For Everett Residents: The Honest Timeline for Eclipse Mill Park and What the Riverfront Is Actually Delivering in 2026

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If You Live in the Riverfront Neighborhood — or Plan To

Everett’s Snohomish River waterfront has been one of the city’s most-discussed development projects since ground broke on the former mill site. For residents already living in the buildings Shelter Holdings has completed, the experience has been mixed: a beautiful site on the river, excellent Interurban Trail access, and a growing residential community — alongside empty ground-floor storefronts and delayed amenities that were part of the original sales pitch.

Here is what the 2026 construction season actually brings, and what you’ll be waiting on for several more years.

What You’ll Actually See Built in 2026

Eclipse Mill Park Phase 1 city construction starts this summer. The City of Everett is handling the waterside portion: bank stabilization along the Snohomish River, a floating dock, and waterfront amenities that will make the park usable from the river. The target is to have the city’s portion complete by November 2026.

Once the city finishes, Shelter Holdings has 18 months to complete the land-side Phase 1 — the playground, trail connection, play lawn, and parking that will make Eclipse Mill Park the usable community green space it was designed to be. That window runs from fall 2026 through spring 2028. If Shelter Holdings hits that timeline, residents get a complete park in spring 2028.

That’s real progress. For people who have been watching construction equipment on the site for years, a functional waterfront park with a dock and river access represents the moment the neighborhood begins to feel finished. The summer 2026 construction start is the beginning of that ending.

What You’re Still Waiting On

Grocery Store: 2030

The grocery store that was expected to be a retail anchor for the riverfront neighborhood has been pushed to 2030. If you’re living in the buildings now, that means your nearest walkable grocery option — for at least the next four years — is elsewhere. The QFC on Colby Avenue and the Safeway on Broadway are the nearest established options, each roughly a mile from the riverfront site.

Cinema: Gone, Replaced by Pickleball

The cinema concept that was part of the entertainment vision for the riverfront has been replaced by a pickleball facility. Whether that’s a downgrade or a sidegrade depends on your perspective — but if you were planning the evening of dinner and a movie at the waterfront, that programming won’t be available from the riverfront site itself. The Historic Everett Theatre downtown remains the city’s cinema option.

Ground-Floor Retail: Partial and Selective

Some ground-floor retail spaces in completed residential buildings remain vacant. The honest reason is that Snohomish County’s retail market is extremely selective right now — the county has the tightest retail vacancy rate in Puget Sound, which means good tenants have options and are taking time choosing locations. The riverfront neighborhood is still building the resident density that makes a coffee shop or restaurant economically viable on its own. That density is coming. It just hasn’t fully arrived yet.

Services and Resources in the Interim

While the riverfront’s retail and amenity programming catches up to its housing, downtown Everett — a short walk or bike ride — has a full commercial district with restaurants, cafes, the farmers market (opening Mother’s Day 2026), and the Historic Everett Theatre. The Waterfront Place restaurant cluster at the Port is accessible via the waterfront trail network. Everett’s community services network, including resources through Volunteers of America Western Washington, serves the wider city.

The Honest Assessment: Good Investment, Delayed Amenities

Living at the Everett riverfront right now means being an early resident in a neighborhood that isn’t finished. The bones are strong — beautiful site, river access, Interurban Trail connection, genuine density. The timeline for the full vision is longer than originally marketed. The park arrives starting in 2026. The grocery store arrives in 2030. The retail environment is being built incrementally as the neighborhood’s resident population grows.

That’s a real trade-off, and you deserve to know the honest terms of it before you decide whether to live there.

Frequently Asked Questions for Everett Residents

When will Eclipse Mill Park be fully open?

Spring 2028, if both the city (waterside, summer-November 2026) and Shelter Holdings (land-side, fall 2026-spring 2028) hit their timelines. The park’s waterside portion — dock, bank stabilization, river access — will be complete by November 2026.

Will there ever be a grocery store at the Everett riverfront?

Yes, but the opening has been pushed to 2030. Shelter Holdings has committed to the grocery anchor as part of the retail program; the delay reflects tenant recruitment timelines and the density thresholds grocery retailers typically require before committing to new locations.

Is the Everett riverfront a good neighborhood to live in right now?

For people who value riverfront access, trail connectivity, and urban density near downtown Everett, yes — with the explicit understanding that the retail and amenity programming is still being built out. The housing itself is solid and the site is genuinely attractive. The full neighborhood vision is several years from completion.

What is the Interurban Trail and does it connect to the riverfront?

The Interurban Trail is a paved multi-use path running through Snohomish County. It passes through the Everett riverfront site and provides trail access north and south. It is one of the neighborhood’s most consistent amenities and already functional for residents.

What is the difference between Eclipse Mill Park and Waterfront Place?

Eclipse Mill Park is the public park being built at the Snohomish River waterfront site on Everett’s east side (Shelter Holdings development). Waterfront Place is the restaurant and retail district at the Port of Everett on the west side of downtown, along Port Gardner Bay. They are different places serving different parts of the city.

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