Roosevelt is a neighborhood in northern Seattle, Washington. Its main thoroughfare, originally 10th Avenue, was renamed Roosevelt Way upon Theodore Roosevelt's death in 1919. The neighborhood received the name as the result of a Community Club contest held eight years later, in 1927.
Roosevelt's principal and minor arterials are the one-way pair Roosevelt Way (southbound) and 12th Avenue NE (northbound), Lake City Way (SR 522) and 15th Avenue NE, and NE 65th and 75th Streets. City streets are laid out and designated in a pattern; see street layout of Seattle, directionals.
The boundaries of the neighborhood are Interstate 5 to the west, beyond which lies Green Lake; NE Ravenna Boulevard and NE 60th Street to the south, beyond which is the University District; 15th Avenue NE to the east, beyond which is Ravenna; and Lake City Way (SR 522) to the north, beyond which lies Maple Leaf.<!-- Consolidated 4 citations into 1 -->
History
The Roosevelt neighborhood was annexed to Seattle in 1891, but development remained sparse until the early 20th century. In its early years, the area was informally called the "Hollywood District", but it was officially renamed Roosevelt in honor of President Theodore Roosevelt. After Roosevelt's death in 1919, Seattle renamed 10th Avenue NE as Roosevelt Way NE, and the new high school (opened 1922) was dedicated as Roosevelt High School. A community club–sponsored contest in 1927 then adopted “Roosevelt” as the neighborhood's name, replacing the Hollywood moniker. On January 1, 1928, Sears, Roebuck & Co. opened a North Seattle department store at Roosevelt Way and NE 65th Street, anchoring the retail core. This Sears store operated for the next 52 years. To prepare for transit‑oriented growth, the Seattle City Council approved a comprehensive rezoning of Roosevelt in January 2012, allowing mid‑rise buildings up to about 65 feet (6 stories) near the future station. While many residents supported the light‑rail project, some advocated lower height limits to preserve sight‑lines of the high school's historic façade.
Schools
The Roosevelt district is also home to Roosevelt High School (RHS, opened 1922), one of the older schools in the Seattle Public Schools District. Like the street, it is named after Teddy, not Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Shops
Although primarily a residential neighborhood, the Roosevelt district had a Sears department store from 1928 to 1980. After its closure, the land was redeveloped as Roosevelt Square, and a Mud Bay pet store among other businesses. A block beyond Roosevelt Way to the west is the longest-established vegetarian restaurant in Seattle, independent Sunlight Cafe, nearly as old (1978) as Starbucks.<!-- Consolidated 2 references into 1 --> Numerous other small businesses still line 65th Street and Roosevelt Way. Teddy's is a multi-generational, multi-subculture popular biker bar. Roosevelt Way from 62nd Street north to 64th was somewhat of an "audio row", having featured a concentration of stores selling high-end audio and video systems and components. Today, only two such stores remain.
Parks
thumb|right|Map of Cowen's University Park Addition, southeast corner of present-day Roosevelt, showing original course of Ravenna Creek
The neighborhood includes two parks: Cowen Park, in the southeast corner (contiguous with the larger Ravenna Park of Ravenna); and Froula Playground, in the northeast corner, adjacent to the Green Lake Reservoir. The source of Ravenna Creek has been reduced to Cowen Park; since completion of the partial daylighting in 2006, the creek has been reconnected to Lake Washington.
Transportation
The underground Roosevelt Station opened for service on October 2, 2021, at NE 65th Street and 12th Avenue NE. The new Link light rail connection quickly accelerated redevelopment in the surrounding blocks. Between 2016 and 2021—the five‑year period leading up to the station’s opening—the Roosevelt urban village saw an estimated 1,626 new housing units built, a 95 percent increase in the neighborhood’s housing stock. Older single‑family houses and low‑rise structures near the station have been replaced by mid‑rise apartment buildings, new shops, and public amenities in a wave of transit‑oriented development. Sound Transit and local preservationists also collaborated to retain elements of neighborhood history: the façade of a 1947 Art‑Deco Standard Radio building was preserved and integrated into the new station design.
See also
- Neighborhoods of Ravenna Creek
Notes and references
External links
- Roosevelt Neighborhood Association official website
- Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas — Roosevelt
Bibliography
- <br> Economics > Laureates > Robert E. Lucas.
- <br> PDF at "The Company: What We Are All About"
- <br> Howe > Restaurants > Vegetarian.
- <br> From
- <br> High-Resolution Version, PDF format, 16.1 MB <br> Medium-Resolution Version, PDF format, 1.45 MB, January 12, 2004 <br> Low-Resolution Version, PDF format, 825 KB, January 12, 2004 <br> Planned Arterials Map Legend Definitions, PDF format, January 12, 2004.
- <br> "NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated June 17, 2002.
- Sound Transit webpage on future light rail station in Roosevelt
Further reading
- <br>"with additions by Sunny Walter and local Audubon chapters." <br>Viewing locations only; the book has walks, hikes, wildlife, and natural wonders. <br>Walter excerpted from
- <br>See "Northeast Seattle" section, bullet points "Meadowbrook", "Paramount Park Open Space", "North Seattle Community College Wetlands", and "Sunny Walter – Twin Ponds".
