Bradner Gardens Park
About
Bradner Gardens Park is a 1.6-acre park in the Mt. Baker neighborhood of southeast Seattle. Visitors are encouraged to enter the park through one of three arbors designed, fabricated, and installed by University of Washington architecture students in the Howard S. Wright Design / Build Studio under the tutelage of instructor Steve Badanes.
Winding paths connect the many features of Bradner Gardens Park including seven ornamental theme gardens in the ornamental border, 61 p-patch plots, the children's A to Z garden below the scarecrow. The park is host to 50 varieties of ornamental street trees recommended for small spaces and under utility lines. A 33-foot-tall vintage (1916 to 1933) Aermotor windmill circulates water from the seasonal pond to the dry streambed next to the children's play area. Tilth Alliance manages the demonstration gardens.
The park also offers wonderful play experiences for children with a basketball court that has one regulation hoop and one adjustable hoop. Watch a basketball game from the mosaic bench decorated by Coyote Junior High students then explore the orange tractor (metal fabricated by Clair Colquitt and wood carved by Chris Vondrasek) and hollow log in the children’s play area.
Visitors can discover art throughout the park from garden weasel wind chime by Clair Colquitt to the trellis made from garden tools. The leaf-shaped pavilion built by the architecture students provides a wonderful small gathering space.
Community volunteers worked with Barker Landscape Architects to design Bradner Gardens Park in cooperation with Seattle Parks and Recreation. Friends of Bradner Gardens Park is a special collaboration of residents of the Mt. Baker Community and the following horticultural organizations:
- Department of Neighborhoods P-Patch Program
- Tilth Alliance
Friends of Bradner Gardens Park maintain the gardens in cooperation with Seattle Parks and Recration staff. Bradner is a pesticide-free park that uses sustainable gardening practices.
Current Project
Comfort Station/Restroom Repair & Upgrades
The project goal is to renovate existing comfort station building including new roof, plumbing, and electrical. Seattle Parks and Recreation has received the building permit and is working to put the project out to bid.
Budget
$805,000 for design, permitting and construction - Seattle Parks and Recreation negotiated with insurance company to provide funding from the arson damage; additional funding will be provided by Seattle Parks and Recreation Capital Investment Program funding.
Schedule
Planning and Design: 2022 - 2023
Construction: Fall 2023 - Spring 2024
Anticipated Site Impact
Contractor hired for the project will work to minimize impact to the park and P-patch.
For Information Contact:
Kelly Goold, Project Manager at: Kelly.goold@seattle.gov
Special Event Spaces
This park has a special event space that you can rent for your next gathering! Learn more on our rentals page.