Where Construction Is Happening in Magnolia
Every building, land-use, and trade permit issued by the City of Seattle inside Magnolia over the last 12 months — from the bluff above Discovery Park to the homes overlooking Smith Cove. The data refreshes nightly; bookmark this page and check back to see what changed.
Most Recent Permits
Thinking about buying or selling in Magnolia?
Data sourced from the City of Seattle Building Permits dataset (Public Domain). Updated nightly by Seattle SDCI. Map © OpenStreetMap contributors. Information is provided for general awareness and is not a substitute for due diligence. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Reading the Pulse of Magnolia, One Permit at a Time
Building permits are the quiet leading indicator of a neighborhood. They tell you where capital is moving, which blocks are turning over, and how owners are betting on the next ten years — long before any of it shows up in a sale price.
The map above pulls every building, land-use, and trade permit issued by the City of Seattle inside Magnolia over the trailing twelve months, refreshed nightly from the Seattle SDCI Open Data portal. You can filter by ground-up new construction, additions and major remodels, or just the last thirty days — useful if you’re tracking a specific street or watching how activity has shifted since spring.
Magnolia is a peninsula of stable, owner-held inventory, and that shapes what you’ll see here. Most activity clusters in three patterns: thoughtful additions and view-line remodels on the west bluff and Magnolia Boulevard, full teardown-and-rebuild projects on lots where mid-century homes no longer pencil to renovate, and infrastructure permits — seismic retrofits, sewer side-sewer replacements, and the steel-and-shotcrete work that comes with steep-slope properties. Commercial activity is concentrated along the Magnolia Village corridor on West McGraw and 32nd Avenue West.
For buyers, the heatmap is a way to vet a block before writing an offer — knowing a neighbor pulled a $1.2M renovation permit last quarter is the kind of context that doesn’t make it into the listing. For sellers, it’s a read on what the market is rewarding. Click any pin to see the address, scope, estimated project value, and a link to the official City record.
Matthew Konsmo
Associate Real Estate Broker
Coldwell Banker Danforth
Western Washington
Serving buyers and sellers with integrity and expertise. Matthew is an Associate Real Estate Broker with Coldwell Banker Danforth, helping clients navigate the Pacific Northwest market with confidence.