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Let's ChatA neighborhood that still feels like a beach town inside a city — Olympic Mountain sunsets from the bluff, kids on bikes, dogs everywhere, and a tiny commercial strip at 32nd & 65th where the staff at every spot knows your name by week three.
Mostly century-old Craftsman bungalows on tree-lined blocks, with Foursquares, Tudors, and the occasional view-bluff modern mixed in. Median sits around $1.2M; the best-prepped homes are gone in a week.
Stately old homes, leafy streets, an active community association, easy walks to Sunset Hill Park, Golden Gardens, the Ballard Locks, and the rest of Ballard's restaurants and breweries five minutes away.
Sunset Hill is a hike from the Eastside — Microsoft Redmond is a 45-minute-on-a-good-day drive, and even with the 2 Line now crossing Lake Washington, you'd bus or drive to a station first. If your job is in Bellevue or Redmond five days a week, factor in the commute.
Sunset Hill is the part of Ballard that still feels like a beach town — the western bluff that drops toward Shilshole Bay, where the streets are quiet, the trees are old, and the Olympic Mountains do their thing across the water every clear evening. The neighborhood was named for exactly what you'd guess: the view. The center of social life is the small commercial cluster at 32nd & 65th — a grocery, a bistro, a bakery, an ice cream shop. From there it's a five-minute drive into the heart of Ballard for the bigger food and nightlife scene, the Locks, and the breweries.
"This is the Seattle neighborhood that still feels like a Seattle neighborhood — porches, dogs, the smell of salt water, and a sunset every night that makes you stop walking."20mto Amazon Spheres
35mto Amazon Spheres
30mto Microsoft Redmond
75mto Microsoft Redmond
Work with the team that knows how to get their clients top value in the Seattle market––all while having fun doing it.
Let's ChatMost of the houses were built between 1900 and the 1930s. Craftsman bungalows with deep porches and exposed rafters, Seattle Foursquares with their hipped roofs and big front windows, Tudor Revivals with steep gables and leaded glass. Lots run wider and deeper here than in Ballard proper — real backyards with mature trees, garden beds, and the occasional chicken coop. New construction is rare. What you usually see is a thoughtful remodel: original woodwork left alone, kitchen and baths brought up to current, porch unchanged. If you want a turn-of-the-century Seattle house with original character and room to garden, Sunset Hill is one of the few neighborhoods in the city where the inventory exists.
The commercial node is a tight cluster of storefronts on 32nd Ave NW between NW 64th and NW 65th. Sunset Hill Greenmarket has been the neighborhood grocer for more than 25 years — local produce, daily-baked bread, beer and wine, and staff that has worked there long enough to know your kids' names. Baker's is the cocktail bar — natural wines, small plates, outdoor seating in summer. Caffe Fiore up the street at NW 85th is the morning coffee. There's a bakery and an ice cream shop in the same block. None of it is a destination — that's the point. It's a five-minute walk for people who live here.
Sunset Hill Park at NW 75th and 34th Ave NW is the public viewpoint — benches, grass, and an unobstructed view across Puget Sound to the Olympics. It's the spot locals walk to with a glass of wine in summer. Golden Gardens sits at the bottom of the hill on Shilshole Bay — one of the only sandy beaches inside Seattle proper, with picnic shelters, a fishing pier, volleyball courts, and bonfire pits along the water. North of the marina, the Burke-Gilman Trail picks up at the Locks and runs east through Ballard, Fremont, and along Lake Union — the bike commute if you work in South Lake Union or downtown.
Sunset Hill is a driving and biking neighborhood. There's no light rail nearby and no planned station that would reach this far west. The RapidRide D Line runs along 15th Ave NW and gets you downtown in roughly 35 minutes. By car, downtown Seattle is about 20 minutes off-peak; the Amazon Spheres and South Lake Union are 15 to 18 minutes the same way; Bellevue is 30+ depending on the bridge. Bike commuters pick up the Burke-Gilman at the Locks — about 12 minutes to Fremont, 25 to South Lake Union, 40 to the U-District. The bus works if you're patient; cars and bikes work better.
Sunset Hill is served by Seattle Public Schools. The neighborhood elementary is Loyal Heights Elementary, just east of Sunset Hill in the Loyal Heights neighborhood. Middle school assignment is Whitman; high school is Ballard High School. Salmon Bay K-8 (an option school) and St. Alphonsus Catholic School are also in the broader Ballard area. School boundaries shift periodically, so always confirm current assignment with Seattle Public Schools for the specific address you're considering.
The bigger food, bar, and shopping scene starts where Sunset Hill ends. Drive five minutes south on 32nd Ave NW and you're on Ballard Avenue — Bastille, Stoneburner, Ocho, and the Ballard Sunday Farmers Market every Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks are five minutes the other way, with the fish ladder, the boats moving between Puget Sound and Lake Union, and the Burke-Gilman Trail pickup point. The reason people buy in Sunset Hill is that you get the quiet residential blocks AND you get Old Ballard. You're not trading one for the other.