West Seattle, Washington
27 Monday
Story and photos by Anne Higuera
Reporting for West Seattle Blog
Alki Lumber will make its final sale in West Seattle sometime this Friday afternoon, after more than 100 years as the peninsula’s only full-service lumber yard. Preparation for the move to their new building in South Park has been under way since last month, but they’ve been open for business at 4422 36th Ave SW even as the shelves continue to empty. They will reopen as Alki Marine Lumber on Monday morning at 558 S. Kenyon Street.

(Alki Lumber’s retail area has little left on its shelves in West Seattle)
“It’s an odd mix between sad and exciting,” says Korey Love, Alki Marine Lumber president. Love has worked for Alki Lumber for 18 years, and says the goal at the new location is to keep things as they have always been—just in a new place. “We’re going to do our best to not change anything: Same service. Same product.”
Love says the new location has 2,500 sf of office and retail, a 17,500 sf warehouse and the lumber yard, for a total of 2 acres. In comparison, the West Seattle location, essentially the same size at 1.98 acres, is made up of multiple buildings and lumber storage yards with a street in between them following the angles of the triangle area. That means the size of the new location will be familiar, just consolidated and more efficient.

(Charlie moves fixtures bound for South Park using a forklift)
There’s a lot of history here, most of it far beyond even the longest employees’ memories. That’s what happens with a business founded in 1921. Charlie, who was hired for his first job at Alki in 1980, points out the building just east of Alki’s retail entrance that looks like a house. He says it was moved from across the street to its current location many years back. Alki Lumber’s website identifies that as the building it operated out of on 36th and Avalon after leaving its first location on Harbor Avenue. It was subsequently moved to its current location in 1957. Just as Alki Lumber moved again and again in its early years, Charlie sees Alki Lumber’s move to South Park as part of the inevitable change that happens with growth. “The city wants progress. The city doesn’t want a lumber yard. It’s a key development area — the writing was on the wall.”
After owning it for 100 years, the Sweeney family sold Alki Lumber to Marine Lumber in late 2021. “The plan was always to merge the two into one location,” says Love. That plan was spurred along by the Sweeney family’s plan to develop the West Seattle acreage into hundreds of apartment units called the Sweeney Blocks. Despite Alki vacating the property this year, there is not yet a projected date for demolition or groundbreaking for the development, family spokesperson Lynn Sweeney told WSB last month. Alki’s new building is right next to Marine Lumber’s longtime location with an address on S. Chicago Street. Marine Lumber’s operations will stay where they are, but the office staff will join Alki’s in the new building. “Come Monday, everyone will be under one roof.”

(Alki Marine Lumber President Kory Love at the West Seattle sales desk)
As Love took a phone order today, framed photos of 3 generations of Sweeneys still hang above the counter, along with vintage tools on the nearby wall. Some of it will go to the new location, and some will become keepsakes. Practical fixtures, like the drawer system for specialty nuts, bolts and other hardware is being wrapped up on pallets, ready to move to the new space. Other things won’t be making the trip. “We purged some of the inventory we’ve had for 20 years and haven’t moved,” Love said, smiling. Jerry, who’s worked at the store since 1999, quipped, “We’ll have a clean store this time.”

(Blue-wrapped fixtures ready to be moved to South Park location with Alki’s original building from 36th & Avalon in the background)
Moving all of the inventory will be a monumental effort, and Love says some of their vendors are offering up their own delivery trucks to help make it happen. He’s aiming for the middle of April to have it all cleared out. While Alki Lumber has a lot of loyal West Seattle customers, they only make up about 30% of sales, so they will actually be closer to the majority of their customers and to their own employees’ homes in the new location. Love says he hopes West Seattleites will find the trek down the hill worth it. “We’re bringing the coffee pot and we’ll still have doughnut Wednesdays,” and he says if the 10-minute drive is too much, “We deliver.” A grand-opening celebration will be planned for late spring.
Meantime, the West Seattle location was not noticeably less busy two days before it is permanently closed. Love says the new space will be an improvement for operations, but the old location won’t be forgotten. “This has 70 years of dirt and dust and all the other good stuff.”
(Seller photo from 2024 West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day)
What’s in YOUR basement/attic/storage unit/storage bins? Maybe something you don’t need any more – if you ever did – would be an amazing treasure for a West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day shopper. Or maybe you just have stuff someone else would find useful – dishes, outgrown kids’ clothes, toys, books … Whatever you might be considering selling – or looking to buy – the biggest shopping/selling day of the year is coming up, West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day, coordinated by WSB, 9 am-3 pm Saturday, May 9. The first step toward a fun sale day is for sellers to register to get their spots on the map – same fees we’ve charged for 18 years – and registration opens in exactly one week, on Wednesday, April 1. It’ll be open for about three weeks, so you have some time to decide, but if you know you’re having a sale, write that up-to-20-word description and be ready for our registration announcement in a week! After we close registration, we get busy making the map and list, which will be available online one week before WSCGSD. Thanks to everyone who makes this a fun day of meeting neighbors and finding treasures!
This Saturday (March 28), thousands of “No Kings” rallies are planned around the country. In case you’re wondering what’s planned in West Seattle, here’s what we have:
WEST SEATTLE INDIVISIBLE: Our area’s major resistance group is emphasizing the main Seattle rally (Cal Anderson Park, marching to Seattle Center), and last we heard had sold out seats on four buses to take more than 200 people there: “WSI is focusing our attention on the big march downtown, we will have a very visible presence with our ‘we ARE the people’ theme with colorful tall pole signs.” The buses are departing at 11 am.
WEST SEATTLE RESIST: This group that rallies every Sunday at California/Alaska plans to be there 10 am-2 pm on Saturday.
SINGING RESISTANCE: This group sent the following announcement:
Singing Resistance is a movement grounded in love, nonviolence, and solidarity. In the context of escalating violence towards our communities and federal invasions of our cities and towns, we sing because song is an antidote to fear, song helps us connect to each other, and through song we can name and protect what we hold sacred. We sing publicly in the streets for the sake of solace, strength, solidarity, to voice our dissent, and to refuse cooperation with oppressive and autocratic forces.
Join us at the West Seattle Resist: No Kings Day protest in the Alaska Junction
Saturday, March 28th, 2026
Meet at 10 am at Junction Plaza Park, one block EAST of the Junction on SW Alaska St.
We’ll learn and practice songs and then join the larger protest in the Walk All Ways intersection.Anyone with a voice can sing these songs. Bring signs, rhythm instruments, a friend, and your joy!
OLD TYME ADULTS FOR DEMOCRACY: The senior-led group that has protested at Admiral/California will be there 2-3 pm on Saturday.
(Any other “No Kings”-related gatherings in West Seattle on Saturday? westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you.)
We’ve received a few recent reader questions about a longstanding problem – the “When Flashing, Use High-Level Bridge” signs not necessarily reflecting what’s actually happening with the low bridge, particularly the one on Delridge. So we asked SDOT if this problem is on their radar for a fix. They’re “working on a plan,” says spokesperson Ethan Bergerson:
The issues with the road signs alerting travelers when the low bridge is open or closed are due to a combination of factors including aging equipment and multiple instances of wire theft. We are working on a plan to upgrade and replace the components, and do not yet have a definitive timeline for these repairs.
Checking back email, the oldest note we can find on this dates back to 2024, at which time an SDOT staffer told a reader, “We have been working to troubleshoot and correct the issue for the past few weeks. Our electricians recently replaced a bad relay in the system, but unfortunately that did not completely correct the issue.”
2:37 PM: Police are investigating gunfire reported to have happened on the Highway 509 offramp near Myers Way. According to radio exchanges, a driver heard two pops from bullets breaking glass on windows of his Silverado. The shooter was reported to be in a mid-2010s black Acura Integra with fully tinted windows and last seen headed back onto Highway 509 and northbound toward the 1st Avenue S. Bridge. No injuries reported.
2:45 PM: Since it’s been determined this happened on the state highway offramp, dispatch told officers, the investigation will be taken over by the State Patrol.
ADDED THURSDAY: Here’s the SPD summary of the incident:
At 1417 hours, victim reported he accidentally cut off a vehicle when he merged into a lane of traffic. The driver and/or passenger in the suspect vehicle fired two rounds at the victim. One round hit the head rest and stopped. The other round nearly missed the victim’s head as well. No suspect information was available other than a black sedan. Two rounds were located inside the victim vehicle.
We told you a bit about The Hope Factory when Mayor Katie Wilson used it as the setting for her announcement of legislation to add hundreds of shelter spaces – including tiny houses – this year (WSB coverage here). The Hope Factory, at the west end of S. Nevada Street, is a cavernous space where volunteers build them. Today, those volunteers include members of the giving group Impact West Seattle.
When they voted to give one of their recent quarterly contributions – comprised of donations from their 200+ members – to The Hope Factory (aka Sound Foundations Northwest), they also made a plan to join the volunteer builders for a day, and today is that day.
We asked if we could stop in to see how that went, and just came back from that visit. Impact West Seattle has eight members building this morning and eight more arriving for the afternoon. This morning, they’ve been building walls; this afternoon, those walls will be raised to finish assembling tiny houses; paint follows.
The Hope Factory – which got its start in West Seattle, with a tiny-house-building operation under a big canopy at Camp Second Chance – has this down to a science, with everything arriving pre-cut, so volunteers just have to assemble, with the help of manuals as well as other, longtime volunteers.
The volunteer operation opens new spots every week after their weekly newsletter goes out on Wednesdays. You can read the newest edition and subscribe here.
City policy requires Community Advisory Committees be set up for sites like the tiny-house village Camp Second Chance and the planned tiny-house/RV-lot Glassyard Commons, both in southeast West Seattle. These groups’ meetings are meant to be a monthly opportunity to get updates on what’s happening at the sites and surface any community concerns. Participation in the Camp Second Chance CAC has long lagged; two community members were at its monthly online meeting on Tuesday afternoon, along with reps from LIHI, which operates CSC and will operate Glassyard Commons. We watched the meeting for the first time in months. Here’s what we heard: 82 people are living at the 9701 Myers Way S. site right now – and 24 pets, it was noted. Five tiny houses are vacant but not because of a shortage of prospective residents; the previous occupants left belongings behind and CSC has had some kind of issue – about to be resolved, participants were assured – storing them. Tiny houses are meant to be a stepping stone to permanent housing, and the LIHI reps said that’s pending for 12 CSC residents, including two who recently secured full-time employment. The prospective housing ranges from an apartment building that LIHI is managing to a voucher to help with rental housing in Snohomish County. Another unique housing placement: They’re in the process of finding an adult care home for a camp resident with a brain injury. One community concern surfaced – getting the city to deal with an unsanctioned encampment on city property outside the CSC fence. The meeting lasted less than a half-hour; next one is at 4 pm April 28, and you can get on the list for the link – or ask about advisory committee participation – by emailing marta@lihi.org.
The photos and report are from Natalie:
We had our townhouse group mailbox broken into overnight around 3:30 am 3/25 at Brandon/California. We have video and it appears they had keys to just open the whole set of 4 mailboxes. USPS case number 86835698 if anyone recognizes them; attached are photos of the car and 2 individuals that opened and stole from our box.
There was a third person in the car that never left the vehicle. We couldn’t read the plate from the video. A reminder to bring your mail in daily.
Mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar – which you can preview any time – here’s what’s happening today/tonight:
REMINDER – WALKING FOR WELL-BEING: 10 am Wednesday walks start from 47th/Fontanelle (so if you didn’t see this in the calendar and missed it because of our late list today, here’s your reminder for next week).
TODDLER READING TIME: 10:30 am at Paper Boat Booksellers (4522 California SW; WSB sponsor).
PLAY AMERICAN MAH JONGG: 2-4 pm, play at the new location of Missing Piece (4707 California SW).
MYSTERY CLUB AT THE LIBRARY: 2:30 pm, fun for tweens at Southwest Library (9010 35th SW).
HIGH-SCHOOL SPORTS: From the Metro League schedule today: Two baseball games at Nino Cantu SW Athletic Complex (2801 SW Thistle), West Seattle HS vs. Cleveland at 2:30, Chief Sealth IHS vs. Seattle Academy at 5 pm.
DROP-IN HOMEWORK HELP: 4-7:30 pm at High Point Library (3411 SW Raymond).
ROCK BAND GAMING AT MR. B’S MEAD CENTER: 5-10 pm, weekly event in South Delridge! (9444 Delridge Way SW)
FIX-IT WORKSHOP: Repair your broken item instead of throwing it out! Weekly event, free (donations appreciated), 5:30-7:30 pm at West Seattle Tool Library (4408 Delridge Way SW, northeast side of Youngstown Cultural Arts Center).
HIGHLAND PARK WAY PROJECT @ HPAC: Project reps from SDOT will be the main guests at tonight’s HPAC meeting, 6 pm at Southwest Library (9010 35th SW), to talk about the Highland Park Way hill lane-conversion project (here’s our latest report).
WEST SEATTLE URBANISM: Want to talk about our city’s growth, present and future, as the City Council reviews round 2 of rezoning? You’re invited to this 6 pm meetup at Great American Diner/Bar (4752 California SW).
CRIBBAGE NIGHT: 6 pm at the West Seattle Eagles (4426 California SW), non-members welcome too.
KUNDALINI YOGA: Now at 6 pm at Inner Alchemy Studio/Sanctuary (3618 SW Alaska). $35.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT RUN: Get moving at midweek – go on the weekly 6:15 pm group run with West Seattle Runner (2743 California SW; WSB sponsor) tonight – all welcome, all paces!
HUM-IN PROTEST: This gathering is for protesting via sound vibration, 6:30-7 pm Wednesdays at Junction Plaza Park (42nd SW and SW Alaska).
LIVE MUSIC AT THE LOCOL: 6:30 pm. 21+. Rotating performer lineup. (7902 35th SW)
HOLY HOUR FOR PEACE: The community is welcome to join in this contemplative event to follow Pope Leo’s exhortation to “dare peace.” 7 pm to 8 pm at Our Lady of Guadalupe (35th SW and SW Myrtle).
MUSIC BINGO: Weekly music bingo at at The Good Society (California/Lander), 7 pm.
TRIVIA x 5: Five West Seattle trivia venues tonight starting with a special Wednesday night edition of Easy Street Records‘ Music Quiz, 6:30 and 7:30 pm … Also: 7 pm at Admiral Pub (2306 California SW), free to play, cash prizes … Larry’s Tavern (3405 California SW) has Wednesday trivia at 7:30 pm … Quiz Night at 8 pm at Beveridge Place Pub (6413 California SW) … And trivia starts at 8:30 pm at Talarico’s (4718 California SW).
SKYLARK OPEN MIC: The stage is yours at West Seattle’s longest-running open mic! 7:30 pm signups for the weekly event at The Skylark. (3803 Delridge Way SW)
KARAOKE AT ADMIRAL PUB: Sing at the pub starting at 8:45 pm, after trivia. (2306 California SW)
Planning something that’s open to community participation/observation? Please send us info so we can add it to West Seattle’s only comprehensive event calendar! westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!
If you took recyclables and/or shreddable paper to last Saturday’s event at South Seattle College (WSB sponsor) presented by the West Seattle Junction Association and West Seattle Chamber of Commerce, you were one of 503 participants. The local organizations’ partners at Waste Management also reported, “We saw 84% of residents coming from single-family homes, 11% of residents coming from apartments/condominiums, and 5% of residents coming from townhomes. The most popular items that were donated by number of households were appliances/electronics, shredded paper, and batteries/lightbulbs. The least popular items were propane canisters and clothing/textiles. An interesting note is that we saw a 50% reduction in the amount of foam collected (likely due to less amount of Styrofoam packaging being created).”
If you missed it, there’s annther big free-dropoff recycling event coming up in a month, the spring Recycle Roundup at Fauntleroy Church (9140 California SW), exactly one month away, 9 am-3 pm Saturday, April 25 – here’s the list of what will and won’t be accepted.
6:00 AM: Good morning! Welcome to Wednesday, March 25, 2026.
WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET
Showery and breezy, high around 50, possible afternoon thunderstorms. Sunrise at 7:01 am; sunset at 7:29 pm.
(Tuesday just before sunset – photo by Bob Burns)
TRANSIT TODAY
West Seattle Water Taxi – Regular West Seattle service, winter schedule through April 10.
Washington State Ferries – Check WSF’s alert page for last-minute changes. The Fauntleroy-Vashon-Southworth route is now on its spring/summer schedule, with 3 boats on weekends as well as weekdays.
Metro buses – Regular weekday schedule and routes. Note that this Saturday brings Metro’s service change, with buses changing from Barton to Trenton in preparation for the repaving project.
SPOTLIGHT TRAFFIC CAMERAS
High Bridge – Here’s the main camera, followed by the Fauntleroy-end camera:
Low Bridge – Here’s the westward view. Also note, maritime-opening info is available via X (ex-Twitter):

1st Avenue South Bridge (fully open but 25 mph speed limit):

Delridge cameras: In addition to the one below (Delridge/Genesee), cameras are also at Delridge/Juneau, Delridge/Henderson, Delridge/Oregon, and video-only (so you have to go to the map), Delridge/Holden and Delridge/Thistle.

MORE TRAFFIC CAMS: All functioning traffic cams citywide are here (including links to live video for most); for a quick scan of West Seattle and vicinity-relevant cameras, see this WSB page.
See trouble on the bridges/streets/paths/water? Please text or call our hotline (when you can do it safely, and after you’ve reported to authorities if they’re not already on scene) – 206-293-6302. Thank you!
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