Lincoln Playfields at Lower Woodland Park: Reject Option A, Advance Option C
The Seattle Public Schools Board of Directors, SPS Superintendent, and the Seattle Parks and Recreation Board of Commissioners
Our Option C is not the SPS Option C: See here for why it costs millions less and is better for everyone.
Feedback: You can provide feedback to SPS regarding their designs until May 9th on their website.
Update 4.28.2026:
SPS Option A has been changed to move back the baseball diamond fence by about 20 feet, creating access paths into the park. This is an improvement, although it still does not address dangerous overcrowding of the sports complex, taking out eight historic Linden trees along Green Lake Way, destruction of 2021 $1.7M rebuild of Soccer Field #2, 12 foot sidelines against fencing, or construction downtime of 18 months with no fields at all.
SPS Option B has been resurrected, which means adding a hybrid field at 50th and Aurora, leaving Soccer Field #2 and the east side of the park unchanged. We have not taken a stance on Option B.
SPS Option C that was presented had major differences with the version we have been advocating for, creating negative impacts and raising costs by many millions. We have created a formal response with pretty pictures. Briefly, these are the key issues:
- SPS Option C must simplify upgrades at Soccer Field #2
- No new parking lot for the new soccer field
- Orient the soccer field into the hillside using cut & fill grading
- Size and tilt the soccer field as SPS & Parks determine is best
You can provide feedback to SPS regarding their designs until May 9th on their website.
Update 4.25.2026: Unfortunately, SPS did not follow our advice on Option C design to contain costs and impacts, creating an expensive straw man version of Option C that they could tear down. We came prepared with a flyer showing how Option C actually works. The SPS take on Option C includes adding an expensive parking lot at the gravel lot location, expensive and unnecessary modifications to Soccer Field #2, and orienting the gravel lot field E/W instead of into the hillside, which increases tree and neighborhood impacts. We will continue to push for an honest assessment of Option C. You can provide feedback to SPS for the next 2 weeks on their website, which will be updated with meeting materials at some point.
Update 4/21/2026: We have visualization of the preferred configuration of Option C at the gravel lot from a volunteer architect! The field is oriented into the hillside to save all exceptional trees, and most trees on the hillside are small (< 8 feet tall) and can be transplanted. ADA accessible paths connecting to the 170 parking spot picnic loop, bathrooms, and crosswalk at 50th and Whitman can be seen here, click here to watch the video:
We have also simplified designs at Soccer Field #2 to remove the grandstand. All that is required is extending the field about 30 feet to the west, adding end zone fencing, adding goalposts, and restriping. Option C will take less than a month to build, while Option A will require a full spring, summer and fall with no field at all. Option C provides more total space for athletics, including junior leagues, ultimate frisbee, and other multi-sport uses. For more details on our Option C recommendations, look down below.
Update 4/10/2026: There is a public meeting being held on April 25th at Hamilton Middle School from 10 AM to 11:30 AM to present updated SPS plans for the fields. SPS is presenting two final designs, including one that we believe is Option C, and we hope the version presented is the "steel man" version of that design. Claims made by the Lincoln PTSA that Option A is cheaper or faster are speculative as there is no budget for either alternative, and Option C has not been studied or presented prior to this meeting. We have been published in the Urbanist and on Wallyhood and will continue to push for a good park design that supports a new field.
Update 2/1/2026: Parks Board Meeting Recap: Thank you for turning out to the Seattle Parks Board Meeting! About 20 people either spoke or attended the meeting in favor of rejecting Option A and advancing Option C. Nobody at the meeting was in favor of Option A other than the project leaders. See below for the problems with Option A, all about Option C, and selected community comments. If you have questions, feel free to reach out at friends.lwp@gmail.com. Thank you!
The Four Problems with Option A
Issue 1: Eight large (24"+) trees planned by the Olmsted brothers will be replaced with synthetic turf and a retaining wall
Update 4/28: No change here, the trees are still removed.
The trees were planned in 1910 by the Olmsted brothers as part of a continuous line along the Green Lake Way walking path. They are part of the park's founding character, providing shade to the fields and the path and buffering them from Green Lake Way. Option A replaces these trees with synthetic turf and extensive earthwork that goes right up to the Green Lake Way walking path, ending at a new retaining wall. The wall will be about 384' long, up to 6' high, and topped by fencing and many field lights that will only be 125 feet from neighbors across the street. In Option C, all field lights are at least 200 feet from residential neighbors.
Issue 2: Every side of the new fields will be fenced off, cutting off pedestrian access to the park
Update 4/28: SPS Option A now includes work to move the baseball diamond fencing back, creating space for walking paths into the park. Sidelines, BMX jumps, and the skate park will still be overcrowded:
While SPS says people can access fields from the corners and walk on the sidelines, the sidelines themselves will be sized to the legal minimum, which is 12 feet wide. That is dramatically smaller than the current 45' sideline areas bordered by paths and open space. The sidelines will not be safely accessible for pedestrians, families, seniors, and vulnerable populations. Forcing people to walk across the synthetic turf to access the park will either block dog walkers or invite pet waste onto the fields. We also expect the sidelines to be blocked by students and equipment when the fields are in use. The functional result of this plan is that the safe crossing at 52nd Street and recently renovated bathrooms there will be blocked from accessing the park, cutting off recently upzoned Tangletown from accessing the park.
Issue 3: Overcrowding will prevent events and cause unsafe conflicts with the bike jumps and the skate park
Update 4/28: SPS Option A includes work to move the baseball diamond fencing back, creating space for skate park access:
The fields will not only overcrowd the park by adding more users, they displace all open space that is needed for seating, safe circulation, and space for spectators or park visitors. Stray balls and families with little kids and dogs are either on the synthetic turf sidelines, in the parking lot, in the way of BMX bike jump users, in the skate park, or up against a fence. The proposed sideline areas do not legally allow for fixed objects such as seating and will not be safe for spectators. The SPS project team has alternately shown seating where the bike jumps are, or no seating around the fields at all, as there isn't room for both. What is now a central public gathering space that invites in all forms of community will become an unsafe and exclusive practice facility for high school athletics.
Issue 4: Infrastructure destruction and significant negative impacts increase costs, environmental impact, and legal risks
Update 4/28: No change here for Option A.
The proposed construction requires the removal of the recently completed Soccer Field #2, wasting a 2021 $1.7M rebuild, including high-end lighting, concrete platforms, fencing, and the electronic baseball scoreboard. The project will take about a year of construction time, during which there will be no fields for Lincoln. Destroying recently built infrastructure is not only bad government, it wastes the embodied carbon footprint of that project. Option A is also choosing to opt into a multi-year Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) under SEPA, potentially leading to indefinite delays and further inflating the total budget.
For more details, you can review Seattle Public School plans here.
12/12 Update: We have a better alternative: Option C!
Option C combines low impact versions of SPS Options A and B for a better Lower Woodland Park Design. Option C ensures Lincoln High School gains a new, safe facility capable of hosting games. It also preserves historic trees lining the Green Lake Way pedestrian path and maintains safe, legal access for all park users, including vulnerable populations and those with children and dogs. There are two parts to the Option C plan.
Option C Part 1: Soccer Field at Aurora and 50th
Update 4/28: Note that the field can be 330 feet long instead of 300 feet long. The designs here do not change much in response, although tree impacts will increase.
Option C utilizes the 170 parking spots and bathrooms in the picnic loop, directly east of the field. The field is oriented to minimize tree impacts, minimize neighborhood impacts, and for easy ADA access to the picnic loop and bathrooms. Events like cyclocross and cross country can take advantage of the field space for event staging or shift towards the additional 120 parking spots and 2 sets of bathrooms near the horseshoe pitches. The sidewalk adjacent to the new field and trees along it will be rehabilitated, improving public safety and park accessibility. By repurposing a defunct gravel construction lot, the design reclaims and positively activates the space with a field nestled in a natural wooded setting.
Option C and Option B site boundaries overlaid
Update 4/28: SPS brought back Option B! Details will be on their website eventually.
SPS points to what they studied as "Option B" when claiming Option C is too expensive, but clearly the impacted area of Option B is much smaller and the impacts will be far less. Option C covers about half the footprint of Option B by focusing exclusively on soccer without the addition of a football field or a new parking lot. This streamlined approach avoids destruction of exceptional trees, compared to the 78 trees slated for removal under the district's plan. It also avoids all expensive changes to the picnic driving loop.
Option C Part 2: Football/Soccer Hybrid Field at 52nd and Green Lake Way
Update 4/28: SPS did not follow this design in their version of Option C. They are proposing to spend 4.8M on a completely new hybrid field and are calling that Option C, wiping out Soccer Field #2.
Option C Part 2 has the same boundaries as existing Soccer Field #2 except for a 30' extension to the west to accomodate football. All costly destruction of lighting, fencing, and concrete is avoided, plus earthwork and regrading is avoided. Endzone fencing is needed, but sideline fencing can be avoided. As a much simpler project, construction time should only take about a month, versus up to a year for Option A. The 45' sideline areas enable flexible configuration for youth leagues and rec sports like ultimate, and space for seating and visitors allows Lincoln High School to host games.
Option C and Option A site boundaries overlaid
Update 4/28: Moving back baseball diamond fencing means the red outline will shift south by about 10 feet.
SPS consultants have effectively sidelined the community by refusing to engage with any stakeholders who question Option A. However, those who truly know and use this park understand the stakes: Option A will compromise the historic Olmsted design and degrade the park’s integrity for the next half-century. Under this plan, the eastern side of the park will become a congested, single-use facility that excludes the general public, while the western side remains a neglected area prone to encampments. We deserve a balanced solution. Join us in stopping Option A and advancing Option C—a design that respects our park’s history and serves the entire community.
FAQ
What about parking?
Here is a view of the current parking spaces:
- The athletic fields and the west side of Lower Woodland Park each have 290 paved spots and 2 sets of bathrooms.
- The gravel lot has been shut down for years at a time when used for construction staging without issue, for instance when Green Lake Way was repaved.
- There are 170 parking spots in the picnic loop directly adjacent to the gravel lot- a 4 way stop or signal could help with left turns and wayfinding into the loop.
- The athletic field parking lot regularly overflows. The picnic loop only fills up for regional events, such as cross country, and that is partly because event sponsors set up booths in the loop itself.
- Regional events like cross country and cyclocross can move event hosts out of the picnic loop and to the new soccer field, and those events could also start using the 120 spots and two sets of bathrooms towards the north.
- The zoo does not need the gravel lot since it moved its primary entrance to N 59th Street and Phinney Avenue. The lot is not accessible to the zoo entrance, and for the rare occasion when they may use the lot, the can shift that parking to the picnic loop.
Is a 300 foot soccer field a problem?
Update 4/28: We were told by SPS that 300 feet was fine so that is what we have advocated for, as it lessens costs and impacts. If 330 feet is essential, Option C can support that.
- Soccer field #2 and soccer field #7 will both be 330’, are walkable and can be reserved by Lincoln.
- Even with the shorter field, Option C creates 7% more field space than Option A (based on total field area of the two fields). This is due to the large, reconfigurable sidelines of the hybrid field (45 feet, vs 12 feet for Option A).
- 300’ soccer fields are common and even the standard in some counties. Here are some sites that have 300’ soccer fields in the Seattle area:
| Facility Name | Address | Size |
|---|---|---|
| Whitman Middle School | 9201 15th Ave NW, Seattle, WA 98117 | 300’ x 180’ |
| Bobby Morris Playfield at Cal Anderson Park | 1647 11th Ave, Seattle, WA 98122 | 300’ x 210’ |
| Queen Anne Bowl | 2800 1st Ave W, Seattle, WA 98119 | 300’ x 190’ |
| Grass Lawn Park (Field #1) | 7031 148th Ave NE, Redmond 98052 | 300’ x 200’ |
| Marymoor (Field #5) | 6046 West LK Sammamish Pkwy NE, Redmond, WA 98052 | 300’ x 195’ |
Why has this process taken so long?
- The BEX levy funded a new sports field for Lincoln High School, but SPS does not own any land for the sports field in the area, so public park land is the only realistic option
- In 2024 SPS failed in its effort to redevelop the Wallingford Playfield park due to community opposition and legal issues
- SPS assessed other locations and decided on Lower Woodland Park in 2025, which the community generally welcomed as there is space in the park for a field
- Unfortunately, SPS during the design process had no public meetings and decided to study field designs that have major negative impacts, “Option A” and “Option B”
- SPS held their first public meeting on November 6th of last year, where they announced Option B was impractical so they were doing Option A
- The community responded by reaching out to SPS with concerns that SPS did not reply to, then created Option C as an alternative by the end of November
- Over 450 people endorsed a petition to reject Option A and advance Option C, but SPS has so far refused to communicate about or study Option C
- About 20 people from the community testified or attended the Parks Board meeting on January 22nd asking they reject Option A and advance Option C
- The Parks Board did not green light Option A, and frustrated Lincoln athletics participants turned to trying to force through Option A with a petition
- SPS studied a version of Option C, and on April 25th SPS will present Option A and Option C at Hamilton Middle School from 10 AM to 11:30 AM
- We all want a field at LWP and all are frustrated with this process; the question is what’s the right field location for the next 50+ years of increased density and use of this park
What about the trees?
Option C preserves all exceptional and historic trees:
- Option C orients the new soccer field into the hillside at the gravel lot to preserve exceptional Western Red Cedars within and on the sides of the gravel lot.
- Option C does impact some broadleaf maples nearing the end of their lifespan. Five of the maples are badly damaged in the gravel lot, two maples would need to be removed from the hillside.
- Most other hillside trees are under 8 feet and can be transplanted in reclaimed gravel lot space. There are also two medium sized pine trees (about 12" diameter) that are badly twisted and would need to be removed, and one short lived horse chestnut would be removed. Here is a view of the hillside trees:
Option A, meanwhile, removes 7 to 9 historic European Linden trees that were planted at the Olmsted brother's direction in 1910:
- They form a continuous line along the Green Lake Way boulevard.
- The trees are integral to the park's founding character as a "woodland park", as they were designed to welcome people into the park by creating a natural boundary and create a tree lined path to the lake.
- The trees have one to two hundred years of life left in them. Here is a recent photo:

A few of over 150 comments we have received in favor of Option C
“I have coached and officiated games at the LW fields for 20+ years, and have seen the current over-use and limited parking and open space around the existing fields evolve into a crisis. Build new fields in Woodland Park – DO NOT put more density / use on the LW complex!!” – Patrick
“The idea that those tremendous, beautiful shade trees lining the east side of lower woodland park be removed to make room for heat-trapping plastic grass makes me so sad… In the sunny months those plastic turfs will be miserable to play in without the adjacent cool shaded air of those trees to bring down the ambient heat.” – Stephen
“Rising 8th grader next year and a neighbor to the school and the parks, this plan finally puts equity and utility at the forefront. Plan C looks like a great win-win solution for all concerned.” – Michael P
“I love the idea of a grandstand on the hybrid football / soccer field… it really adds to the overall feel of the school climate. At a time when many people are feeling more and more isolated and lonely, creating a way for the greater community to participate and join is something that is needed.” – Jon-Erik
“I do not support the renovation of this community space for new astroturf fields. I also have very serious concerns about how this will impact traffic… The school’s activity needs do not trump community safety and other’s enjoyment of the park.” – Maureen
“I already have trouble getting out of my driveway with the current traffic and this would make it worse. I currently deal with people parking blocking my driveway… though I feel this is a waste of taxpayer money if there needs to be another field in Woodland Park please choose option C.” – Margaret
“Revised Option A should be dead on arrival… We need to be conserving our trees and green space. These trees have taken decades to grow and AstroTurf is not green space… why was this planning not done before Lincoln reopened? Seems like another example of poor planning by SPS.” – Neal
“The proposed Option C plan looks to be the best option… I am very excited about the underutilized gravel parking lot being transformed into a soccer field with minimal impact on trees and the park driveway. The ability to have a grandstand… will make Woodland Park a really incredible park!” – Alyssa
"Please consider Option C. As a parent of a soccer loving middle schooler who hopes to play for Lincoln and as an adult who plays in the RATS league, I truly feel like Option C is a solid choice that benefits the community." - Alisa
"Our kids need more playfield space. The fields are utilized past reasonable capacity all the time. Option C would help reclaim a troubled space, lessen traffic and increase fields. What isn't to love?" - Alyssa
"Option A just looks like a bad idea for all the reasons listed. It's squeezing in too much for the space that is there and removing heritage trees which I'm very much opposed to." - Scott
"I can't believe Option A is being considered!! Absolutely ridiculous! This area already has extremely high use and is an integral part of Woodland Park. We need more trees—not more astroturf!!" - Gwen
"Option A would completely decimate lower woodland and is totally inappropriate. The loss of trees, the parking impact, it does not fit!" - Jessica
"I live within the area and am a parent with students at both Lincoln High School & Hamilton Middle School. This Option C proposal makes a lot of sense and I believe may be more cost & value effective. This plan makes better usage of available space, while minimizing negative impacts, and I believe will increase the overall safety of the area. Locating a soccer field that fits within the gravel lot brings regular life to an area of the park that is often under utilized." - Laura
To:
The Seattle Public Schools Board of Directors, SPS Superintendent, and the Seattle Parks and Recreation Board of Commissioners
From:
[Your Name]
Please take immediate action to ensure a safe and sustainable solution for athletic facilities in Lower Woodland Park.
We request the immediate rejection of the current proposal to replace the soccer field at 52nd and Lower Woodland Park with two new, densely packed fields.
Instead of this proposal, we urge you to pursue a responsible, distributed field capacity plan by prioritizing the following two actions:
Field Upgrade: Authorize a limited upgrade of Lower Woodland Soccer Field #2 at 52nd Street to a football/soccer hybrid design to meet Lincoln High School's needs. This can include upgrading the loop path, seating, and storage.
New Soccer Field: Authorize planning for an additional soccer field in a safer, less impactful location (such as the North Lower Woodland area or the Aurora/50th parking lot) to serve as an offset for existing parks users.
We ask that you follow a design that ensures Lower Woodland Park is safe and works for all users for decades to come.
