About the Friends of Detective Cookie Chess Park

Our History

In 2006, Seattle Police Detective Denise “Cookie” Bouldin started a chess club for Rainier Beach youth. The game served well as a metaphor for life’s important decisions. Since then, Detective Cookie’s chess club has provided a safe haven and created an opportunity for neighbors of all ages to interact and build community.

To honor Det. Cookie and to carry forth the positive momentum of her work, a group of community leaders and volunteers formed the Friends of Det. Cookie Chess Park (FDCCP) and began work on a permanent chess park and community gathering space.

Our Vision

Our vision was to create a small public park where chess can be played on built-in chess tables and on a giant in-ground chess board. This park is meant to be an outdoor destination for her club as well as the greater community to learn, play and observe chess together in Rainier Beach, Seattle, WA. Our mission is to improve the health and wellbeing of children and families in Rainier Beach through the game of chess.

We worked with Johnson Sutherland, a landscape architecture firm, to design and permit our vision. The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) helped us build the park, and now it owns and maintains it

Chess Park Objectives & Community Impact

The Detective Cookie Chess Park is an inter-generational, multicultural community space where neighbors can gather and play chess. The site was an underused right-of-way adjacent to Barton Place Apartments, low-income housing owned by Seattle Housing Authority. A mere block away from the main business corridor which includes our public library, community center and pool, and K-8 and High Schools, the site is at the heart of the Rainier Beach neighborhood. We are igniting the potential of this underused space to develop a beloved community asset.

According to the Seattle 2035 Comprehensive Plan, Rainier Beach has the highest risk of displacement and lowest access to opportunity of any neighborhood in the City. We also carry the perception of a high-crime neighborhood. This has especially taken its toll on our young people–who have suffered the loss of two teens to gun violence in just the last year. However, Detective Cookie’s Chess Club has been making a difference.

A permanent chess park will improve the health and safety of our neighborhood by providing free access to a game that teaches how to concentrate, how to win and lose gracefully, how to think logically and efficiently, and how to make tough decisions. The park is a gathering place for Seattle’s most diverse neighborhood to build community and in increase quality of life.

People playing chess

Milestones and Grants Received

April 2015- King & Queen Chess Sculptures RFP (request for proposal), Grant from Office of Arts & Cultures
May 2015- First Chess Park Pop-up event
June 2016- King & Queen Sculptures dedication ceremony
Nov 2016- Dept. of Neighborhoods Grant for $18,000 awarded for initial Chess Park schematic design
Aug 2017- Dept. of Neighborhoods Grant for $30,000 awarded for 2nd Phase design and permitting
June 2018- Chess Park pop-up event with grant from Play Streets (SDOT) covered by KOMO and King5 news
Nov 2018- Office of Arts & Cultures grant for $31,000 awarded for final design services and programming
Feb 2019- Dept. of Neighborhoods Grant for $25,000 awarded for 3rd Phase of Chess Park final permitting
December 2021– Capital Campaign raises $500,000
September 2022– Park opens

King and Queen Statues and Pop-Up Chess Park Event