Ravenna Creek Project
Stream Flow Transfer Pipeline
-- completed 2004
King County's Wastewater
Treatment Division has installed a new pipeline in some sidewalks between
Northeast 54th Street and Northeast 45th Street in Seattle. When
completed, this joint King County/City of Seattle project will take clean
water from Ravenna Creek that flows into a sewer line and move it into a
new pipe to 45th Northeast and into Lake Washington.
Click on image for a larger view (51KB).
The creek flows are now treated unnecessarily at King County's West
Point Treatment Plant in northwest Seattle. Moving them through the new
pipe will reduce costs and make room within the sewer
system. The new pipe connects with an existing city storm drain to Lake
Washington.
Ravenna Creek--History and other projects
Ravenna Creek used to flow from Green Lake to Lake Washington through the
current location of Cowen and Ravenna parks. Because of development, the
creek was diverted into a sewer pipe and now exists aboveground only
within Ravenna Park, where it is fed by springs and runoff.
Since 1990, plans to restore the creek to the surface (called
"daylighting") within the park boundaries have been in
development. King County will transfer the creek into a new pipeline, and
the City of Seattle will daylight a portion of the creek within Ravenna
Park.
What did construction involve?
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Construction ran from September 2003 to February 2004.
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A King County contractor installed an 18-inch pipe in the sidewalk from
Northeast 54th along 24th Avenue Northeast; along Ravenna Place
Northeast to the intersection with Northeast Blakely Street; and along
25th Avenue Northeast to a location just north of Northeast 45th. (See
map, 51KB.)
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The contractor worked in 300-foot sections every two weeks, restoring
each section before moving to the next.
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During construction, King County's contractor worked to preserve
access to businesses. To keep traffic flowing on 25th Northeast, the
contractor installed the pipeline in the sidewalk. Construction affected
street parking in the area. The contractor avoided construction on
weekends.
Questions?
For more information about the this project, please contact Tim Goon, King County project manager, at 684-1174 or tim.goon@kingcounty.gov.
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