This Lower Queen Anne street adjacent to the Seattle Center campus was named in honor of Seattle Storm basketball star Sue Bird (born 1980) in the fall of 2024. As Ordinance 121704 says,

Sue Bird is the winningest and greatest women’s professional basketball player of all time; and… played her entire 20-year professional career for the Seattle Storm, bringing home to Seattle four WNBA titles (2004, 2010, 2018, and 2020), while also winning five Olympic gold medals (2004-2020).

This, incidentally, makes Sue Bird the third Jew and the first Jewish woman to have a Seattle street named for her (Cowen Place NE and Fuhrman Avenue E are the other two).

Sue Bird on the court in August 2018. Photograph by Flickr user Lorie Shaull, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic

Originally 2nd Avenue N, the street (obviously redesignated a court in a nod to Bird’s sport) begins at the intersection of 2nd Avenue and Denny Way and goes just over 800 feet north to Lenny Wilkens Way, named for another Seattle basketball star. (North of there, its name changes to Seattle Storm Way.)

Overhead directional sign on the northwest corner of Denny Way where 2nd Avenue becomes Sue Bird Court N. The First United Methodist Church of Seattle is in the background. Seattle’s first church, it was founded in 1853. It has been at its current location since 2010. Photograph by Benjamin Lukoff, November 8, 2024. Copyright © 2024 Benjamin Lukoff. All rights reserved.
Overhead directional sign on the southeast corner of Denny Way where 2nd Avenue becomes Sue Bird Court N. The Pacific Science Center and its parking garage are behind those trees. Photograph by Benjamin Lukoff, November 8, 2024. Copyright © 2024 Benjamin Lukoff. All rights reserved.
Southwest corner of the intersection where these streets meet: Lenny Wilkens Way coming from the west, Thomas Street (pedestrian) coming from the east, Seattle Storm Way (pedestrian) coming from the north, and Sue Bird Court N coming from the south. Discerning observers can tell Lenny Wilkens Way is an official name and Seattle Storm Way an honorary one because the former’s sign is green and the latter’s is brown. Sue Bird Court is an official renaming but the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) incorrectly put up a brown sign (with no directional designation, as would be proper for an honorary name) and left the 2nd Avenue N name in place! Hopefully that will be fixed soon. Climate Pledge Arena, built for the 1962 World’s Fair as the Washington State Pavilion and subsequently known as the Coliseum and KeyArena, is in the distance. Photograph by Benjamin Lukoff, September 9, 2024. Copyright © 2024 Benjamin Lukoff. All rights reserved

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