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Ravenna, Seattle
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ravenna |
| settlement_type | Seattle neighborhood |
| image_skyline | {{multiple image |
| border | infobox |
| perrow | 1/2 |
| total_width | 290 |
| caption_align | center |
| image1 | Cowen Park Bridge 01 - colormapped.jpg |
| alt1 | Cowen_Park_Bridge |
| caption1 | Cowen Park Bridge |
| image2 | 1737-63rd-Avenue-NE-Seattle-WA-98115.jpg |
| alt2 | Ravenna-Cowen_North_Historic_District |
| caption2 | Ravenna-Cowen North Historic District |
| image3 | University Village, Seattle, Washington, 2024.jpg |
| alt3 | University Village |
| caption3 | University Village |
| image_map | Seattle Map - Ravenna.png |
| map_caption | Map of Ravenna's location in Seattle |
| mapsize | 250x250px |
| coordinates | |
| population_total | 10574 |
| population_as_of | 2023 |
| population_footnotes | (Ravenna-Bryant) |
Ravenna is a neighborhood in northeastern Seattle, Washington named after Ravenna, Italy. Though Ravenna is considered a residential neighborhood, it also is home to several businesses, many of which are located in the University Village, a shopping mall.
Ravenna Park, located near University Village and the walking or biking route connecting Green Lake to Burke–Gilman Trail, is located within the neighborhood. |access-date=April 21, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060316025945/http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/urbantrailsmap1.htm |archive-date=March 16, 2006 |url-status=dead
Ravenna and Ravenna-Bryant
Human habitation in what is now Ravenna dates to the end of the last glacial period (c. 8000 BCE). Before Euro‑American settlement, the land formed part of the homeland of the Duwamish—the Dkhw’Duw’Absh (“People of the Inside”)—one of the Coast Salish nations. Their village of SWAH‑tsoo‑gweel (“portage”) stood on nearby Union Bay, while the forested wetland that became Ravenna served as a vital backyard and travel corridor.
Founding and early development (1880s–1900s)
The Burke–Gilman Trail follows the route of the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway, which reached the district about 1886. In 1890, mining and real‑estate entrepreneur William Wirt Beck (1851–1944) platted roughly 400 acres with an eye to creating an ideal community modeled on Ravenna, Italy. That same year he opened the Seattle Female College in his home—still standing a few blocks east of today’s Ravenna Park—and helped launch the Ravenna Flouring Mill Company, which built King County’s first grist mill. Beck also preserved 70 acres of old‑growth timber in the ravine that became Ravenna Park.
A streetcar line began service in 1891 along 14th Avenue NE (now University Way NE), skirted the south edge of Ravenna Park, and connected the suburb to downtown Seattle. In 1903, the Olmsted Brothers incorporated Ravenna Boulevard into their citywide parks‑and‑boulevards plan, giving the neighborhood its signature diagonal greenway.
Annexation and land changes
Ravenna incorporated as a town in 1906 and was annexed by Seattle the following year. At annexation, the town limits stretched from 15th Avenue NE to 20th Avenue NE north of NE 65th Street and to 30th Avenue NE south of NE 65th, with NE 55th Street forming the southern edge.
After the 1916 opening of the Montlake Cut, Union Bay’s water level dropped, exposing mudflats that were progressively filled during the 1910s–1950s. The southernmost reclaimed land later hosted University Village, an open‑air shopping center that opened in 1956.
Boundaries
Modern Ravenna is bounded on the west by 15th and 20th Avenues NE, beyond which lies Roosevelt; on the north by NE 75th and 85th Streets, adjacent to Maple Leaf and Wedgwood; on the east by 25th and 35th Avenues NE, facing View Ridge, Windermere and Laurelhurst; and on the south by NE Ravenna Boulevard and NE Blakeley or NE 45th Streets, across from the University District and University Village. The neighboring area commonly called Ravenna–Bryant extends the eastern edge to 45th Avenue NE between NE 75th Street and Sand Point Way NE.
Transportation
The principal arterial through the neighborhood is 25th Avenue NE, while 15th and 35th Avenues NE and NE 65th Street function as minor arterials. NE 40th Avenue NE and NE 55th Street serve as collectors. NE Ravenna Boulevard is a signed local bikeway, and 20th Avenue NE has been closed to motor vehicles since 1975, creating a popular pedestrian and cycling route over the former 20th Avenue Bridge.
Community landmarks and events
Since 1951, residents of Park Road—locally famous as Candy Cane Lane—have mounted an elaborate December lights display, drawing bumper‑to‑bumper evening traffic. A corner grocery has operated on Ravenna Boulevard since the 1920s, while Queen Mary Tea Room (known for Victorian afternoon tea), the Duchess Tavern (established 1934), and Seattle’s only family‑owned Volvo dealership round out the neighborhood’s longstanding businesses.

The late‑19th‑century view above looks northeast across the depot (foreground center) toward the Seattle Female College on the hillside, with the Ravenna Flouring Mill in the foreground; several buildings shown, including the Phillips House, remain standing today.
Ravenna-Cowen Park
Main article: Ravenna Park

The conjoined Cowen Park and Ravenna Park is located at a southwest corner of Ravenna-Bryant, reaching from beyond the source of Ravenna Creek beside nearby Brooklyn Avenue and Ravenna Boulevard, under the 15th Avenue bridge to 25th Avenue NE. The parks comprise the centerpiece of the neighborhood.
For many decades of Seattle city history, the park ravine had been ignored by loggers and farmers and still possessed full old-growth timber rising nearly 400 feet.(1)
Wilma (2001-08-20), Essay 3502
(1.1) See also list of newspaper articles referenced by Wilma
(2) Dolan & True (2003), pp. 142–143.
(3) Van Pelt (2001), pp. xxii, 181–185, 187–191.
The trees remained through the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition of 1908, at which they were featured exhibitions. Public controversy about them declined after their gradual disappearance in suspicious circumstances by 1926. Today, none of that size remain anywhere in the world.(1)
Wilma (2001-08-20), Essay 3502
(1.1) See also list of newspaper articles referenced by Wilma
(2) Higgins (1999-07-30), "Traffic"
(3) Van Pelt (2001)
The legacy helped save Seward and Carkeek parks, and helped galvanize conservation efforts ever since. Today, a single Sierra Redwood stands over the Medicinal Herb Garden at a south edge of the UW campus, at 106 feet somewhat over a quarter of the height of those of Cowen Park-Ravenna Park.(1)
Located at an edge of the central main campus, SSW of Drumheller Fountain near Stevens Way. (2) Dolan & True (2003), p. 144.{{cite web
|access-date = April 21, 2006
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20041220050340/http://home.earthlink.net/~ravennacreek/chronology.htm
|archive-date = December 20, 2004
|url-status = dead
Ravenna Creek
Main article: Ravenna Creek
Projects have included daylighting portions of the creek (partly with the goal of restoring native fish runs), building and maintaining trails, and restoring riparian habitat, sometimes in collaboration with the University of Washington's environmental science program.(1) Dolan & True (2003) (2) O'Neil (1998) (3) {{cite web |access-date = April 21, 2006 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20041220050340/http://home.earthlink.net/~ravennacreek/chronology.htm |archive-date = December 20, 2004 |url-status = dead | access-date =April 21, 2006 | archive-date =April 7, 2005 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20050407162551/http://home.earthlink.net/%7Eravennacreek/specific.htm | url-status =dead | access-date =April 21, 2006 | archive-date =April 7, 2005 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20050407162551/http://home.earthlink.net/%7Eravennacreek/specific.htm | url-status =dead
References
Bibliography
- — see heading "Note about limitations of these data".
- — maps NN‑1030S & NN‑1040S dated 17 June 2002.
- — links to "Village Descriptions Duwamish-Seattle"; cites Waterman, Buerge, Smith, etc.
- — draws on Dorpat & Crowley, Crowley Rites of Passage, and other U-District histories.
-
- — high-, medium-, and low-resolution PDFs available.
- — note caveat in footer.
-
References
- "Seattle GeoData".
- Dailey, p. 26.
- Phelps (1978), p. 25.
- (1 January 1891). "Ravenna Park: One of the Most Charming of Seattle's Environs". The Seattle Post‑Intelligencer.
- (April 2003). "Olmsted Park Plans for Seattle".
- Wilma, David. (20 August 2001). "Seattle Neighborhoods: Ravenna–Roosevelt — Thumbnail History".
- "Annexed Cities Exhibit". Seattle Municipal Archives.
- (January 1999). "History @ UBNA". Center for Urban Horticulture, University of Washington.
- Dorpat, Paul. (18 June 2001). "Seattle Now & Then: University Village".
- "Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas – Ravenna".
- (1 June 2002). "Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas – Bryant".
- (2005). "Street Classification Maps". Seattle Department of Transportation.
- (1975). "Study: 20th Avenue N.E. Bridge Closure". Seattle Engineering Department.
- Hook, Bailey. (23 November 2000). "Holiday Lights Keep Ravenna Tradition Bright". The Seattle Times.
- Lund, Carole. (15 March 2006). "Ravenna Grocery Marks Eight Decades". North Seattle Herald-Outlook.
- Higgins, Jessica. (6 December 1997). "Ravenna‑Bryant: Still a Neighborhood of "Firsts"". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
- Dorpat, Paul. (1994). "Seattle Now & Then".
- Williams, David B.. (March 3, 2010). "Seattle Parks Department cuts down huge Ravenna Park trees in the mid-1920s". [[HistoryLink]].
- Dolan & True (2003), p. 142
- "Restoration Ecology Network".
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