Cayton Corner Park

Updated: July 2, 2024

Summer 2024

Seattle Parks and Recreation hosted a Groundbreaking celebration on Monday, June 17.  We are working hard to get the contractor on site by mid-July. One of Seattle Parks and Recreation’s newest park construction projects, Cayton Corner Park will be a gathering space for the community; a place for neighbors to enjoy whether meeting up with friends, hanging out while kids stretch their legs and imaginations, passing through on the way to the bus, or soaking up some of our precious sunshine. The park includes a small lawn area, an accessible pathway, retaining walls to address grading challenges, a stairway, picnic tables and handrails. It is located next to the Hearing, Speech, and Deaf Center. 

The space was named in 2014 after the Cayton family, who were early black settlers in the neighborhood in the late 19th and early 20th century. The Cayton’s newspaper, The Seattle Republican, was one of the most read in the city in the 1890s. Cayton also established the Seattle chapter of the NAACP.

Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) installed the new sidewalk in April 2018. The sidewalk curves around the tree into the park allowing the tree extra room to be healthy.

Group of people with shovels and dirt at a groundbreaking

Location

Cayton Corner Park, 1831 E Madison St, 98122

Budget

  • $15,300 Small and Simple Neighborhood Matching Fund (NMF) for schematic design
  • $25,000 Small and Simple NMF for design development and construction drawings
  • $51,436 Neighborhood Park and Street Fund
  • $75,000 NMF for finishing design development and construction drawings
  • $1,000,000 from Seattle Parks and Recreation, Park District Funding
  • $40,000 in Community and Foundation funding, Seattle Parks Foundation

Schedule

Planning: 2012
Design: 2013 - Early 2023
Construction:
   Phase I: Use the Neighborhood Park & Street Fund (NPSF) for 19tth Ave sidewalk improvements in early 2018
   Phase II: Use Parks District Fund for construction in Summer 2024

Completion: Early 2025

Project Description

The current development project will add much-needed public green space to the busy Madison corridor, link the Central District and Capitol Hill, represent the community through design and the namesake history and beautify what is currently an empty lot.

Acquisition

The initial Opportunity Fund project intended to acquire an open space for the neighborhood.

The acquisition was selected for the first round of Parks and Green Spaces Levy Opportunity Funding. The application received in this community-initiated process is a preliminary concept and the final design may be constrained by the project budget. All projects will go through Park’s public involvement procedure which includes public meetings and community input. They will also go through an internal Parks process to ensure the most effective implementation.

Past Work

The consultant and the community group worked with Seattle Parks and Recreation to complete the design development phase. This phase is based on the schematic design. Details such as path grades, dimensions and plant types will be refined. The site has some challenges for the designer. It is steep and is next to E. Madison Street, an arterial.  A beautiful large tree erupts into the sidewalk; the tree will remain in the project as an anchor design element.

Tree to be preserved at Cayton Corner

This builds upon the $25,000 Neighborhood Matching Fund award received in December 2013 to complete a schematic design for the park. The Friends of (what was then called) 19th and Madison Park used their NMF award to hire J.A. Brennan and Carolyn Law to complete a schematic design and a preliminary cost estimate for the park. This work was completed and the Design Report attached.

This Parks and Green Spaces Opportunity Fund acquisition is complete. Parks staff completed the acquisition of the 4,500 square foot, triangular-shaped lot. A consortium of neighborhood organizations will work with Seattle Parks on planning, design and construction of the new park.

Community Participation

Public Meeting 9/12/2017

Parks and Recreation

AP Diaz, Superintendent
Mailing Address: 100 Dexter Ave N, Seattle, WA, 98109
Phone: (206) 684-4075
Fax: (206) 615-1813
pks_info@seattle.gov

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