Cherry trees in front of Pike Place Market are gone
Mar 14, 2023, 5:25 PM | Updated: Mar 15, 2023, 8:03 am

Workers remove cherry trees on Pike St. Tuesday. (Feliks Banel)
(Feliks Banel)
This morning, the City of Seattle removed the storied cherry trees on Pike Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Mayor Bruce Harrell, who had paused the tree’s imminent removal a week ago, late last week reached a compromise with several local groups who had been advocating for the trees’ preservation.
The cherry trees, which were planted in 1980, may have had decades of life left in them, according to Seattle tree expert Arthur Lee Jacobson. Nevertheless, city officials insisted they had to be removed as part of a project to redevelop that block of Pike Street as a “curbless street” similar to Bell Street in Belltown.
This pretty much sums it up for the doomed 鈥淐herry Trees of Pike Street鈥
鈥 Feliks Banel (@FeliksBanel)
Taha Ebrahimi, a Seattle woman working on a book about Seattle’s street trees, said her research showed long and deep connections between the cherry trees and Seattle’s Japanese community, as well as the city’s cultural and trade ties to Japan. With this in mind, the city agreed to install an interpretive plaque sometime in the future.
A total of eight new cherry trees will be planted along Pike Street, as well as 16 additional cherry trees elsewhere in the city 鈥 in keeping with a new city policy regarding tree replacement.
Background Report on Pike St. cherry trees
成人X站 Newsradio鈥檚 earlier story reported that Pike Street between First and Second Avenue is being redeveloped to create additional bike lanes and wider sidewalks. There鈥檚 some confusion over this aspect of the story, especially what the new design of that Pike Street block includes.
聽stated the bike lanes are actually going away, and that Pike Street in that block will be more of a combined space for vehicles, bikes, and pedestrians, like the 鈥渃urbless street鈥 design of Bell Street between First and Second Avenue.
You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News with Dave Ross and Colleen O鈥橞rien, read more from him鈥here, and subscribe to The Resident Historian Podcast聽here. If you have a story idea, please email Feliks鈥here.