• Study

Tacoma to Puyallup Regional Trail

Planning study news

On May 14, 2024, we announced the name of the new trail. It will be called the spuyaləpabš Trail, honoring the people who have lived on and stewarded the land for centuries: the Puyallup People. spuyaləpabš is the Lushootseed name for the Puyallup People, translated as "people from the bend at the bottom of the river." Lushootseed is the native language of 13 Pacific Northwest tribes, including the Puyallup Tribe of Indians.

Preliminary engineering, environmental analysis and cost estimation work is complete along with the final route of the new regional trail.

Timeline
2021-2023
Status
Complete
Budget
$2.3 million for a preliminary engineering and environmental study

Purpose

The spuyaləpabš Trail, formerly referred to as the Tacoma to Puyallup Regional Trail, will be a 12-mile regional shared use path that connects downtown Puyallup to Fife and downtown Tacoma. It will provide people who live and work in the area with a new option to travel without a motorized vehicle to a variety of destinations. Through this study, WSDOT completed preliminary trail design, established trail character, prepared construction cost estimations and the environmental review.

WSDOT's SR 167 Completion Project led the study in coordination with the Puyallup Tribe of Indians, Pierce County, the Port of Tacoma, the cities of Tacoma, Fife and Puyallup, and other local cities and agencies. Through the study, WSDOT and partners finalized the trail route, completed preliminary trail design, prepared construction cost estimates and began the environmental review. WSDOT will build approximately 8 miles of the trail, with the remaining 4 miles built by the cities of Fife and Tacoma. 

The trail will route along WSDOT’s future SR 167 alignment from Puyallup to SR 509 in Fife. From there the trail will route along the west side of Alexander Avenue East and continue along the south side of Pacific Highway East where it enters downtown Tacoma. At this point, the trail will be included within the city’s Puyallup Avenue Complete Streets project until it reaches the Thea Foss Esplanade.