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Under a city construction budget set-aside for public art in Kirkland, art is installed on the corridor.The first such work was The Spikes, created in 2017 by Lake Washington Institute of Technology welding student Merrily Dicks, [8] [9] and consisting of three 6–8 ft (1.8–2.4 m) columns of recycled railroad spikes, rising from a 4 ft × 4 ft (1.2 m × 1.2 m) metal base.
A portion of the central corridor, named the Cross Kirkland Corridor, is owned by the City of Kirkland; [6] a spur to Redmond, named the Redmond Central Connector, is owned by the City of Redmond; [7] a portion in downtown Bellevue was purchased by Sound Transit, [8] and a northern portion of the corridor remains Port property for dual use as a ...
The City of Bellevue plans to construct a lidded park over a section of I-405 between 4th and 6th streets as part of its "Grand Connection" program. [125] A new half-diamond interchange at Northeast 132nd Street in Kirkland opened on May 20, 2024, [ 126 ] while the Northeast 85th Street cloverleaf interchange is planned to be reconstructed as ...
Kirkland is a city in King County, Washington, United States. A suburb east of Seattle , its population was 92,175 in the 2020 U.S. census [ 5 ] which made it the sixth largest city in King County and the twelfth largest city in the state of Washington.
University of Washington Station, Evergreen Point Freeway Station, Yarrow Point Freeway Station, South Kirkland P&R, 108th Ave NE, Kirkland Transit Center, Juanita Totem Lake Transit Center Schedule Map: 257 No No No No Downtown Seattle Evergreen Point Freeway Station, Yarrow Point Freeway Station, Kingsgate P&R, Brickyard P&R Kingsgate ...
A combined state department of transportation was proposed in the mid-1960s and gained the support of Governor Dan Evans. [10] Charles Prahl, who resigned as head of the Department of Highways, criticized the Evans administration's proposal to create a transportation "superagency" and the prioritization of rapid transit in plans for the urban transportation system of Seattle. [11]
The municipality's transit operations was a stand-alone department within the county until 1996, when it became a division of the newly created King County Department of Transportation. In August 2018, the county council approved legislation to separate Metro from the Department of Transportation, creating the King County Metro Transit ...
In 2019, Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) began construction of Renton–Bellevue HOT lanes on I-405, which includes a rebuilt interchange for the Stride S1 Line. [ 49 ] [ 50 ] Sound Transit completed environmental review for the S1 and S2 lines (on I-405) in September 2020 and the S3 Line (on SR 522) in March 2021. [ 51 ]