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Getting around Snohomish with Community Transit

an aerial view of downtown Snohomish, WA and the Snohomish River

Community Transit is here to get you where you want to go. We are proud to be a part of the Snohomish community — we live here, ride here, and drive here. Wherever you need to go in Snohomish, feel good about how you get there.

 

About Snohomish

Snohomish is located on the Snohomish River, southeast of Everett and northwest of Monroe. Snohomish lies at the intersection of U.S. Route 2 and State Route 9.As of the 2020 U.S. census, there were 10,126 people, and 4,221 households in the city.

Key destinations in Snohomish include its historic business and residential center in its downtown district, Harvey Airfield, the Snohomish Aquatic Center, its local Boys and Girls Club and senior center, Snohomish's public library, and its many parks and nature preserves. These include Ferguson Park and Hill Park on Blackmans Lake; Morgantown Park and Pilchuck Park on the Pilchuck River; and Cady Park and KlaHaYa Park in downtown on the Snohomish River.

Community Transit provides bus, DART Paratransit, and Vanpool service to Snohomish from surrounding cities. Two of these routes travel from Everett Station (with limited service to the Boeing Everett Factory) to Snohomish and continue east along US 2 to Monroe, Sultan, and Gold Bar. Another route travels from Lynnwood and Mill Creek to Snohomish and follows the State Route 9 corridor north to Lake Stevens. Community Transit also operates a commuter bus route that connects Snohomish and Monroe to Downtown Seattle with intermediate stops on Interstate 405 and State Route 520. The city also has one park and ride lot, located near Avenue D and State Route 9, that is owned by the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT).

Snohomish is also the southern terminus of the Centennial Trail, an intercity multi-use path for pedestrians, cyclists, and equestrians.

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Blog / Published on Feb 20, 2024

Travel back in time on a transit tour of local museums

Experience Snohomish County’s vivid history by bus.

Photo shows a park and picnic area at the Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Museum in Arlington

Pictured above: A park and picnic area at the Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Museum in Arlington.

Snohomish County is rich with the history of hardworking families who moved west and built the communities we’re proud to call home today. Some of the most unique museums that are open to the public in Snohomish County today hold treasures that tell interesting stories of how the region was established. Step aboard a Community Transit bus and relax on the drive to a world gone by. Don’t just read about history (although you can take a bus to a library if you want to read about history). Transit makes it easy to experience it yourself.

Stanwood Area Historical Society museums - home of the Snow Goose & Birding Festival
27122 102nd Ave NW – Stanwood
Route 240
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Promotional artwork for the 2024 Stanwood Camano Snow Goose & Birding FestivalIf you haven’t visited the town of Stanwood, it’s in the northwest corner of Snohomish County. There you will find the Stanwood Area Historical Society campus, with historical exhibits at the D.O. Pearson House, the former home of Stanwood’s first mayor; The Floyd Norgaard Cultural Center (”The Floyd”); and the Dave Eldridge Center, originally named the Stanwood Camano History Museum. In addition to regional relics and art, Stanwood is home to one of Western Washington’s most spectacular events, the Stanwood Camano Snow Goose & Birding Festival. This annual event takes place Feb. 24, 2024, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Step aboard a transit bus and enjoy the views of wildlife. Discover the Snow Geese, Trumpeter Swans, and why this community is internationally recognized.

Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Museum – where coho salmon still spawn
20722 67th Ave NE, Arlington
Routes 220 & 230
Plan My Trip

Be sure to wear comfortable walking shoes when you take the bus to Arlington to explore this museum’s campus which includes Pioneer Hall, a park and picnic area, outdoor displays, and three ponds. Kids and adults alike will enjoy the life-size animal displays and a model train depicting the Darrington Logger chugging along the north fork of the “Stilly” (Stillaguamish River). Fishing is a big part of the economy and culture for local tribes. The ponds at the museum are networked with Portage Creek and the Stilly, which flows into Puget Sound. From the museum’s observation deck overlooking the creek, you’ll have an excellent view of the Coho salmon working their way up the fish ladders, along with muskrats, beavers, and river otters, depending on the time of year.

Blackman House Museum – inventor of roof shingles
118 Avenue B, Snohomish
Routes 109, 270 & 271
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The Blackman House Museum occupies the former home of a pioneer logging family who invented the process of cutting and drying roof shingles so they could be mass-produced and carried by train across the country. The Blackman family was part of a community that homesteaded from Snohomish north to the Stillaguamish. They launched an empire shipping boatloads of Pacific Northwest cedar and fir lumber. If you walk out on the dock at Hill Park and look to the right, on the northeast shore of Blackman Lake, you can see pilings that date from 1876. Three bus routes stop within a half-mile of the Blackman House Museum in Snohomish.

If you enjoy your tour and want to keep exploring, here’s a list of ten more interesting museums throughout Snohomish County. To find out which destinations are near the bus routes add the address here.

 

Route information is accurate as of this article’s publication date. As our communities grow, Community Transit makes changes to stops and routes to best serve riders. For the most updated route information use our Plan My Trip tool.

Written by Debra Yergen, Communications
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