A Vital Sammamish Town Center

We are in favor of planned growth to sustain the well-being of the community we love. In 2008 the City Council approved The Sammamish Town Center Plan for a maximum of 2,000 residential units and 70 ft. building height limit. Our City Council recently initiated proposals to increase the density from 2,000 to 4,000 units and increase building heights to 85'. We want to make the community aware of the impacts these changes may have on our community. Learn more about the amendment process.

Together, we strive for a Town Center that enhances our city’s future without compromising its character, its fiscal health, safety, our children’s schools, or our current residents’ quality of life. This is a critical time in the development of the Town Center. Construction of the first phase is now underway. We need to make our voices heard before it is too late to change course.

What Can I Do?

Issues with the Town Center...
And City Council.

Help us make the City Council listen... Or hold them accountable.

What you need to know about the Town Center Amendment

We are concerned about the plan to build 85' buildings and add 2,000 housing units to the Town Center. This development would worsen traffic, overcrowd schools, and harm our natural environment.

Increased population means more road use, raising safety concerns during emergencies. Our schools, already full, may need to bus students to Redmond. Additionally, increased urbanization threatens the trees, lakes, and wildlife that define Sammamish.

Read more about why we urge the city council to reject this plan. Help protect Sammamish's character — sign this petition to preserve our quality of life.

Image of bumper to bumper traffic.

Traffic Gridlock

Photo credit Cory M. Grenier

Explore the challenges and opportunities of transit in Sammamish. With most residents relying on cars for their daily commute, the introduction of light rail in nearby Redmond offers potential but limited impact for Sammamish traffic. Learn how commuting alternatives stack up and what the future holds for transportation in the region, and if it will really help our residents.

Does your commute include Redmond Way?

A dearth of public transit

A case for a growth moratorium

Environmental Degradation

Sammamish has trees, lots of them, and many are mature Douglas-firs, one of our state's native trees. The TC growth will be at the expense of the tree canopy those trees provide. We're going to lose our natural shade and trade it for a heat island. Also, the animals that depend on those trees, such as the native Douglas squirrel and the brown creeper, will lose their homes.

The Town Center development presents our community with a defining choice
We can either treat this crisis as an inevitable consequence of growth, or take the high road and rise as responsible stewards of our unique ecosystem and demand that the size of this development be limited so as to not extirpate our iconic Lake Sammamish kokanee salmon.
As residents of Sammamish, we must learn to value all the natural treasures that we presently have and work to safeguard them.
Wally Pereyra, Environmentalist, July 2025

Park funds being used for Town Center

A former Mayor's Thoughts

Financial Burden to Taxpayers

The details of Sammamish city finance are complicated, but the underlying problem is simple.

Sammamish, like most cities in Washington, is in a jam. Major expenses tend to grow at the rate of inflation. The major revenue source, property tax, by law cannot increase at the rate of inflation, if it is greater than 1%. In years of low inflation, this was not a big, obvious problem. Then 2022 and 2023 happened. The imbalance became visible, large and short term.

What does this have to do with a much bigger Town Center? City revenues increase with new construction. But city expenses also increase. The City Council hopes that the near term increase in revenue from a bigger Town Center will cover the longer term increase in expenses that it will cause. So far, the City has not provided any justified argument that this will be the way it plays out.

A fiscal sustainability crisis for Sammamish

Sammamish is already over capacity!

Sammamish doesn't have the infrastructure to support all this growth, nor are there viable plans to build it. We're already failing our traffic concurrency. Our water and sewer system is already stressed, with the water district planning high cost expansions. There is no more room to build schools in our city.

How big do you want Sammamish to get?

A case for a grown moratorium

Does Sammamish really want to be a regional growth center?

What happens in the case of an emergency?

Our roads are already crowded. The City's own studies show that our roads would be more congested than Paradise, California in an evacuation situation. And Paradise burned to the ground.

Our region is already beset by climate emergencies, earthquakes, windstorms and flooding. How are we going to get out?

Where Are You Going To Park

The Sammamish Town Center is being promoted as a destination for dining, shopping, and civic events, but parking will be limited to one space per housing unit, which may not be sufficient given the average number of cars per household.

How much shopping in the Town Center?

The amendment wants to put almost 400,000 square feet of retail in the Town Center. This is half the size of Bellevue Mall! Where are people going to park?

Most Recent Blog Post

Case studies about the impact of the Town Center.

Most Recent Blog Post
Read more on the blog.

Our Mission

Growth, but keep it sustainable

Our mission is to educate ourselves and our neighbors on the complex issues surrounding the 240-acre Town Center and to advocate for a thoughtful, balanced approach to housing, retail, transportation, city economic involvement, and environmental stewardship.

We believe in a Town Center that honors the values of current Sammamish residents—one that prioritizes responsible growth, fiscal sustainability, safeguards our natural environment to include our wildlife, trees, watershed, creeks, and aquifers, and upholds the integrity, infrastructure, and safety of our city.

Together, we strive for a Town Center that enhances our city’s future without compromising its character, its fiscal future, its safety, our children’s schools, or our current residents’ quality of life.

We love Sammamish. Let’s keep it that way.

About Us

Who are we and what do we stand for.

We are a growing coalition of 25+ bipartisan Sammamish residents (Democrats, Republicans. Independents, Progressives), committed to shaping a Town Center that is environmentally sustainable, and fiscally responsible - without regressively taxing fixed-income residents to benefit developers and city council member’s personal agendas. We reflect our community’s reasons for moving to Sammamish.

We appreciate our beautiful lush forests and sparkling lakes, excellent schools, safe communities, backyards, trails, and parks where our children/grandchildren and pets can play, easy traffic, friendly, inclusive neighborhoods, and fantastic city services.

Many of us have lived here between 10 and 50+ years and have seen the damage that can happen when partisanship happens–when city council majorities swing too far to the right then far to the left. We are unified in our support of leaders that believe in compromise.

We believe in measured growth, but not without infrastructure. We want the Town Center that was promised to us in 2008, not the housing density boondoggle and financial disaster of 4000 housing units with the “opportunity” for retail and the pursuant gridlock and overcrowding that would come. We support leaders who put the interests of residents first, while ensuring compliance with King County requirements and the city's development code.

We’ve been fully self-funded from the start and do not accept money from political parties or developers. In line with our commitment to transparency, we’re now welcoming donations from Sammamish residents to further our community outreach efforts and any future activities.

Sign Our SOS Petition

Let the City Council know that you don't want 85' buildings and 4,000 housing units in our Town Center.

We plan to present this petition to prevent the approval of high rise buildings and excessive housing density in Sammamish Town Center.

Sign our Petition