Skip to main content

Fall 2025

The North Loop Trail has reached physical completion! All trails are constructed and open for riding. Please join us for the grand opening event on Saturday, October 25, from 12—2 PM at View Point Park, 4307 28th Ave S.

The project was divided into two phases: Phase One, the South Loop, was completed in fall 2023, and Phase Two, the North Loop, was completed in summer 2025. SPR will monitor trail usage and impacts throughout the three-year pilot program.

Seattle Parks and Recreation (SPR), Friends of Cheasty Greenspace at Mountain View, Evergreen Mountain Bike Alliance, and the Seattle Parks Foundation (SPF) thank the community for their input throughout this project.

    Volunteers Encouraged

    For more information on volunteer opportunities, contact Evergreen Mountain Bike Alliance: www.evergreenmtb.org/calendar/work-parties

    Volunteer opportunities to help with the ongoing forest restoration activities are also available through the Green Seattle Partnership.

    Project Description

    The idea of a bike trail was first suggested by community members almost a decade ago. What started as a desire to provide more recreational opportunities as well as deeper connections with community and nature became what we now refer to as the Cheasty Mountain Bike and Pedestrian Trail Pilot Project.

    The proposal is a bicycle and pedestrian loop trail system. There would be limited grading and no significant trees are proposed for removal. There are identified Environmental Critical Areas (ECAs) located within the site. It is also worth noting that the proposed trail alignment has been reconfigured from the 2015 proposal: the new alignment further avoids the wetland complex and steep slopes. This is not a permanent use, but rather a pilot project. It is not being rolled out within all of our greenspaces: this particular proposal is only occurring within Cheasty. This three-year pilot will commence once the mountain bike trails are open. During that time, SPR will conduct an evaluation, which includes monitoring the trails and assessing impacts to wetlands, erosion control, habitat disturbance, and parking impacts. After the conclusion of the pilot period, SPR will decide if we will continue to allow mountain bikes on the trails within Cheasty Greenspace.

    Background

    This community-initiated project created Seattle’s first forested mountain biking trails. Led by the Friends of Cheasty Greenspace at Mountain View and built under the guidance of Evergreen Mountain Bike Alliance, the trails offer new opportunities for families and neighbors to access nature through our urban park greenspaces.

    Almost a decade ago, the Friends of Cheasty Greenspace at Mountain View, along with other stakeholders, had an idea. They wanted to build community and provide more access and opportunities to an underused green space. Through many conversations, community grants and hundreds of volunteer hours, that idea gained traction when Seattle Parks and Recreation began examining the feasibility. The result was the proposed bicycle and pedestrian trail pilot project within Cheasty Greenspace, which is located in southeast Seattle at Cheasty Blvd. S and S. Della St.

    This project included bicycle and pedestrian trails within Cheasty, which provide additional opportunities for families and neighbors to access nature through our urban park greenspaces. The proposal was quite intentional and was designed to minimize environmental impacts by utilizing best management practices for protecting wetlands and enhancing the stability of the steep slopes.

    In 2015, SPR studied the potential environmental impacts of the Cheasty Mountain Bike/Pedestrian Trail Pilot Project and found there were no significant environmental impacts and issued a Determination of Non-Significance (DNS). That decision was appealed to the City of Seattle's Hearing Examiner. On Jan. 26, 2016, the Hearing Examiner found that there was insufficient information for SPR to issue a DNS at this time and that more information and study are needed about wetland impacts, including drainage/hydrologic impacts as they relate to wetlands, impacts to trees, including through compaction and altered hydrology and any associated impacts to wildlife habitat.

    In 2017, the City's Survey Crews completed the surveying groundwork and mapping of the proposed trail alignment. Environmental consultants completed the seasonal wetland evaluation and re-evaluated the trail alignment, including the trail's buffer areas, with special emphasis on issues that were raised by the Hearing Examiner related to environmental impacts. The result of this work is an updated proposal that has been reconfigured from the 2015 version: the modified trail alignment further avoids the wetland complex and steep slopes. SPR has evaluated the impacts of the proposal as it relates to these limited areas of the environment and feels confident that the project can move forward. A Determination of Non-Significance was issued on October 15, 2018. The appeal period ran through November 5 and the public comment period was open through November 13, 2018.

    Contact Us

    Have questions or want to learn more about a project, contact us below:

    Contact Information
    Phone (206) 684-4075
    Email EngageParks@seattle.gov
    Website www.seattle.gov