Bananthony’s Bodega has opened at the Capitol Hill corner of ‘weed and weed’

(Image: Bananthony’s Bodega)

There is a practical purpose behind Capitol Hill stoner snack and street style shop Bananthony’s Bodega but the business in the back is nearly as wacky as the party in the front.

“We wanted to be part of the community,” Capitol Hill entrepreneur and cartoonist Ethan Jones tells CHS about Bananthony’s arrival around the corner from the commerce of 15th Ave E where the new shop has moved in next to new roommate Ruckus Recreational Cannabis and across the street from the neighborhood’s Uncle Ike’s.

“If I sell snacks on the corner of weed and weed, I have a feeling I’ll be able to cover rent,” Jones quips. Continue reading

The abrupt end of Amazon Fresh leaves uncertain future for groceries at 23rd and Jackson

The Jackson Apartments (Image: Vulcan)

Amazon’s latest maneuverings in its ongoing disruption of the nation’s grocery industry will bring an abrupt end for a key store in the Central District.

The future of grocery shopping at 23rd and Jackson is uncertain after the retail giant announced Tuesday it is shutting down every single one of its more than 60 Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh groceries across the country. Most stores are set to close February 1st.

Amazon has said it plans to open more than 100 new Whole Foods stores including some that will take over its previous Amazon Fresh and Go locations but it has not provided specifics of which stores will be replaced and when the transition would happen. Continue reading

‘Intervening party’ — Friends of Denny Blaine takes big step in legal fray over nude beach

A crowd filled the park during a puppet show protest last August

The Friends of Denny Blaine group that has grown as an advocate for community solutions around protecting the Seattle park as a queer-friendly nude beach is starting of 2026 with new legal powers.

FoDB is now an intervening party and is being represented pro bono by law firm Perkins Coie.

The group announced it has organized as a nonprofit and filed to formally intervene in the lawsuit brought by a group of neighbors against the city over the park. The legal filing will give Friends of Denny Blaine stronger say in the beach’s future. Continue reading

After 10 years on E Jefferson, Peloton Cafe’s ride continues

Earlier this month, CHS reported on the global cycling brand Rapha shutting down its Capitol Hill “clubhouse” as part of worldwide cutbacks for the London-based sportswear brand.

On E Jefferson, a much more local ride continues. January marks the 10-year anniversary for the Peloton Cafe Bike Shop. Continue reading

Seattle responds to ICE: ‘Standing Up for Our Values’ Town Hall in the Central District, nightly vigil in Cal Anderson, support for ‘solidarity strike’

A memorial to those lost in ICE custody and deportation at a Seattle vigil earlier this month (Image: Alexis Mercedes Rinck)

  • ‘Standing Up for Our Values’ Town Hall: A part of Mayor Katie Wilson’s transition team will hold a community meeting Monday night at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute in the Central District to help shape the new administration’s response to federal threats. Wilson’s “Standing Up for Our Values” policy group led by Roxana Norouzi of OneAmerica and Jaelynn Scott of the Lavender Rights Project will host the session Monday from 4:30 to 7 PM in the 17th Ave center. “Your input will inform Mayor Katie Wilson’s administration as they plan for our city’s future,” the event notice reads. The session is part of a pre-planned night of transition team meetings including one on arts and culture being held on First Hill at the same time but comes after a weekend of unrest after federal agents shot and killed observer Alex Pretti, the second civilian shot and killed during the ICE crackdown in Minneapolis in as many weeks.
  • Cal Anderson nightly vigil: An effort in Cal Anderson Park to memorialize people killed by ICE will stretch into a weeklong vigil. Starting Monday, a Community Candle Lighting & Moment of Remembrance will be held in the park beginning at 5:30 PM nightly through next Saturday, according to @hannahkrieg.
  • King County Council considers call for ‘guardrails’ on ICE funding: The King County Council will vote Tuesday afternoon on a motion calling on Congress to place “guardrails on funding for DHS” as a key vote in Washington D.C. approaches its Friday deadline. The motion sponsored by by Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda, and cosponsored by Councilmembers Rhonda Lewis and Jorge BarĂłn would call for “a halt to U.S. Border Patrol deployments and unlawful surges of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection to cities across the U.S., along with several restrictions,” according to an announcement from Mosqueda’s office. The symbolic King County Council vote comes as a Senate battle over Department of Homeland Security funding could scuttle a proposed $1.3 trillion spending package and lead to a government shutdown.
  • Solidarity strike: The board of the 43rd District Democrats is calling on area leaders “to support a solidarity strike with our Minnesota siblings”:
    As we enter our 250th year as a country, many of us are reflecting on who we are as a country – the struggles we have overcome, the injustices we have contributed to, and the work yet to be done. History is watching and begs the question, “What did you do in the face of these injustices? What did you do with your power?”
    “The 43rd LD will not go quietly into that dark night,” the open letter (PDF) concludes. “We call on our community to stand with us and with Minneapolis against the dying of the light. Will you be on the right side of history?”
 

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Rain City Fit doing some heavy lifting with plans for transformation of Capitol Hill auto row-era garage into new RCF Barbell Club

The more than 100-year-old garage is being lined up for redevelopment on Boylston Ave

Trainers like Kyle McKee are part of the Rain City Fit lifting community (Image: Rain City Fit)

A Capitol Hill fitness row is coming together on Boylston Ave. The new project could be a good sign for smaller, local real estate deals after a year of big brands backing out of their Capitol Hill investments. It is also a strong sign for the growth of one of Capitol Hill’s most popular home-grown fitness communities.

Permits and development paperwork show a former auto-row era service garage on Boylston just around the corner from E Pine is being readied for a new Rain City Fit project.

Development of the RCF Barbell Club will transform the 1923-era garage into a new 6,000-square-foot gym.

The Boylston project is a major investment for the Hill-based gym. Rain City Fit’s Ben Koenigsberg purchased the auto row-era property last year for $2.7 million according to King County records. Continue reading

Light rail milestones: Judkins Park Station to finally open in March, ORCA adding ‘tap to pay’ with RapidRide G test in February

Pretty much ready and waiting since 2023 (Image: Sound Transit)

Light rail service across the I-90 bridge between Seattle and the Eastside via the Central District’s Judkins Park Station will finally begin in March.

Meanwhile, the region’s ORCA payment system is finally rolling out a long-awaited upgrade with a test on the RapidRide G line along Capitol Hill’s southern edges.

Sound Transit has announced the opening of the world’s first light rail on a floating bridge and “crosslake” service will begin March 28. Delayed six years by construction screw-ups and logistical complications, the milestone marks what will be a full transformation of the network into a two-line system — the original 1 Line serving the city and its north-south neighbors, and now the added 2 Line connecting Seattle to Bellevue and Redmond. Continue reading

‘Sold out’ — Wilson’s arts and culture transition team meeting on First Hill is hot ticket

A Monday final meeting of Mayor Katie Wilson’s “Arts, Culture, and Creative Economy” transition team has “sold out.”

Monday’s public session at First Hill’s Town Hall Seattle has seen all free tickets claimed. A standby queue will be formed at the venue’s west entrance. Continue reading

Pikes/Pines | It’s easy to ‘leaf’ space for Capitol Hill bees in winter

You need a bit of patience to see a Small Carpenter Bee, genus Ceratina, well. I caught this little male, put him in a jar in the freezer, and then took photos as he woke up (yes, this is all quite rude). I let him go right where I found him and will forever cherish these little bees when I catch them zipping around our flowers. (Image: Brendan McGarry)

Recently, I was out in my garden pulling up old pieces of bamboo used for fencing around some fragile native plants getting established. I was in the process of making a pile of them to burn, when I noticed several had their hollow ends delicately cemented in. Several years ago I would have thought almost nothing of this, but these little plugs brought me back to spring and the delights of plants and their pollinators. It was a gentle reminder that life is still going, even in the middle of winter.

Until I started learning about bees through the Washington Native Bee Society, joining the Washington Bee Atlas, and studying to become an Apprentice Master Melitologist through Oregon State University (half measures be damned), I probably wouldn’t have had much to say about what bees are doing during the winter. Or rather, I probably wouldn’t have even realized it was a question to ask. Most of us know that insects aren’t out in force during the winter and we generally understand they have to go somewhere during that period of time. But most of us don’t dwell on these ideas and certainly don’t consider them when we go about our annual gardening tasks.

The capped off ends of my bamboo poles were almost certainly created by a Mason Bee. These members of the genus Osmia are well known for their pollination services (they are much more efficient pollinators than European Honeybees), as well as their particular style of nest. Continue reading

This week in CHS history | Hill gay bars make liquor board pushback, coldest day in 23 years, E Union Tiny Houses

Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2025

 

Seattle anti-Trump protests including ‘PUNCH A NAZI’ illuminated display continue at Cal Anderson Park


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