Skip to content

Linnea Westerlind Visited Each of Seattle’s 426(!) Parks for This Awesome Guide

The Seattle native details every public park in the city.

By ELAINA FRIEDMAN July 24, 2017

_MG_8155

This article originally appeared in the July 2017 issue of Seattle magazine.

In the spring of 2009—after a particularly long winter with a new infant—Linnea Westerlind made it her mission to visit every public park in Seattle (426 and counting). Four years, three children and countless Google Maps printouts later, the West Seattle resident—who also works as a marketing and communications consultant—completed her mission. She chronicled her journey and discoveries on a website, and then turned it into a book. The newly published Discovering Seattle Parks ($18.95; Mountaineers Books) offers a comprehensive look at about 100 of Westerlind’s favorite spots, from urban parks with usable features (such as chalk walls and bocce courts) to hidden alcoves tucked away near the water.

Growing up in Kirkland, Westerlind learned to love the outdoors during ski trips to Snoqualmie and Stevens Pass, on hikes and while visiting West Seattle’s Lincoln Park. Now, as a city dweller with a family, she’s passionate about uncovering the city’s public spaces and sharing them with her kids and others who love green space and parks. “With the number of parks, the variety and the miles of shoreline, it’s hard to find another city that has what we have,” she says.

During her explorations, she discovered how rooted Seattle’s parks are in the city’s history. “I found that exploring Seattle’s parks is a great way to learn about our early founding, like the Olmsted brothers’ influence [who, in the early 1900s, designed many parks in Seattle and beyond, including New York City’s Central Park], and to understand where we were as a young city.” 

Of Seattle’s parks and her new book, she says, “My hope is to share something new for everybody; that everybody can find something new to seek out.” 

Vital Stats

Favorite Park
Linnea Westerlind’s favorite parks are the lesser-known ones, such as Jack Block Park in West Seattle.

Delightful Find 
She discovered many waterfront street-end parks, some of which have been informally adopted by the surrounding neighbors, who have added benches and flowers.

Smallest Site
One tiny North Seattle park turned out to be an overgrown parking strip.

Field Notes 
She started the project before smartphones were ubiquitous. “I used to print out Google Maps, mark the addresses of the parks and use them as my guide. Sometimes it would be raining, and my maps would turn soggy and my notes would smear. I got lost a lot!”

 

Follow Us

AANHPI Month: Where to Celebrate, Eat, and Learn Around Seattle

AANHPI Month: Where to Celebrate, Eat, and Learn Around Seattle

From festivals and museum exhibits to food tours and historic neighborhoods, here are a few ways to mark the month across the region.

Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month—known as AANHPI Month—is observed in the U.S. each May. It began as a weeklong observance in 1978 and expanded to the full month in 1992. Asian, Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities in the United States extend back much further, including to the late 16th century, when…

Black Panther Park in Skyway Becomes First Black Panther Park in the World

Black Panther Park in Skyway Becomes First Black Panther Park in the World

The new community garden honors the Black Panther Party’s legacy of food justice and the Skyway neighbors who helped bring it to life. 

On a sunny Sunday earlier this month, at the corner of 75th Avenue and Renton Avenue South, the community gathered for the opening of Skyway’s Black Panther Park. Inspired by the Black Panther’s Free Breakfast for School Children program that compelled the federal government to provide breakfast in schools, Black Panther Park is a community…

Rearview Mirror: A Family Coming Apart, SIFF, and My First Fashion Show

Rearview Mirror: A Family Coming Apart, SIFF, and My First Fashion Show

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

The Family House A house can hold a lot, and Seattle Rep’s Appropriate knows that. Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ Tony-winning play, directed here by Timothy McCuen Piggee, drops the Lafayette siblings into their late father’s hoarded, falling-apart Arkansas plantation home for an estate sale, and lets the whole thing crack open from there. The sibling dynamics are…

Studio Sessions: Raili Jänese

Studio Sessions: Raili Jänese

The Kirkland painter brings a playful eye to daily life and the little rituals of being human.

Artist Raili Jänese pays close attention to the small stuff. It might be a goose on the move, a rabbit in the yard, or a person lost in the rituals of coffee or cooking. The Estonian-born artist, now based in Kirkland, makes colorful acrylic works that turn everyday behavior—human and animal alike—into something funny and…