King County Metro will run two free shuttles in downtown Seattle this summer. The Waterfront Shuttle will operate everyday between May 21 and September 7. Buses will arrive every 15 minutes from 10am to 10pm.
This route travels between the Chinatown/ International District and Seattle Center, via Pioneer Square, the waterfront (Alaskan Way), and Belltown.
Sound Transit’s Executive Committee will have an unusual second meeting this month to further debate the resolution to downscale ST3 to shrink its budget gap. The meeting is today at 1:30-4:00pm. The meeting page has links to the agenda, the resolution, two reports evaluating the Enterprise Initiative, and how to attend the meeting in person or virtually and to give public testimony. There will be no decision today. The vote will be next Thursday in two weeks at the the full monthly ST board meeting May 28, assuming the board doesn’t postpone it.
Some committee members called for the second meeting because there were more people wanting to testify at the first meeting than there was time for. Members may also continue offering their own opinions on the resolution.
This article is to collect comments about the meeting and its outcome. I’m not expecting much new today, but sometimes events like this generate unexpected news and over a hundred comments, so we’ll see.
Correction: Corrected the date of the full board meeting.
Sound Transit Route 535 travels inbound from Lynnwood City Center station to downtown Bellevue, primarily via I-405. This express service stops at Alderwood Mall and in Bothell and Totem Lake.
Route 535 runs every 30 minutes during the week, every hour on Saturdays, and does not run on Sunday. In October 2025, Route 535 had 1,908 average weekday boardings.
The plots below show the average weekday ridership by stop in each direction, color-coded by time of day. For a more detailed breakdown of how the plots are set up, please refer to the How to Read the Plots section of the article discussing Route 70.
Average Weekday Ridership per Route 535 Trip in October 2025. “Inbound” is toward Bellevue; “Outbound” is toward Lynnwood. Click the plot to view at full-resolution in a new tab.
Route 535 offers essential express service connecting communities along the north half of I-405. Some observations:
Paris’s ultra-useful transit is getting better. (Transit Tangents)
Stockholm’s beautiful metro stations are “the world’s longest art exhibition”. (Not Just Bikes)
We need visionaries like this, and politicians who can prioritize the right things get it done. Paris has automated trains, platform screen doors, service every 5 minutes on many metro and bus lines, station entrances with a pedestrianized street and walk-up retail at both city and suburban stations, no bias against gondolas or funiculars where appropriate, extensive cycletracks, tram tracks in grass beds, etc.
Both Stockholm and Sound Transit spend 1% of their station budget on art, yet Stockholm has much better art. Each station built since the 1970s has a unique look so you can tell at a glance which station you’re at. In Seattle each of the DSTT stations are unique, but the U-Link/Northgate Link underground stations all look alike, so if you can’t see the signs because they aren’t visible from your viewpoint or people’s heads are blocking the view and you missed the audio announcement, it can be hard to figure out whether this is your station or not, so sometimes you just have to go out and hope it is. Whereas if each station were unique, you could tell at a glance at any part of the wall or floor whether this is your station.
The two guys narrating each taking up half the picture reminds a bit me of West End Girls. London in the 80s, with transit.
In 2022, the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) launched a project to redesign Aurora Ave. The highest ridership bus route in Washington, Metro’s RapidRide E Line, carries 13,000 people along the corridor every day. Aurora Ave is consistently one of the most dangerous streets in Seattle. Over the past few years, SDOT has received thousands of responses from the public on how the street should be changed. Based on this feedback, the agency shared a few concepts in 2024. The long-term changes on Aurora will include the following infrastructure and safety improvements:
Sidewalks for comfort, safety, and ease of access
Better lighting for improved visibility
Safer, more accessible street crossings for people walking and rolling
Updated drainage to prevent water accumulation
Making it more comfortable and accessible for people walking and rolling
Reducing crashes for all road users
Improving bus service so it’s more dependable and convenient
The Sound Transit Board is facing large decisions regarding its budget shortfall. The Board is now expected to adopt an updated ST3 plan that will help reshape timelines for light rail segments across the region. Some projects, like the West Seattle line, are proposed to move forward now, while others, including Issaquah’s connection, are pushed back again — this time by six years. Meanwhile, construction of the Seattle Center to Ballard line is postponed indefinitely.
A Sounder North train waits at Everett Station (SounderBruce).
Yesterday, the Sound Transit Board Executive Committee reviewed a proposal assembled by the three county executives to realign ST3 for the second time. Although much of the hubbub since has focused on certain decisions presented in that proposal, including plans to temporarily truncate the Ballard Link Extension to Seattle Center and indefinite deferral of the south Seattle infill stations, an understated assumption of the plan includes discontinuation of the Sounder N Line beginning in 2033.
Sound Transit has an Executive Committee meeting right now (10:30am-12:30pm) to discuss the proposed ST3 system plan changes to reduce costs. The meeting page has links to the agenda, the proposal, a reports on the Enterprise Initiative, a TOD progress report, and a link to watch the meeting live remotely via Zoom. The meeting will start with public testimony for 45 minutes; then the committee members will debate the proposal. There will be no decision today; the decision will be in the May 28th full board meeting.
If you’re at the meeting, feel free to liveblog anything interesting below. A video of the meeting will be posted to ST’s YouTube channel within 48 hours.