Neighborhood Centers

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Project update

The public is invited to attend an online open house to learn about recommendations to support neighborhood centers in Olympia. The event will be held virtually, starting with a presentation from the report’s authors, MAKERS Architecture and Urban Design. Participating community members will have the chance to ask questions of City staff and provide feedback.

When & where?

  • Thursday, May 16, 2024
  • 5:30 p.m.
  • Zoom (register)

What's happening?

Neighborhood centers are small walk, bike, and transit-friendly business clusters within residential neighborhoods that serve the day-to-day retail and service needs of local residents and foster community interaction. Neighborhood centers are important to community-wide goals to increase walkability, reduce our carbon footprint, improve human health, and foster neighborhood resiliency.

Olympia’s Comprehensive Plan identifies 17 locations for neighborhood centers. Conditions of these sites vary from thriving retail centers to vacant or completely undeveloped. Despite long-held goals to encourage them, neighborhood centers have not developed as envisioned. In 2014, the Olympia Planning Commission set out to find out why this was the case and to help create a path to implement the City’s vision. Early efforts included a community wide online survey and stakeholder interviews.

In January 2022, the City hired the consulting team of MAKERS Architecture & Urban Design and Leland Consulting Group gain a better understanding of barriers affecting neighborhood centers, and identify strategies for addressing these barriers. This team is focusing on the twelve neighborhood centers that are not part of Olympia’s master-planned communities.

View details about each of these 12 neighborhood centers at the bottom of this page.

The consultants spent the first half of 2022 evaluating each of the neighborhood centers, talking to stakeholders, and conducting a market analysis. The next phase of the project is to share findings from these efforts and get community input.

Community input

Your input is important for identifying actions the City can take to implement important community goals for walkable neighborhoods, reducing reliance on cars, and fostering neighborhood connections. Over 350 people participated in an online survey from July 13 - August 15.

Project update

The public is invited to attend an online open house to learn about recommendations to support neighborhood centers in Olympia. The event will be held virtually, starting with a presentation from the report’s authors, MAKERS Architecture and Urban Design. Participating community members will have the chance to ask questions of City staff and provide feedback.

When & where?

  • Thursday, May 16, 2024
  • 5:30 p.m.
  • Zoom (register)

What's happening?

Neighborhood centers are small walk, bike, and transit-friendly business clusters within residential neighborhoods that serve the day-to-day retail and service needs of local residents and foster community interaction. Neighborhood centers are important to community-wide goals to increase walkability, reduce our carbon footprint, improve human health, and foster neighborhood resiliency.

Olympia’s Comprehensive Plan identifies 17 locations for neighborhood centers. Conditions of these sites vary from thriving retail centers to vacant or completely undeveloped. Despite long-held goals to encourage them, neighborhood centers have not developed as envisioned. In 2014, the Olympia Planning Commission set out to find out why this was the case and to help create a path to implement the City’s vision. Early efforts included a community wide online survey and stakeholder interviews.

In January 2022, the City hired the consulting team of MAKERS Architecture & Urban Design and Leland Consulting Group gain a better understanding of barriers affecting neighborhood centers, and identify strategies for addressing these barriers. This team is focusing on the twelve neighborhood centers that are not part of Olympia’s master-planned communities.

View details about each of these 12 neighborhood centers at the bottom of this page.

The consultants spent the first half of 2022 evaluating each of the neighborhood centers, talking to stakeholders, and conducting a market analysis. The next phase of the project is to share findings from these efforts and get community input.

Community input

Your input is important for identifying actions the City can take to implement important community goals for walkable neighborhoods, reducing reliance on cars, and fostering neighborhood connections. Over 350 people participated in an online survey from July 13 - August 15.

  • Fones Road/18th Avenue

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    This center is located on the eastern edge of Olympia, near Chambers Lake and approximately ½ mile from shopping complexes along Pacific Avenue. Access to Chambers Lake and the Chehalis Western Trail are located ½ mile to the east. Vacant land south of 18th Avenue has development potential depending on the extent of shorelines and critical areas and their associated setbacks and buffers. Zoning in this area includes Residential Multifamily 24 dwelling units per acre and Mixed Residential 10 – 18 dwelling units per acre.

    View detailed neighborhood center profiles

  • Boulevard Road/Yelm Highway (Victoria Square)

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    This center is located in the Urban Growth Area with the expectation that it will someday be annexed. It is a collection of professional office buildings on the north side of Yelm Hwy, and a gas station and convenience store on the south side. These uses are zoned Neighborhood Retail, surrounding by Residential 4 – 8 dwelling units per acre and Residential 6 – 12 dwelling units per acre zoning. Briggs Village, one of Olympia’s master planned community’s, is located less than a mile to the west, with an elementary school to the northeast.

    View detailed neighborhood center profiles

Page last updated: 01 May 2024, 02:06 PM