Jack Block Park
Jack Block Park is a park in the West Seattle neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, USA. Situated on the northwest corner of the Port of Seattle's Terminal 5, the park offers public beach access, a children's play area, and a observation tower.
History
The site of the park was previously occupied by a wood treatment plant and a shipbuilding facility. The wood treatment plant operated from 1909 to 1994. It was successively owned by the J.M. Coleman Company ; West Coast Wood Preserving Company ; Baxter-Wyckoff Company ; Wyckoff Company ; and Pacific Sound Resources before passing to the Port of Seattle, having been determined to be contaminated with creosote and designated a Superfund site by the United States [Environmental Protection Agency|U.S. Environmental Protection Agency] in 1994. To the east of the creosoting plant, also within the park boundary, was the Nettleton Saw Mill and Lumber Yard, which operated from 1910 until 1965.Originally named Terminal 5 Park, the park opened in 1998 as part of the Port of Seattle's redevelopment of Terminal 5 and was dedicated and named after former Port Commissioner Jack Block in 2001.
In 2007 a local community group proposed a plan to move the West Seattle terminal of the King County Water Taxi from Seacrest Park to Jack Block Park, but as of 2012 the plan has not been implemented.
After an environmental cleanup effort that included the removal of contaminated mud and wood pilings as well as the capping of subaqueous waste|capping] of of sediment, the park's beach opened to the public in 2011.