Over There

Eastside Towns, Then and Now

The suburbs—all grown up.

By Seattle Met Staff October 25, 2024

Bellevue is not exactly small anymore. As if you didn't know that already.

Bellevue

Then: Seattle’s blander reflection. A place full of office parks, glass buildings, and shopping centers serving women in pearl necklaces and men in khakis. 

Now: The same idea, but more diverse, more crowded with incredible food served in giant restaurants; and, yes, more parking spots than anywhere else on earth, most buried beneath enormous towers. 

Kirkland: still charming, but not quite as small.

Kirkland

Then: A sleepy waterfront town perfect for lunch with your grandmother or watching a parade. Hometown to a quaint retail chain called Costco

Now: Your dad’s Kirkland Signature T-shirt is ironically cool now, and after a few annexations, the town is that much bigger. Still a great place for lunch with Grandma—the tech presence draws a ton of restaurants.

Mercer Island is overlooked, and we get the feeling residents like it that way.

Mercer Island

Then: The affluence of Bellevue with the superiority complex of Seattle. At once an incredibly convenient and also weirdly inconvenient place to live.

Now: Overlooked amid the Eastside boom—and some residents like it that way. Even the public spaces, like Luther Burbank Park, feel kind of private—though the light-rail station opening here in spring will likely change that. You might also just come here to go to the eye doctor once a year.

Redmond...actually a great place to live?

Redmond

Then: Microsoft. Microsoft. Microsoft.

Now: OK, yeah, Microsoft still. But also perhaps the Eastside’s most ideal balance between suburban space and urban amenities like a walkable downtown. Not to mention lots and lots of bike trails and more great food. It’s not just the Matador anymore.

Issaquah is booming.

Issaquah

Then: A cute little town where loggers, the descendants of loggers, and people who like logging lived. Also nurtured the band Modest Mouse.

Now: Dual-income tech families who want to send their kids to a nice public school, so they moved to the Highlands. No longer modest.

The sprawl caught up to Woodinville, where wineries are no longer just a novelty.

Woodinville

Then: A rural town with a smattering of wineries and a heck of a lot of trees. A quiet place for quiet people.

Now: A true suburb for those who own both a horse and an Apple Watch to track their rides. The wineries are no longer just a novelty but an industry.

Bothell has maintained its identity even as it has been slowly consumed by the greater Eastside.

Bothell

Then: Not exactly part of the Eastside. But hey, there was a nascent UW campus and plenty of space to grow. 

Now: Microsoft employees totally live here. It turns out the McMenamins Anderson School campus is more fun than the UW one.

Admit it, you love Renton.

Renton

Then: An affordable town that the rest of the Eastside disavowed.

Now: A “relatively” affordable town with a newish waterfront shopping center and a Seahawks training facility that the rest of the Eastside still disavows.

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