Puyallup: News

What’s that construction near the state fairgrounds in Puyallup? Here’s what we know

Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup.
Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup. bhayes@thenewstribune.com

Crews started construction this week on a $5 million festival street along the fairgrounds in Puyallup.

The project on Ninth Avenue Southwest, by the Red Gate, has closed the road from Meridian to Fifth Street Southwest until this fall. The fair chipped in $1 million and donated land to accommodate sidewalks in the right of way, the city previously told The News Tribune.

The end result will be a curbless street that can be easily closed to accommodate pedestrians during major events at the fairgrounds. It will have a promenade design, with wide sidewalks, lighting, planters and benches.

Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup.
Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

“During the day, it functions as a normal street for vehicles. However, during evenings and weekends, it can be closed to host events, festivals, and gatherings,” city spokesperson Eric Johnson told The News Tribune in an email Thursday. “The street will also be safer for drivers and pedestrians. The street is designed with traffic calming techniques, which essentially narrow the roadway and encourage drivers to slow down.”

This rendering shows the festival street that the city of Puyallup hopes to finish in time for the 2025 Washington State Fair. The project is between Meridian and Fifth Street Southwest on Ninth Avenue Southwest.
This rendering shows the festival street that the city of Puyallup hopes to finish in time for the 2025 Washington State Fair. The project is between Meridian and Fifth Street Southwest on Ninth Avenue Southwest. Courtesy of the city of Puyallup

That means on-street parking on that stretch of Ninth Avenue Southwest will go away. Johnson said that parking has been underutilized, and that fair parking lots nearby provide an alternative.

Crews hope to finish the festival street this summer.

“We closed it at the beginning of this week,” Johnson said about Ninth Avenue Southwest along the fairgrounds. “Contractors have started working, and we hope to have it done by September for the Fall Fair.”

The 2025 Washington State Fair starts Aug. 29. This year is the fair’s 125th anniversary.

Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup.
Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

“The fair has been a great partner with us on this project,” Johnson wrote.

Pierce County Assessor-Treasurer records show the fairs owns all but one parcel along the festival street, on both sides of Ninth Avenue Southwest.

Johnson said the project will “strengthen the fair’s connection to downtown.”

The city is planning a similar festival street in the coming years on East Meeker, from Meridian to Third Street Southeast.

News Tribune archives contributed to this report.

Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup.
Ninth Street Southwest is closed and under construction behind the Washington State Fairgrounds, on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Puyallup. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com
Alexis Krell
The News Tribune
Alexis Krell edits coverage of Washington state government, Olympia, Thurston County and suburban and rural Pierce County. She started working in the Olympia statehouse bureau as an intern in 2012. Then she covered crime and breaking news as the night reporter at The News Tribune. She started covering courts in 2016 and began editing in 2021.
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