
Magnuson Park

The Fin Project (public art at the park)
Magnuson Park is a 350 acre (140 ha)
park on
Sand Point at Pontiac Bay,
Lake Washington, in the
Sand Point neighborhood of
Seattle, Washington. The park is the second largest in Seattle after 534 acre (220 ha)
Discovery Park in
Magnolia.
Sand Point is the
peninsula with Pontiac and Wolf bays that juts into
Lake Washington, map .
Area 4 is the un-named greater Sand Point area of northeast Seattle..
Sand Point-Magnuson Park
The first park at Sand Point was established in 1900 as
Carkeek Park, a gift from developers Mr. and Mrs. Morgan J. Carkeek. After
World War I, a movement was begun to build
Naval Air Station (NAS) Sand Point, and
King County began acquiring surrounding parcels. In 1922 the
Navy began construction on the site, which it was leasing from the county, and in 1926 the Navy was deeded the field outright. The name
Carkeek Park was subsequently given to
a new park north of
Ballard. This deed amounted to a public gift of $500,000 from the county to the Navy, in 1926 dollars; this would be $5,283,000 in 2005 dollars, not including significant real estate appreciation. The Seattle Chamber of Commerce—a commercial entity—had done the same thing for the Army 28 years before with Fort Lawton, much of which is now Discovery Park.
In 1970 the airfield shut down, and negotiations began as to who would receive the surplus property. In 1975 a large portion of the Navy's land was given to the City of Seattle and to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The city's land was largely developed as a park and named Sand Point Park. In 1977, it was renamed Magnuson Park in honor of
Washington Senator Warren G. Magnuson. Both names are in use. Fourteen years later, in 1991, the naval installation closed completely, and the remaining land was divided among several entities including the city.
thumb|Aerial photograph of the Naval Air Station Seattle in the 1940s.Magnuson Park is home to Seattle's biggest playground, the Junior League of Seattle Children's Playground which was designed, developed and funded through the efforts of the Junior League of Seattle, a women's leadership and volunteer organization. Spearheaded by prominent Seattle resident, Mary Herche, the Playground celebrated its 10th anniversary on Saturday, May 16 where children played in the 20,000 square-feet of colorful climbing walls, sand box, swings, slides and much more.
The Junior League of Seattle donated and dedicated this "Air, Land and Sea" playground to the children of Seattle to commemorate the organization's 75 years of community service. The playground was designed partly by children and built entirely by volunteers at the site of the former Naval Air Station Control Tower.
Sand Point provides habitat for the second richest bird habitat of any park in Seattle, with 170 species reported. In addition, Magnuson Park today features several sports fields, a picnic area, a swimming beach, public sailboating, many paths for walking and bicycling, a
dog park or off-leash dog area and "Kite Hill", a large grassy man-made hill that was made from pieces of the old aircraft runway. Vehicle access includes boat launch ramps and large parking lots for cars, trucks, and boat trailers. As of Fall, 2005, the City of Seattle has a development plan that features a large sports field complex of approximately ten fields, with seven to be well lit, and this plan has encountered opposition from neighborhood groups, environmental and park advocates.
The park also has a history of unofficial clothing-optional use since the mid 1970s. Sporadic and quiet use is in the northeast part of the Park, east of NOAA. Long-term volunteer efforts continue toward enhancing safe and legal use. Magnuson Beach Bares as MagnusonBeach.org has recently begun posting organized events for these purposes (August 2006). Magnuson Park is one of about two dozen locations in Seattle.
Sand Point
Sand Point is a
peninsula that juts into
Lake Washington between Wolf Bay and Pontiac Bay. It is occupied by Magnuson Park, parts of
View Ridge,
Windermere and gives its name to the
Sand Point neighborhood to the west.
Formerly the easternmost point was
Naval Air Station-Sand Point; the former military base is now mostly public park with a portion occupied by
NOAA and by city housing.
The area has been inhabited since the end of the last
glacial period (c. 8,000 B.C.E.—10,000 years ago). Prairie or tall grassland areas (anthropogenic
grasslands) were maintained along what is now Sand Point Way NE (map ), among numerous locations in what is now Seattle. The
Xacuabš (
Xachua'bsh or
hah-choo-AHBSH, "the People of the Large Lake", now of the
Duwamish tribe) had the village of
TLEHLS ("minnows" or "shiners") on the shores of what is now called Wolf Bay in
Windermere, on Lake Washington south of
SqWsEb, now called Sand Point-Magnuson Park.
BEbqwa'bEks ("small prairie"—anthropogenic grassland) was near what is now Windermere. One or three sizable
longhouses have been documented. Villages were diffuse. These people may have been associated with the
hloo-weelh-AHBSH of
Union Bay. Just on the other side of Sand Point, the village of
too-HOO-beed was of the
too-oh-beh-DAHBSH extended family, near what is now called
Thornton Creek at what is now
Matthews Beach, so Sand Point was their shared "side yard".
See also