SR 515 begins at an intersection with
SR 516 east of downtown
Kent, in the business district of the East Hill neighborhood. The highway travels north on a four-lane section of 104th Avenue Southeast, passing
Kent-Meridian High School and several suburban neighborhoods. SR 515 then diverts northeast onto 108th Avenue and crosses Harrison Creek, leaving Kent
city limits near
Panther Lake. The highway enters
Renton and continues north through suburban neighborhoods along the east edge of the
SR 167 freeway. It passes the
Valley Medical Center at Carr Road and turns northwest onto Benson Road. SR 515 then descends from Talbot Hill and passes under a pedestrian overpass at Thomas Teasdale Park. The highway then supersedes a section of Talbot Road and crosses under
I-405, which it intersects in a
half diamond interchange at the south edge of downtown Renton. Talbot Road continues into downtown Renton, passing several
big-box stores and SR 515 turns northeast onto Grady Way near the
city hall. Grady Way turns into Main Street and travels north along an
embanked section of I-405 towards the center of downtown Renton. SR 515 terminates at two intersections with
SR 900, which is split between a pair of
one-way streets: Houser Way, which also carries a
street running railroad, and Bronson Way one block from the
Cedar River and the
Renton Public Library. SR 515 is used by
King County Metro route 160, which provides bus connections to areas between
Kent's train station and Downtown Renton. The
Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) conducts an annual survey of traffic volumes on state highways measured in terms of
annual average daily traffic. Traffic volumes on SR 515 range from a minimum of 7,900 vehicles in downtown Renton to a maximum of 31,000 vehicles in northern Kent. ==History==