Greenway Trust Priority Area:
If the hills of the Teanaway Community Forest could talk they would tell tales of bubbling lava, ancient jungles roamed by coyote-sized horses, and a shoreline sculpted by great blocks of ice.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
Snoqualmie Valley’s Tollgate Farm has a long history as an important community hub. Local residents are working to restore one of its most iconic sections—the Tollgate Farmhouse—and envision a park with both recreation amenities and a hub for sustainable agriculture.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
The public lands on Squak Mountain are growing! Recently, the Trust for Public Land and King County purchased 226 acres on Squak Mountain along SR 900 just south of Issaquah. The land was formerly the site of a historic car camp from the 1930s, and had been slated for logging and a housing development....

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
As our region recovered from the Great Depression, new innovations began to change the face of skiing and bring about a new era for Snoqualmie Pass, with mechanized ski lifts, train service from Seattle to the Pass, and the birth of the current Snoqualmie Summit ski area.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
Neighbors from across the Snoqualmie River Valley came together for this eight-part workshop series, in which differences were set aside, sleeves were rolled up, and a vision for a bright future was crafted.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
A local Greenway school uses nature to cultivate happier, healthier students. After just seven months, the results are already incredible.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
Local schools will be able to build or renovate school buildings this year, thanks to revenue received from Washington state-owned lands--many of which are popular destinations for hikers, trail runners, equestrians, and other recreation-seekers.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
Skiing at Snoqualmie Pass began from humble roots. And a little bit of Olympic glory.

Greenway Trust Priority Area:
A rare, land-locked salmon, called kokanee, is coming back from the brink of extinction in the Lake Samammish basin. There’s much to celebrate, and so much more work to be done to guarantee long-term survival.