Balancing Act
• Beacon Hill •
In Beacon Hill, it’s not uncommon for doctors and lawyers to live side by side with neighbors who are receiving subsidies from the city to make improvements to their homes. Economic diversity may be the defining characteristic of the South Seattle neighborhood, and it’s the one that residents are desperate to hold on to. “It’s one of my favorite parts about this place,” says Dylan Ahearn, an environmental consultant who lives in North Beacon Hill. “We’re all out in the street playing together all day long.”
It’s also the characteristic that might be the most endangered. In the slender strip of land just east of I-5, character-rich homes are still affordable—by Seattle standards—the views of the Olympics and the Cascades are virtually unmatched, and commute times to downtown are remarkably manageable even by bike. But now that the area near the new light rail station north of Jefferson Park is attracting commercial developers, it’s just a matter of time before more urban professionals discover what Beacon Hill has to offer—and what it could have in the future.
So now locals are wrestling with how to keep improving their ’hood without destroying its everyone-knows-everyone vibe. “You have to balance new development with trying to keep the character of the community,” Ahearn says. “It’s nice to have more services, but you don’t want to change the neighborhood so much that you drive people out and turn it into just another neighborhood in Seattle.”
Love
Beyond Borders
• Phinney Ridge
and Greenwood •
In case you haven’t heard, Phinney and Greenwood like each other. Like, they like each other. They started blowing kisses at each other years ago. Then they hooked up in July 2008 when Dale Steinke and Doree Armstrong launched the phinneywood.com neighborhood blog. And this summer, well, they want to get hitched.
No really. Members of the Phinney Neighborhood Association and the Greenwood Chamber of Commerce are kicking around the idea of having the communities tie the knot August 12, as their third annual joint street party mobs Greenwood Avenue North. If it happens, it would be a mock civil ceremony to join the platonically involved neighbors; the city doesn’t have any plans to officially merge them. But the sentiment is real. “Our neighborhoods are too small to be promoted by themselves,” says Sheri Hauser, owner of the year-old Phinney-based art gallery and collectible store Tasty. “It would be a real shame not to unite and have a bigger voice.”
The union wouldn’t just be about promoting local businesses, though. It’s a planned public acknowledgment of what residents have felt for years. “If you go from Phinney down into Ballard, you’re leaving a core business area, driving through residential streets, and then hitting another business area,” says Lee Harper, the executive director of the Phinney Neighborhood Association. “But you don’t really feel that when you move from Phinney to Greenwood.” Instead, one business district along Greenwood Avenue blends into the next, flanked on both sides by tree-lined residential streets.
They’ve got their differences—Phinney’s older and more established, and Greenwood’s more affordable and culturally diverse. And they’ve got their issues—specifically encouraging the transient younger population that lives in both neighborhoods’ multifamily housing to feel a part of the community. But if there’s anything a stable couple should be able to weather, it’s the occasional spat and kids.
Published: April 2011


Hello Seattle Met Magazine -
We would like to know why you left out Queen Anne hill as a best neighborhood in Seattle? We have great views, great parks, we are close to Seattle Center, Lake Union, downtown, and the freeways… what’s not to love? Queen Anne is a dynamic, all ages neighborhood with a university (SPU) and lots of seniors, single people, families, apartments, condos and houses. Check out the fun, funky restaurants and cool little shops on our website: www.qachamber.org.
Sniff. We miss the love.
Sincerely,
Queen Anne
Laurelhurst, may be one of the top places to live in Seattle but only for those that have money and lots to spend, which doesn’t mean that you have to be a millionaire. I live and work too close to Laurelhurst for comfort and find that the residents will support low cost housing as long as it isn’t near them. They’re cheap and uppity with a guilty liberal conscience.
The name is Greenwood-Phinney. We conjoined the neighborhoods for the purpose of neighborhood planning in the late 90s.
PhinneyWood is the name of Dale & Doree’s blog.
Wait … Montlake is one of the top 20 places to live in the Puget Sound because the residents are already complaining about the 520 construction that hasn’t even started yet??
UH huh ! The Weakly Mag words slamming Beacon Hill cannot be taken back !
Now the Weakly is still just another rag tabloid. too bad !
My previous comment was about Magnolia. Senior moment, please excuse.
Laurelhurst residents might be wise to continue it’s quiet. Consider similar west coast neighborhoods in CA and OR who have increased business in their locales. The residents rarely enjoy the benefits.