RapidRide I Line Construction Update (March 2026)
SMALL BUT MIGHTY: Community-Drawn Stories for the RapidRide I Line
Exquisite Riders, collaborative community drawings for RYAN! Feddersen’s SMALL BUT MIGHTY.
For artist RYAN! Feddersen, community engagement isn’t a box to be checked—it’s a generative force at the core of her practice. Her expansive public art project, SMALL BUT MIGHTY, has been developed through time spent listening, drawing, laughing, and imagining alongside the people who live, learn, work, and travel along King County Metro’s forthcoming RapidRide I Line—a 17-mile corridor connecting Renton, Kent, and Auburn, anticipated to open in 2027.
Rather than treating engagement as a preliminary step, Feddersen approached it as a creative methodology capable of shaping not just ideas, but form, imagery, and meaning.
“Community engagement is an interesting but often nebulous part of public art development,” Feddersen says. “There are all kinds of ways artists go about it—from being present at an informational booth, to leading participatory workshops, to collaborative artmaking that becomes a direct part of the project.”
In SMALL BUT MIGHTY, collaboration took shape through shared moments of everyday life, expressed through drawing, storytelling, and imagination. These moments reflect where people are going, what they care about, and how they move through the world. They ultimately coalesced into Exquisite Riders, a series of nine glass mosaics that will be embedded into prominent retaining walls along the I Line.
Drawing Together: From Play to Public Art
The project’s community engagement began at the King County Metro Roadeo, an annual obstacle-course competition that brings together Metro operators, staff, and families. Within this lively setting, Feddersen designed a collaborative drawing activity in which participants worked sequentially on a single figure, each person responding only to written prompts, without seeing what had been drawn before.
“I planned an art activity based on a Surrealist drawing exercise where multiple people work together in the creation of a single drawing,” she explains. “The premise was that community-made contributions could inspire elements of the future artwork.”
Participants were guided by three simple prompts:
- Draw a head: Think of an animal from your commute or neighborhood
- Draw a torso: What activity might you use the bus to access?
- Draw legs: Imagine a mode of movement to get from one place to another
The results were joyful, strange, and imaginative: giraffes and opossums, owls and flamingos, cats, bears, aliens, mermaids. The characters danced ballet, went grocery shopping, fished, commuted to work, rollerbladed, grabbed coffee—and even planned the occasional bank robbery.
“Participants demonstrated a lot of creativity,” Feddersen says. “The characters produced during the first session were so charming and elicited such excitement that they inspired an additional component of the work.”
Exquisite Riders: A Community’s Imagination, Made Permanent
Originally, these collaborative drawings were intended to inform Fellow Travelers, another element of SMALL BUT MIGHTY that will feature sandblasted silhouettes of anthropomorphic animals integrated into the sidewalk at eleven I Line stations. But the drawings sparked something more.
“They inspired an additional component of the work, Exquisite Riders, which will take the form of retaining-wall mosaics,” Feddersen explains.
Once this new direction was established, she expanded the engagement process by hosting drawing sessions at Kent Elementary, West Auburn Senior High School, and Kent Meridian High School to ensure the mosaics incorporated a wide range of voices along the corridor.
In the studio, Feddersen carefully broke down the submitted drawings into parts, reimagining and recombining them into new fantastical riders. In total, 27 community contributions are represented across the nine mosaics to be installed in Kent and Renton. Many additional drawings subtly shaped Fellow Travelers—from the animals depicted to the everyday activities suggested.
“While only a portion of the contributions will be represented directly in the final artwork,” she says, “I wanted a place to share these characters in their original form.”
A selection of the original community drawings is featured here, with a complete archive to be shared on the artist’s website.
Art That Travels With You
SMALL BUT MIGHTY is rooted in Plateau and Interior Salish storytelling traditions, reflecting Feddersen’s heritage as a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, where Animal People live complex lives that illustrate the interconnectedness between humans, animals, plants, and land.
Along the I Line, these stories will unfold through three interconnected bodies of work:
- Fellow Travelers: Eleven ground-plane artworks appearing as shadows cast by station amenities, revealing Animal People waiting for the bus alongside us.
- Exquisite Riders: Nine opalescent glass mosaics, informed by community drawings, embedded in concrete retaining walls patterned with beadwork-inspired designs.
- Salmon Shoal: Five glass mosaic medallions in the patterned retaining walls at Mill Creek Canyon Earthworks Park, depicting salmonberry in its five colors and symbolizing interdependence between species and ecosystems.
Together, these works quietly transform everyday transit spaces into places of recognition, humor, and shared presence.
“These artworks playfully suggest everyday relationships and shared experiences with our non-human kin,” Feddersen says. “Animals, plants, and humans alike inhabit and impact the world.”
When the I Line opens, riders won’t just be traveling between destinations—they’ll be moving through a landscape shaped by collective imagination, where community stories are quite literally built into the route.
King County Executive Zahilay, Metro and partners break ground on RapidRide I Line in South King County
We broke out the shovels on March 19, to celebrate the start of construction on the I Line! Read more about the celebration
(Left to right) Community members Arya Nguyen and Prem Subedi, Metro General Manager Michelle Allison, State Rep. David Hackney, Auburn Deputy Mayor Tracy Taylor, Kent Mayor Dana Ralph, Renton Mayor Armondo Pavone, King County Councilmembers Steffani Fain & Peter von Reichbauer, King County Executive Girmay Zahilay, State Rep. Debra Entenman, Renton Councilmember Valerie O’Halloran
What to expect during construction
Construction activity, mainly along roads and sidewalks, is anticipated to begin in the first quarter of 2026. Typical work hours will be Monday through Friday, 7:00 am to 5:00 pm, with some nighttime and weekend work. Construction may cause temporary changes or disruptions to your usual access or travel patterns along the RapidRide I Line route. The contractor will work in designated construction zones with potential temporary local impacts over the course of the project.
During construction, you can expect:
- Temporary parking restrictions
- Periodic lane and driveway closures
- Large machinery and truck activity
- Construction staging and parking impacts near some construction sites
- Some sidewalk, intersection, and lane closures
- Detours for people walking, biking, and rolling
- Temporary bus detours and bus stop relocations for Route 160 and other area transit and bus routes.
- Flaggers to direct traffic around work areas
Community Highlights
Renton
Safety Fest
Mar. 28 | 11AM-2PM | Renton Community Center (1715 Maple Valley Hwy)
This is a unique opportunity to engage with local agencies, city staff, and dedicated volunteers who are passionate about helping families stay safe. Explore a variety of interactive stations and learn about essential topics like fire prevention, first-aid, and public safety and more. You’ll walk away with the knowledge and confidence to keep your family safe while having fun this summer! Learn more.
Senior 50+ Housing Fair
Mar. 31 | 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM | Don Persson Tenton Senior Activity Center (211 Burnett Ave N)
Meet representatives from Renton-based senior housing communities, referral specialists, and related agencies such as housing repair services. This event will be an Open House format. Although this event is free, pre-registration is encouraged. Pre-register here.
Kent
Somewhere Over the Rainbow: Easter at Kent Station
Mar. 28 | 11 AM – 3 PM | Kent Station (438 Ramsay Way)
Follow the yellow brick road to Kent Station for a magical, Oz-themed Easter celebration. Families can enjoy a day packed with whimsical activities, like three age-specific egg hunts, a “Wizard of Oz” scavenger hunt for older kids, and a chance to meet “magical unicorns” and cuddly rabbits at the petting zoo. Don’t forget your camera for photos with the Easter Bunny and a stop at the egg decorating station! Learn more.
Spring Scavenger Hunt
Apr. 1-30 | 8AM-5PM | Downtown Kent
Spring has sprung! Celebrate the longer days and warming weather with a scavenger hunt through downtown Kent–having fun and supporting local businesses, too. Little stuffed bees have scattered across historic downtown Kent, and Kent needs your help to track them down. Search for the hidden bees, complete your passport, and submit it for a chance to win awesome prizes from local businesses. Learn more.
Auburn
Cultures of the Valley Family Day
Mar. 28 | Noon-4PM | White River Valley Museum (918 H St SE)
Learn more about some of the cultures that call the valley home in the first of two Family Day programs during our exhibit Shaping the Valley. This free event explores Japanese and Marshallese cultures through fun activities and crafts. All ages welcome! Learn more.
Peter Cotton Trail
Apr. 3 – Apr. 6 | 8 AM – 8 PM | Various parks and trails
Hop through Auburn’s parks and trails in search of the elusive bunnies who will be hidden in various locations around Auburn. Find 10 bunnies, submit a scorecard, and get entered for a chance to win some awesome prizes! This family-friendly event is perfect for all ages, including seniors and those in the specialized recreation community. It’s a great way to get outside, stay active and enjoy the outdoors! Learn how it works.










When will you post your plans for a South East King Realignment with Stride S1?
Looking forward to seeing your improvements, and hopefully not using it to justify service cuts.