Long a cultural center for the
Duwamish,
European settlers arrived in the area of present-day Renton as early as 1853. First among them were Henry Tobin and his wife Diana. The town of Renton was accessed via the
Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad, the first railroad to be built to
Seattle, and was in the vicinity of several
coal mines that attracted entrepreneurs like
Erasmus M. Smithers, who is credited with the founding and establishment of the town in 1875. Smithers named Renton in honor of Captain William Renton, a local lumber and shipping merchant who invested heavily in the coal trade. Smithers discovered coal there and brought in Charles D. Shattuck as the coal mine operator. Renton was incorporated as a city on September 6, 1901, The culmination of these actions reduced the threat of annual flooding. The population sharply increased during
World War II when
Boeing built their
Renton Factory to produce the
B-29 Superfortress. Renton grew from a population of 4,488 in 1940 to 16,039 in 1950. The game company
Wizards of the Coast also is headquartered in Renton. Providence Health System has centralized its administrative offices in Renton, along with
Group Health Cooperative. Owing to its location at the confluence of three major
freeways (
I-5,
I-405, and
SR 167), Renton's economic development team has lured a number of specialty retailers that draw consumers from around the region, including
IKEA. Some retail establishments were unwanted though, and the city successfully defended zoning restrictions on pornographic theaters before the U.S. Supreme Court in
Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. The
Renton Public Library was built directly over the Cedar River and opened in 1966. It stretches across the river, next to Liberty Park, and was the main branch of the city's independent library system until its 2010 annexation into the King County Library system.
21st-century redevelopment The city government has encouraged redevelopment of industrial areas around Downtown Renton and near Southcenter since the 1980s. The first
IKEA in the
Pacific Northwest opened in Renton in 1994 at a former Boeing building; the original building was replaced by a new store on the same site in 2017. The former
Longacres horse-racing track was redeveloped in the 1990s to support offices for Boeing and the
Federal Reserve Bank, which moved from its Seattle building. Port Quendall, a land parcel in north Renton, is home to the Virginia Mason Athletic Center (VMAC), housing the
Seattle Seahawks Headquarters and training facility that opened in August 2008; before then, the Seahawks trained in
Kirkland. In the mid-1990s, Renton undertook a major redevelopment effort to revitalize its downtown core, which had declined in commercial prominence since the opening of the
Southcenter Mall in
Tukwila in 1968. The many car dealerships that had previously occupied the center of downtown Renton were encouraged through economic incentives to relocate to a newly created auto sales zone close to the I-405/SR-167 interchange. In place of the old dealerships downtown, a new transit center and parking garage were built in partnership with
King County Metro. The transit center is surrounded by several multi-family residential buildings and a small
town square named Piazza Park, which hosts a weekly
farmers' market. Centered on former Boeing Co. property near the south shore of Lake Washington is a residential and commercial development named The Landing. To the north of the Landing, a hotel and office development on the lakefront called Southport has been developed at the site of the former Shuffleton power plant, which was demolished in 2001. A 347-room hotel operated under the
Hyatt Regency brand opened in June 2017. In 2017, Bosa Development announced plans to build five residential towers between 16 and 23 stories at Quendall Terminals, a
Superfund site in Renton on the shore of Lake Washington. The proposal was never formally approved by the city government, which had permitted six-story buildings on the site, and was dropped in 2024. ==Geography==