CHS Year in Review 2025 | Capitol Hill’s most important stories


Capitol Hill’s Hot Rat Summer
— and its expressions of art, community, and trans rights — will never end

A look back at the year that was on Capitol Hill is a look ahead at what comes next. 20-year plans. A new mayor. A city struggling with the intractable challenges of gun violence, homelessness, and protest. Before the details are wiped away by what comes next, here is a look at the stories. The Capitol Hill renter who will now lead the city. The stories of those shot and killed. The big spaces looking for new corporate strategies. The small spaces looking for new dreams.

Thanks for reading CHS in 2025. We look forward to bringing you more Capitol Hill stories in 2026.

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2025’S MOST IMPORTANT STORIES

  • PIKE/PINE GUN VIOLENCE: Matters of life and death are larger than the calendar. A year of deadly Pike/Pine gun violence stretched back to October of 2024 when 25-year-old Breanna Simmons was gunned down on 11th Ave in a murder that has not been publicly solved. Looking back just a bit further, 23-year-old Kenji Spurgeon was shot and killed in July in a parking lot at 10th and Pine. Last New Year’s Eve, 29-year-old Jonny Adamow was shot and killed at Broadway and Pike. This fall, 26-year-old Robert Fleeks and 18-year-old Jaydon Jameson were murdered within two blocks of Broadway and Pike. The latest killings brought new calls for more to be done as District 3 rep Joy Hollingsworth released a five-point plan of “immediate actions” needed to address ongoing safety issues in the area.
  • CAL ANDERSON PROTEST CRACKDOWN: It wasn’t clear Seattle made much progress from 2020 when it comes to how its police force deals with protest and the First Amendment. In May, Seattle Police made multiple arrests in a crackdown on protesters at a fundamentalist church group’s rally in Cal Anderson Park setting off new debate on SPD’s crowd control practices while also revealing weaknesses in the Harrell administration’s support for the city’s trans and queer communities. It is not clear promised investigation into the crackdown will ever reach useful conclusions but the circumstances clearly didn’t help Mayor Bruce Harrell keep his job.
  • WILSON WINS: A Capitol Hill renter will be the next mayor of Seattle as Katie Wilson led a progressive resurgence in the November election and narrowly defeating the incumbent. Harrell was the city’s second African American mayor and its first Asian-American mayor. The last time an incumbent mayor was reelected in Seattle was in 2005. Wilson, a Capitol Hill resident and progressive organizer, socialist, and leader at the Transit Riders Union who campaigned on her leadership around minimum wage and renters rights campaigns across the region faced a strident attack from Harrell as the incumbent pushed back following a terrible showing in the primary, criticizing Wilson as a child of privilege without adequate experience for City Hall, and claiming his opponent was a leader in the defund the police movement. Wilson painted Harrell as out of touch and focused on her messages around affordability and underserved communities including leading the city with plans to create $1 billion in union-built affordable housing, build 4,000 units of shelter, and expand police alternatives like the Community Assisted Response & Engagement Department’s crisis responders while also fielding smaller initiatives like championing creation of more public restrooms in the city.
  • BROADWAY CRISIS CARE CENTER: Months of opposition and pushback from area business and property owners made way for King County’s plans to open a new Crisis Care Center at Broadway and Union by 2027. CHS reported in October on the approval of the $56 million plan to acquire the property, overhaul the building, and hire an operator for what is planned to be the second in a network of five county facilities providing 24-7 walk-in and emergency care mental health clinics funded by a 2023 voter-approved levy.
  • GROCERY STORE WORRIES: The uncertainty around the future of the grocery store in big cities like Seattle and densely populated neighborhoods like Capitol Hill grew more clouded in 2025 with the sudden summer shuttering of the Broadway Whole Foods coming at the center of debate over a new ban on leases that block new groceries and pharmacies. Meanwhile, the experience of shopping in grocery markets around Capitol Hill and the Central District continued to degrade.
  • FOOD + DRINK SHUTDOWNS: With the closures of Plum, Mamnoon, Stateside, Knee High Stocking Co. and Cook Weaver, Capitol Hill lost a combined 70 years of neighborhood food and drink.
  • GIANT EXITS: Capitol Hill’s collection of empty giant commercial spaces grew in 2025. In September, coffee giant Starbucks shuttered its $20+ million Capitol Hill Roastery. June brought the abrupt end of the one-of-a-kind, mixed-use Redhook microbrewery below the Pike Motorworks apartments. Summer’s Broadway Whole Foods shutdown at the center of neighborhood worries around the future of grocery stores belongs here, too.
  • SAVAGE CITIZENS: A pro-cop, pro-business, anti-street disorder, anti-supportive housing community found a voice on Capitol Hill as Broadway crystal shop owner Rachael Savage entered the city’s political fray. Savage got trounced in her Republican run to displace Alexis Mercedes Rinck from her Seattle City Council seat but found bubbles of support for her positions including an initiative to ban homeless camping in Seattle. Whatever is next for Savage, it won’t include the Broadway boutique where the shopkeeper said challenges with crime, drug use, and homelessness spurred her decision for a political run. Savage ended 2025 announcing The Vajra was closing after 36 years of business on Broadway.
  • PARKS PROBLEMS:Bouts of negative park activity” brought chain-link fences to one Capitol Hill park and pushed the city’s parks department to come up with a community plan for addressing crime and disorder in three other Capitol Hill and Central District parks. In November, parks officials heard from neighbors and park goers on ideas for addressing the issues while keeping Seven Hill Park, Broadway Hill Park, and Tashkent Park open. Others spoke out in a different way, Meanwhile, the fight to keep Denny Blaine nude continued.
  • CHOP ON TRIAL: After a string of settlements, Seattle’s response to CHOP went to trial as proceedings begin in the Antonio Mays Jr. wrongful death case. The deadly shooting — one of two killings of Black teens in the camp — came early on a Monday morning amid a night of drive-by shooting fears around the protest zone during 2020’s CHOP. Mays was shot inside a Jeep Cherokee that had been driven at high speeds through the streets and died as camp security and medic volunteers worked to save him while Seattle Police and Seattle Fire refused to enter the protest area.
  • STREET AND TRANSIT CHANGES: Seattle’s $17.45 million overhaul of Pike and Pine connecting Capitol Hill to the waterfront was completed including transitioning portions of Pike and Pine to new one-way configurations. The paint-intensive $144 million RapidRide G overhaul of the Madison corridor faced its first major bureaucratic test as officials backed off a plan to erase a small section of the route’s red-paint bus lane. The seven-year 520 Portage Bay Bridge and Roanoke Lid construction project dug in the north of Capitol Hill.

ALSO IN 2025…

  • In July, Capitol Hill Block Party dropped a day and went 21+ only
  • In June, 70,000 marched for “No Kings” from Cal Anderson Park
  • In December, D3 rep Joy Hollingsworth wrapped up the city council’s 2025 effort to forge a new 20-year growth plan for the city including new “Neighborhood Centers” and state-mandated “Middle Housing” laws expanding zoning hoped to allow a greater range of housing types in more parts of the city. In 2026, the debate will continue as the city knocks out the block by block particulars of neighborhood centers and transit corridors
  • In November, Capitol Hill coffee shop Fuel started what could be a “new” food+drink trend in Seattle: tipping
  • In February, pieces of the neighborhood’s past were revealed as demolition and construction began to make way for the new Broadway Center for Youth affordable housing and job training facility at Broadway and Pine
  • In March, CHS broke the vital breakfast sandwich news that Eggslut was coming to Capitol Hill
  • In February, a smash and grab burglary marked the start of another year of car-ramming break-ins targeting the Hill’s pot shops
  • In December, a crash showed that not even the neighborhood’s self-serve kombucha taprooms are safe from car violence
  • In October, Kaiser Permanente responded to calls from the neighborhood — and CHS reporting — to live up to community promises for keeping 15th Ave storefronts active
  • In June, Capitol Hill died. Again. The Rhino Room nightclub became a couch store

CHS 2025 MOST COMMENTED

 

A BRIEF HOLIDAY MESSAGE FROM CHS
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Gunfire reportedly part of fight early Sunday at 15th and Howell

Multiple reports of gunfire early Sunday included a 911 caller reporting someone firing into the air on 15th Ave.

It is not clear if Seattle Police ever made it to the scene. Continue reading

35 happy hellos and 18 sad goodbyes in 2025 Capitol Hill food and drink

Colibri Mexican Kitchen is an an excellent representative of the year that was for the area’s food and drink projects

Colibri Mexican Kitchen

There is definitely some double counting here. There is also some undercounting. CHS tallied the Bar Tango, Double O’ Burgers, Cantina del Sol, and Uncle Dom’s Italian Kitchen complex as one.

Another year of change, new energy, and sad goodbyes in Capitol Hill food and drink has passed. Below, we count it all up.

Start with a visit to an excellent representative of the year that was for the area’s food and drink projects. 12th Ave’s Colibri Mexican Kitchen is a “happy hello.” But it was also a “sad goodbye.”  The restaurant took over the space formerly home to the much-loved Plum after 20 years of business for the vegan bistro. Now Colibri is becoming much-loved.

Colibri Mexican Kitchen

The project from first-time restaurateur Celeste Bakr is growing as a family venture inspired by their restaurant veteran uncle on the edge of Pike/Pine with with large portions and full plates that echo traditions of plenty.

“We are going to pour our love into it,” Bakr told CHS when we talked with her after Colibri’s 2025 opening.

You can know that much of that same energy runs through the 2025 rosters below — the new restaurants, bars, and cafes, the new owners and changes, and, yes, the closures. Somebody loved even the giants like the Starbucks Roastery where many people found joy and employment every day. Here’s hoping for new things for spaces like that in 2026.

But, first, a look back at 2025.

HAPPY HELLOS

TRANSITIONS

SAD GOODBYES

 

A BRIEF HOLIDAY MESSAGE FROM CHS
Subscribe to CHS to help us hire writers and photographers to cover the neighborhood. CHS is a pay what you can community news site with no required sign-in or paywall. To stay that way, we need you. Become a subscriber to help us cover the neighborhood for $5 a month -- or choose your level of support 🎁

 

Harrell wraps up time in Seattle mayor’s office: 1,064 community events, 639 pieces of legislation, 350 new police officers

Harrell’s concession speech (Image: City of Seattle)

In one of his final messages before handing over the keys to the mayor’s office to Katie Wilson, Bruce Harrell has tallied some of the major accomplishments during his administration by the numbers including a count of the outgoing mayor attending some 1,064 community events and producing 639 pieces of legislation over his four years in office. Continue reading

Pikes/Pines | The State Weed Control Board would like you to not spread more holly on the Hill

Common Holly, Ilex aquafolium, growing wild in a greenspace. (Image: Brendan McGarry)

I know for certain that at some point in my past, my ancestors revered holly.

Ilex aquafolium, known variously as Common Holly or English Holly, is a plant of significance wherever it grows.

Holly was the plant of the Roman holiday Saturnalia and later picked up by the traditions of Christmas which borrowed from the latter traditions. This plant has variously protected people from evil, represented good fortune, and gave hope for the greener pastures that came with fairer weather on the darkest of solstice days. I am honestly somewhat flabbergasted that this spiky, persistent plant has held on so long in our imaginations.

It must have been powerful stuff in the eyes of my European ancestors.

Today the significance of holly in the Pacific Northwest is largely problematic. Continue reading

Seattle Fire battles Pike/Broadway building blaze after reported ‘rubbish fire’ spreads — UPDATE: Arson

Firefighters could be seen battling the blaze in an image from a city traffic camera

Seattle Fire crews battled a Christmas morning building fire that started as a reported rubbish fire at Broadway and Pike.

The reported address for the blaze at 816 E Pike is the location of the two-story, 1912-era masonry commercial building near the corner of Pike and Broadway home to a location of the Cinnaholic cinnamon roll chain and the A/stir restaurant. Continue reading

Capitol Hill Happy Holidays Card 2025

For this year’s holiday card, CHS turns to 19th and Aloha and an installation of joy at St. Joe’s.

The St. Joseph Parish added the display this year on its lawn near another relatively recent addition — the “community fridge” the church’s Faith Justice Commission and the community keep stocked and open for those in need.

You can maybe think about the wooden reindeer and trees and lights the same way — stocked and open for those in need. Stop by and pick up a little bit of community joy.

CHS, by the way, is also taking some time this week to pick up a bit of joy where we can find it. If there is something we should know about, call or text (206) 399-5959 or say hey @jseattle here or here. You can also check in with neighbors in the CHS Facebook Group. Thanks for reading.

Look! Joy on E Union, too

CHS Happy Holidays Cards Past

 

A BRIEF HOLIDAY MESSAGE FROM CHS
Subscribe to CHS to help us hire writers and photographers to cover the neighborhood. CHS is a pay what you can community news site with no required sign-in or paywall. To stay that way, we need you. Become a subscriber to help us cover the neighborhood for $5 a month -- or choose your level of support 🎁

 

‘Save Raygun Lounge’ — Community rallying to keep the gameplay going at Capitol Hill arcade and tabletop gaming hangout

(Image: Raygun Lounge)

There is hope of a replay at Capitol Hill all-ages arcade bar and tabletop gaming hangout Raygun Lounge where an employee is getting help from the neighborhood to restart the business.

“Raygun Lounge in Capitol Hill has been a nexus for gamers, geeks, and anyone seeking a place to belong. Raygun isn’t just a pinball barcade — it’s a community,” River Flanary says in the plea asking fans to pitch in to keep Raygun Lounge open.

“It’s where pinball wizards meet board game strategists; where LGBTQ+ folks feel safe and at home; where tabletop RPG campaigns unfold, and Magic: The Gathering games rage on. Raygun is a place where our community gathers and becomes friends, with food and drink and engaging games,” Flanary writes. Continue reading

Construction set to begin on new 33-story senior housing tower on First Hill — Horizon House says 70% of its units are already claimed

(Image: Horizon House)

Horizon House says construction is set to begin on its new 33-story West Tower on First Hill neighborhood. The project will add 202 residences to the existing University Street campus, creating, it says, one of the tallest purpose-built senior living high-rises in the United States.

“The West Tower is an ambitious effort that will expand urban senior living options for active seniors in downtown Seattle,” Erica Thrash-Sall, Horizon House CEO, said in the announcement. “We took on this project with one goal in mind: to ensure Horizon House thrives for the next generation of residents.”

The expansion is moving forward in December as Horizon House turns the existing West Wing property over to Andersen Construction to begin demolition. An official groundbreaking ceremony for the skyscraper is scheduled for late January. Continue reading