Metro regular routes as well as rapid ride routes
110, 128, 140, 150, 154, 155 and 156 serve the Southcenter area, providing connections to . Routes
operating hours. Route 110 connects the Tukwila Station ar a at Longacres Drive with north
Menton. Route 128 provides connections between Southcenter and White Center and West Settle.
Route 110 is a major east west bus route connecting the mall to Burien, the LINK light rail station at
South 154th Street, Southcenter, the Tukwila Station, the Burien Park & Ride and the Renton Park
& Ride. Route 150 is the major north south route connecting Tukwila with Kent and Scattle. Route
154 serves the Boeing Industrial site and connects to the Tukwila Longacres station. Route 155
provides service between Tukwila and north Kent, and Route 156 connects SeoTac, Southcenter
and the Tukwila Longacres station. Bus rapid Transit connecting the Burien Park & Ride,
Southcenter, the Tukwila Station and the Renton Park & Ride is planned to commence in 2013.
Sounder offers commuter rail service between Tacoma and downtown Seattle with stops in
Puyallup, Sumner, Auburn, Kent, and Tukwila. The interim Tukwila Longacres Sstation is located just
south of Longacres Way and {see Photo 8); construction of a permanent station is underway-to be
completed by 2013. The station currently accommodates Amtrak service as well as the commuter
trains.
A study by Mirai Associates (now Fehr & Peers) in 2002 indicates that transit accounts for about 2%
of all trips into and out of the area. A great number of these trips are to and from the Westfield
Southcenter Mall; the stop at this mall is the most highly used, and accounts for more than half of
the total riders in the study area. However, existing facilities at this stop arc inadequate for the
The City plans include design and construction
e#is contructing a new transit center in the vicinity of Andover Park West and Baker Boulevard.
This, combined with a permanent Tukwila Long acres Sstation, should make transit a more
appealing option for the area.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 62 5/12/2014
462
Southcenter Snb��re�{�ul��Il
OPEN SPACE ��N��RECREA���N
There are many natural resources w�hinthe Tukwila Urban Center (see Fig.A.2lthe most noteworthy of
vvhichisTukvvi|a Pond (see Photo 4QB),a body ofvvater created bya high vvatertable and the
runoff fronnaUof the innpervioussu�acesof the area's rooftops and parking lots, that isnovva
significant wildlife habitat and a stop-over point for migrating waterfowl. Access to the pond's
edges is restricted around nnostof its perinneter(see Photo 449\, but a park has been preserved
along the Pond's vvesternedge. Tuhxvi|aPond Park is located behind the cornrnercia|deve|opnnent
along Southcenter Parkway and the Target store on Strander Boulevard, and accessed along foot
trails from these roadways. Viewpoints of the pond and wetland are accessible along the eastern
edge of the Pond, on Andover Park East.
(]therannenitiesin the area indudeK4inNer Pond and the Green River (see Photo 1O�\.K4ink|er
Pond is a snnaUervvaterbody atthe eastern terminus ofK�ink|er Boulevard that flows into the
Green Rive�but is inaccessible fronnthe vvestbecause itis trapped behind several industrial
buildings. The Green River Trail, 2.6-miles of which are within Tukwila, winds along the west bank
of the Green River, and the Interurban Trail located on the old Interurban right-of-way east of West
Valley Highway, provide recreational space for bike riding, jogging, walking and inline skating.
Visual and physical access to these trails is difficult. k�uchnf the Green River Trail is hidden behind
the industrial deve|opnnentthat lines the river�nnt for nnostof its length through Southcenter.
•�..�m�. .`.
Photo 408. Tukwila Pond
SubaneaP|an_Counci|Finaidocx
5/12/2014
Photo 4J9,Tukvv|a Pond —no�hside
63
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Photo 102. Green River
-_J
7
Fig.A.2. Existing Open Space Network
ARCHITECTURAL AND LANDSCAPE CHARACTER
While a distinctive building and landscape design has evolved in the Pacific Northwest region, this
has had little influence on the design of buildings in Southcenter. Buildings are often separated
from the street by large parking lots, and their entrances are hard to find. The well-designed
buildings constructed after design review was implemented in 1982 are lost in the overall mix, and
there are too few of them to create a visible theme that could unify the district with any sort of
identity. The result is an unrelated hodge-podge of unarticulated buildings with little
ornamentation or design. The highly distinctive design context ofthe Pacific Northwest Iandscape
(see Fig.A.3. Design Context) stands in contrast to the existing character of the Plan Area's built
environment.
1) Buildings
Buildings within Southcenter are generally reflective of auto-oriented development. Structures are
reduced to the simplest, most economical form: often tilt-up construction, simply massed buildings
with a box-like appearance. While buildings are allowed to a maximum height of 115 feet, few are
more than 50 feet tall. The number of stories on the taller buildings is indiscernible as their
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 64 5/12/2014
464
Southcenter Subarea Plan
architecture is not articulated by typical desi cues like windows per floor or cornice lines.
Ornamentation across the facades is Iimited, except for signage.
2) St[e2tSC8pe
The site layouts and streetscapes surrounding the area's development are primarily oriented
towards the needs of motorists (see Photos 13-16). Primacy is placed on signage visibility and
availability of parking. Parking fronts or surrounds the building, distancing the building from the
street and the public realm. The overall impression of the area's development pattern is of large,
simple buildings fronted by asphalt, announcing convenience and ease of movement for
automobiles. Very little effort is made to create site layouts that are amenable to the pedestrian, or
to use pathways, trees or other site design elements that contribute to the pedestrian realm. While
there are a few individual projects that have successfully used landscaping, streetscape and lighting
along their edges, these fragments do not add up to create any consistent feeling throughout the
district.
Photo 112,. Andover Park West
Photo 124. Minkler Boulevard
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 65 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Natural
Environment
Small
Scale
0
0,"
Murkier Pond
Large
Scale
Green River
Tukaalla Pond
e
Water F ure
Walkable Environment
King Coun[y Trail
ranter Boulevard
uildings
integrated
with nature
I ,
lttgliltitottlittaktlitta
Beautiful
Backdrop
Friendly
r4^141'',
Engaging
Facade
ge
ale Signage
• ,,,,,,,,psONSISSOLIO,
•
M Vi
•:,•••
Destination
Plentiful Pa
Built
Environment
Urban Center Subarea Plan
City of Tukwilla, Washington
othcenter MnI
Fig.A.3. Design Context
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 66
466
5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
Photo 135. Southcenter Parkway
CONCLUSION
Photo 146. Strander Boulevard
The Tukwila community has seen its "Urban Center" transform from farms and undeveloped open
land to an industrial hub, and again to its current incarnation as an industrial and regional retail and
employment center. Southcenterisverysuccessfu|asacornnnercia|district'itis"thep|aceto
shop" for the City and a large portion of the region. Tukwila is the sixth-iargest city in the state for
sales tax collections, and most of those dollars come from the stores located in Southcenter, with
up to twa billion dollars' worth of retail activity generated annually by retailers in the Southcenter
area. However, the success of the district has led to rapid growth that has sprawled in haphazard
fashion across the enormous land area of Southcenter, resulting in a diffuse and exclusively auto-
oriented environnnenttbatisconfusingtoshoppersandfeatures|itt|econnectiontotherestofthe
community.
Whereas Southcenter is the economic engine of the City, it does not function as any real center for
the community. It is active primarily in the daytime, and there are few nighttime uses.
Development within Southcenter is exclusively commercial and is characterized by low-rise
structures surrounded or edged by surface parking. There are very few places to gather or meet
other than in the interior pedestrian corridors ofthe Mali.
Southcenter is bounded by substantial natural and manmade features that separate the district
from the residential neighborhoods to its north and west, and from commercial development to
the east and south. Because of a lack af other connections to the district, most peopie get to
Southcenter by car. Its development pattern is entirely oriented to automobile, with very little
consideration given to the pedestrian or bicyclist. Wide streets lack distinctive treatments such as
landscaping themes, interesting signage or architecture. While the City's Zoning Code states that
the TUC is intended to be "pedestrian-friendly", the large scale of the district's blocks and the
speed of traffic on its streets create powerful disincentives to walking in the district. Sidewalks are
inconsistent and narrow. Street crossings are few and far between, and the streetiights are timed
for cars, not for pedestrians. This pattern of development is vulnerable to loss of value likely to
stem from increasing gasoline prices and the popular embrace of sustainable patterns of
development.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 67 5/12/2014
Southcenter Subarea Plan
The City of Tukwila has a memorable natural setting, and Southcenter has several notable, if
hidden, resources, including Tukwila Pond, Minkler Pond and the Green River. But these resources
have thus far been a missed opportunity for the district - hidden from view, difficult to access, and
therefore rarely used by most of the City's population. Aside from these amenities, few natural site
features remain - most have been developed and paved over with asphalt. Southcenter's visual
character stands in contrast to the context that surrounds it - the incongruence between the green
residential fabric of the City and the hard asphalt of its Urban Center is heightened by the lack of
connections between them.
Tukwila's Urban Center does not reflect design character that is indigenous to the region or to the
City. Buildings are similar in height and massing, and no different than those that can be found at
any successful retail center in the country. The streets that make up the network of Southcenter
are indistinguishable from one another in both aesthetics and importance. There are no landmarks
to indicate important locations and anchors in the district, and no visual or physical connections to
Zink these places together. Unremarkable building design, spread -out development patterns, and
undefined streetscapes contribute to the character of a "placeless" setting.
But the opportunities inherent in Southcenter are strong. The area is easily reachable from
surrounding cities, with good access via the interstate freeways, and as result, the regional mall
remains successful. The recreational and natural amenities of the area make good incentives for
residential development throughout the district, providing potential anchors for new
neighborhoods. Transit options, including the King County Metro bus system, bus rapid transit, and
Sound Transit's commuter and light rail service, can be improved and built upon, and combined
with an improved pedestrian realm to provide an alternative to automobile travel. All of these
factors provide the framework for positive change and offer the opportunity to direct future
growth, to make Southcenter a true "Urban Center" for its community. The Southcenter Plan is
intended to build upon and extend these assets while improving the character, connectivity and
range of experiences offered in Southcenter for the community and the region.
Subarea Plan_CouncilFinal.docx 68 5/12/2014
468