Today's 9.2 mile walk took me to the area between the West Seattle Golf Course and South Seattle Community College. Longfellow Creek runs through it and Delridge Way SW is the main street. The area is primarily residential but this stretch of Delridge Way has quite a bit of commerce.
I passed Espresso shops, an empty looking daycare center, a massage shop, pizza and pho restaurants, a beauty salon, a used tire shop, an upholstry shop, a Stuffed Cakes shop and three small food marts which were really more like convenience stores (an unnamed Food Mart and the Delridge Food Mart with gas pumps and a Super 24 Food Store with a mural painted on its side and a desire to bring healthy food to the area).
The Delridge Branch of the Seattle Public Library is also on Delridge Way but it wasn't open this morning. The library appears to be in a building with housing and the Refugee and Immigrant Family Center (which was advertising free preschool for eligible families).
Across the street, I noted a building going up with a sign which indicated that our Seattle Housing Levy dollars were at work. There are also new private sector townhomes along Delridge.
The Disabled American Veterans West Seattle Chapter Number 23 shares a building with the Full Gospel Pentecostal Federated Church
and the Iglesia Pentecostes Monte Sinai is nearby
as is the well-tended Delridge P-Patch.
This area borders on Delridge Playfield (pictured in a prior post) and the West Duwamish Greenbelt and is home to Greg Davis Park and Natural Area,
Cottage Grove Park and Recovery Garden,
Puget Ridge Playground (with its totlot and perennial garden)
and an unsigned field and playground across 25th from the Delridge P-Patch.
The residential area east of Delridge Way is hilly and the homes are mostly modest. There is quite a bit of building going on with new lots smaller and houses larger than the older housing. There are a few lots for sale, some unpaved streets and a staircase at SW Juneau. (It looked as if a nearby remodel was most likely a school.)
At the end of a dead-end street, sits a building named Common House. It is next to a resident parking area and vegetable garden and is associated with the newer adjacent housing known as the Duwamish Cohousing Community.
The residential area west of Delridge Way is flatter and I noted a new sidewalk along part of 25th.
Homes are mostly smaller and there is not as much new housing here but I did note what may be remodel.
Along the way, I spotted some lovely gardens, yard art,
public art
and a Bee Crossing which really was surrounded by many bees.
Another enjoyable West Seattle walk through many recreation areas.
Monday, September 9, 2013
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