There’s a moment, right around the bend past the gleaming federal courthouse on Dock Street, when Tacoma stops being a city you’re passing through and becomes one you want to stay in. That moment happens on the Thea Foss Waterway Esplanade, and if you haven’t walked it yet, I’m genuinely envious of you — because you still get to experience it for the first time.
The Esplanade is a nearly mile-long waterfront promenade that traces the eastern shore of the Thea Foss Waterway, right in Tacoma’s revitalized downtown core. Named for the Norwegian immigrant woman who launched a small rowboat rental business here in 1889 and eventually built a marine empire, the waterway carries a history as deep and interesting as the water itself. But history aside, what you’ll notice first is how completely alive this stretch of shoreline feels on any given afternoon.
Start your walk from the southern end near the Museum of Glass — you’ll recognize the iconic steel cone — and head north along the water. The path is wide, well-maintained, and punctuated by public art installations, grassy pocket parks, and generous benches positioned to face the water at every possible angle. On a clear day, Mount Rainier floats above the treeline like something out of a painting, and you’ll stop walking involuntarily, phone in hand, feeling slightly foolish about how beautiful it is.
The mix of people here is part of the charm. You’ll find serious cyclists, families pushing strollers, folks walking dogs of every conceivable size, and people who appear to have simply sat down on a bench and decided that was enough for the day. It’s unpretentious in the best possible way.
About midway along the Esplanade, the Grand Staircase — locally nicknamed the Spanish Steps — descends dramatically from Pacific Avenue down to the waterfront level, connecting the promenade to the heart of downtown. This is a genuine architectural statement, and arriving at the water’s edge from those steps feels theatrical in a way that never gets old.
The waterway itself hosts a rotating cast of sailboats, kayakers, and the occasional working vessel, which gives the whole scene a satisfying sense of motion and purpose. In warmer months, the Foss Waterway Seaport building nearby offers paddleboard and kayak rentals, so you can trade the view from the shore for a view of the shore — equally worth it.
Dining and coffee options dot the nearby blocks, with several restaurants along Dock Street offering outdoor seating close enough to the water that the distinction between eating lunch and being on a boat becomes pleasantly blurry.
The Esplanade is free, open year-round, and honestly one of the most underrated urban walks in the entire Pacific Northwest. Tacoma has been quietly getting things right for a while now, and this waterfront path is Exhibit A. Walk it once and you’ll start wondering what took you so long to make the trip.