5th Avenue Transit Mall
The most dramatic change proposed was the concept of moving all bus routes from both 2nd and 4th Avenues onto a two-way transit mall on 5th Avenue that would be restricted to other traffic during peak hours. This would cost the transit agencies nothing in additional operating costs because bus travel times would not increase, compared to all the other options, but would be expensive up front, costing up to $30 million dollars. It ultimately didn’t happen because that cost could not be justified for a transit mall that might be obsolete after Northgate Link opens, but also likely because businesses along 5th Avenue were not on board with the idea.
Added Transit Lanes on 4th & 5th Avenues

520 Bus Reroutes
One of the first ideas that was proposed was improving Montlake triangle to speed up bus transfers there, allowing buses that currently use SR-520 and go all the way downtown to instead transfer riders to and from the University of Washington station. The documentation suggested that this would save riders three minutes if heading to the vicinity of Westlake Station and five minutes if heading to the International District, compared to what expected bus times will be in 2019 with additional buses on surface streets.
As the Seattle Transit Blog reported last month, Sound Transit and Metro are choosing not to reroute any 520 buses except for the 255 to Kirkland, and even that route will not be ready to reroute until September of next year, six months after buses exit the tunnel.
5th Ave & 6th Avenue Transit Pathway
One idea that is moving forward but which SDOT is not sure it will be able to implement in time for the March 2019 deadline is the 5th Avenue/6th Avenue pathway, which would extend the contraflow bus lane on 5th Avenue north to Marion Street where bus lane on 6th Avenue would continue northbound. This will take several northbound buses off 4th Avenue, but SDOT still needs to get the OK from the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) as the new bus lanes will pass several WSDOT ramps.
Convention Center Delay Provides Time To Prioritize Transit