Active since April 23, 2026

Your Dream Starts Here

1415 SW 356th Street  ·  Federal Way, WA

0.2181 Acres

Listing by NWMLS / Windermere Abode

Text LaTosha for more

She's rare, she's ready, and she won't be available for long! This beautifully situated, ready-to-develop lot sits in a well-loved, established well-maintained neighborhood with the infrastructure already in place. Dream it, design it, build it — this is your moment! DADU potential makes it an even smarter play for investors and custom home builders alike. Water and power in the street, septic-friendly, and just minutes from freeways, restaurants, and shopping. The only thing missing is you!
  • Lot Size 9,500 sq ft
  • Lot Details Curbs, Paved, Sidewalk
  • Annual Taxes $1,245 (2026)
  • HOA Dues $0
  • MLS Number 2511188
  • Elementary School Buyer To Verify
  • Junior High Buyer To Verify
  • Senior High Buyer To Verify

What’s Nearby

Right across in the same Pavilions Centre is 85°C Bakery Cafe — fresh bread baked every hour, 60+ varieties, and a drink lineup that includes the famous sea salt cream coffee and boba teas. Cakes, pastries, and the kind of Sunday-morning line that tells you everything you need to know.

When somebody else needs to cook, Jimmy Mac's Roadhouse is the Federal Way classic — Texas-style, family-friendly, all-you-can-eat yeast rolls with whipped honey butter, endless peanuts, Dungeness crab cakes, and steaks that know what they're doing.

For the reset button, West Hylebos Wetlands Park is a 120-acre old-growth and wetland refuge with a 1.8-mile boardwalk loop — peat bog, restored pioneer cabins (the Barker Cabin is the oldest original building in Federal Way), and an easy walk even with a stroller.

When you want to make a day of it, Dash Point State Park is about 400 acres of Puget Sound shoreline with 11 miles of trails, a swimming beach, mountain biking, and camping if you want to crash for a night without leaving the zip code.

And the one nobody expects: the Pacific Bonsai Museum — one of the top bonsai collections in the world, with 100+ miniature trees from across the Pacific Rim, open-air, admission by donation, and six tiny treehouses built into the bonsai that'll stop you in your tracks. You'll take more photos than you planned.

Click anywhere on the map to get approximate drive times.
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