
Lake Washington Blvd Keep Moving Street
Heard on Twitter: “Riding Lake WA Blvd #KeepMovingStreet was AWESOME today! It was quiet, calm, & populated with people out enjoying walks, rides, swims, paddleboards, etc.”

1st Ave NW Stay Healthy Street
This Stay Healthy Street in the Greenwood neighborhood, is incredibly popular, with neighbors and cross-town bike riders alike: “Did another ride today up to Richmond Beach Park in Shoreline, including the 1st Ave NW Stay Healthy Street. Someone made a yard sign cheering people on!“

25th Ave Stay Healthy Street
In Huffington Post: “Three hours after it went in, two kids and a dad biked by, and I had never seen kids that young biking in the street. As soon as people were invited to use the street, they did.”

Alki Point Keep Moving Street
Alki neighbors surrounding this Keep Moving Street are so enthusiastic about it, they made a fabulous video with the resounding message: “Make it permanent!”
They also generated this petition.
Stay Healthy Streets Across the City
Have you been seeing Stay Healthy Streets signs around your neighborhood? These are usually as simple as a “closed street” sign, an orange cone, and a blue sign, letting folks know that the street is closed to regular through-traffic, but OPEN for people to walk, bike, roll, and skate in. With ideas and encouragement from our grassroots advocacy organization, Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, the city of Seattle began implementing Stay Healthy Streets in neighborhoods across the city, in April 2020.
- Aurora-Licton Springs [map]
- Ballard [map]
- Beacon Hill North [map]
- Beacon Hill South [map]
- Bell Street between 1st and 5th avenues
- Central Area [map]
- Delridge/Highland Park [map]
- Golden Gardens [map]
- Greenwood [map]
- Lake City Way 27th Ave NE [map]
- Lake City Way 37th Ave NE [map]
- Mt. Baker/Colombia City/Hillman City [map]
- Othello/Rainier Beach [map]
- Wallingford [map]
- West Seattle/High Point [map]
Keep Moving Streets at Seattle’s Parks
Take the Survey
Do you use a Stay Healthy Street? Tell the City how you feel about the Stay Healthy Streets, how they can be improved, where you’d like to see more of them, and whether any of them should be permanent. This link leads you directly to the City’s official survey — and no worries, it shouldn’t take more than 5 minutes to fill out!
Join Our Grassroots Network
Did you know that Seattle Neighborhood Greenways is the leading grassroots organization* working to make Seattle a great place to walk, bike, and live? Find out how you can get involved or otherwise support our work today!
* We’re not affiliated with the City! 🙂
Sign Up for Our Newsletter
Have you seen our exciting Intersections e-newsletter? Chock-full of photos, videos, and stories of everyday people like you, working in their local neighborhoods to make Seattle a greener, healthier, more affordable and more equitable city to walk, bike, and live in.
Community-Sourced Ideas and Impact
Our grassroots network includes 15 neighborhood groups in every region of the city, plus close partnerships and alliances with 50+ community organizations. Together our work has led to major safety improvements citywide.
South
- Beacon Hill Safe Streets
- Duwamish Valley Safe Streets
- Rainier Valley Greenways-Safe Streets
- West Seattle Bike Connections
Central
- Central Seattle Greenways
- First Hill Improvement Association
- Queen Anne Greenways
- South Lake Union Greenways
North
- Ballard-Fremont Greenways
- Green Lake-Wallingford Safe Streets
- Greenwood-Phinney Greenways
- Lake City Greenways
- NE Seattle Greenways
- University Greenways