Skip to content

Raising Funds, Making Friends | Sponsored

Friends' Pier Party builds excitement around a stunning makeover in the heart of Seattle

By Friends of Waterfront Seattle November 27, 2023

Pink Umbrella
Pink Umbrella

Joy Shigaki spent countless hours as a child exploring Seattle’s beautiful city parks. She is now a leader in the innovative and ambitious effort to completely revitalize and transform the city’s waterfront.

Shigaki is president and CEO of Friends of Waterfront Seattle, the nonprofit group helping fund, program, and steward the new 20-acre Waterfront Park. When finished in 2025, the park will stretch from Belltown to Pioneer Square and will connect the core of the city to Salish Sea, the Pike Place Market, Pioneer Square, the beauty of Mount Rainier and the Olympics, and people to one another.

Brianna Browne and Berhanu Wells

 

Simply put, no other city in the United States can marry urban vitality with such natural beauty.

“We are continuing to carve out a new, needed civic place and space for community in this town,” says Shigaki, a national leader in helping fund and program civic projects and parks. “We are building a space centered in community, belonging, safety, and joy.”

 

The park will become an inclusive, welcoming public space that BIPOC and all marginalized communities can feel that sense of safety, joy, and belonging. It will feature bike and pedestrian pathways, more than 700 new trees and 140,000 plantings, two canoe landing sites for local tribes, and five different playgrounds.

Olive Goh, Omari Salisbury, and Joy Shigaki

The spirit of the project was on full display at Friends of the Waterfront Seattle’s recent Pier Party, held at Pier 62. Part fundraiser and part “friend-raiser,” the party showcased what the nonprofit does best: connecting people through community centered programming and experience in the most beautiful space in the city – Waterfront Park.

It was raining, but nobody cared. The dance floor was packed by 8 p.m. Guests were encouraged to show off their fancy footwear — and did! It was the place to be. The event raised $200,000.

 

“What a night on the Pier and a kicking party it was for Friends,” Shigaki says. “Folks were excited, having fun, and (for some) realizing something IS happening down on the waterfront. The tent is big for Friends, and it got even bigger.”

Pier Party guests hit the red carpet

Friends of the Waterfront is 100% funded by philanthropic donations. The group is raising $170 million through the Campaign for Waterfront Park to both complete park construction and ensure it is safe, clean, welcoming, and activated well into the future.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation recently gave Friends of Waterfront Seattle a $10 million challenge grant. MacKenzie Scott also contributed $10 million. Friends is now focused on major gifts to meet the Gates Foundation challenge and will invite community gifts at all levels beginning in early 2025.

In addition to a one-time overall economic impact of $1.1 billion from construction, Waterfront Park is expected to generate $317 million in new visitor spending annually.

Artwork featured in Takiyah Ward’s Re-Sole 206 exhibit

Follow Us

Rebuilding From The Studs

Rebuilding From The Studs

Niche? Nonprofit? And a print publication? All signs pointed to an uphill battle. But ARCADE’s Leah St. Lawrence is showing how stability, growth, and experimentation can coexist within one organization.

“Greetings. the new publication ARCADE, which you are holding in your hands, is an experiment in integration.” These words welcomed readers to the first issue of a new publication declaring itself to be “Seattle’s calendar for architecture and design.” Selling for one dollar and printed across four pages of 11×17, black-and-white newsprint with a single…

Future Thinking

Future Thinking

Leaning into lessons from her past, including the embrace of new technologies, Ava Van Snow launched her full-service PR firm with the goal of helping others tell their stories.

Public Relations specialist Ava Van Snow has always had big ambitions. Despite a series of challenges during her childhood in Renton—a father who walked out when she was young, being raised by her immigrant grandparents who fled Vietnam during the war, and depending on government assistance to survive—she set her sights on pursuing a career…

Learning to Pivot

Learning to Pivot

Liz Galloway, the founder of Brand Sanity Media, spent the past 15 years learning to grow and adapt within her industry’s changing landscape.

In public relations, you have to stay on your toes. This is a lesson that Liz Galloway, founder of Brand Sanity Media, has encountered many times over the years. “I have a lot of admiration for anyone who is consistent and resilient,” says Galloway, who in addition to launching her own PR firm six years…

Innovative Energy

Innovative Energy

Pioneer Square’s neglected metropole building gets a second life—and a sustainable upgrade—as a nonprofit hub.

After more than a decade lying vacant and in ruins, the Metropole, as its name implies, is once again a vibrant center of culture, industry, and influence. Located in the historic Pioneer Square neighborhood, the Metropole building was constructed in 1892 as the first major commercial project of Henry Yesler, the city’s wealthiest resident during…