həʔapus Village Park & Shoreline Habitat (formerly Terminal 107 Park) is an important archaeological, cultural, and ecological site that sits on the shores of one of the last remaining original bends of the Duwamish River. Located just off West Marginal Way across from the Duwamish Longhouse and Cultural Center, the park offers more than seven acres of native landscape park area along a vibrant river shoreline. Park hours are dawn to dusk.
The Jack Perry Memorial Park a 1.1 acre park. It is the first public shoreline access south of downtown and provides kayak access, views of terminal operation and a coast guard station, and has benches and parking. It offers a close-up view of activities along a container terminal on Harbor Island. Notable is it's profusion of madrona trees sprouting up from the rocks. Madronas were once common along the waterfront but being slow growing, vulnerable to disturbance, and hard to transplant, they are much less so today.