Tacoma Dune Peninsula_02

Be Dune-spired!

Visit and Explore Dune Peninsula at Point Defiance Park in Tacoma

While there are plenty of sand dunes around the country, there’s only one urban park on the planet that long ago helped inspire a major theme in Frank Herbert’s 1965 sci-fi book, Dune. Herbert was born and raised in Tacoma, and Dune Peninsula at Point Defiance Park is named in honor of his famous novel—a tribute to one of the book’s main ideas: that humans can protect the planet from the perils of pollution.

Visit the Dune Peninsula today and it’s hard to believe that this young park (only five years old) was long ago a rather noxious area because of a smelter operating in the area from 1890 to 1986. This inspired Herbert’s sci-fi ideas about protecting places from plumes and fumes that can lead to ruins. Fast forward many years, and plentiful progressive initiatives coupled with deep dedication have transformed this space into a thriving 11-acre beauty. Beloved by locals and visitors, Dune Peninsula is a nature-infused landscape of prairie grasses, indigenous flowers, picnic spots, and wowing views of glistening Puget Sound and the Cascade and Olympic Mountains. Photographers seek that perfect picture of Mount Rainier from here.

Walk the paved loop path, honorarily named Frank Herbert Trail. Medallions quoting Dune inspirations are embedded on the path. In fact, Dune-fluence abounds here: the massive bronze sculptures twisting out of soil … those are the giant sandworms.

Stay: With outstanding views and within a few minutes’ walking distance of Dune Peninsula at Point Defiance Park, Silver Cloud Hotel Tacoma at Point Ruston Waterfront can’t be beat for its location. It’s the only boutique hotel and spa (there’s also a rooftop pool) along north Tacoma’s shoreline, just feet from the beauty of Puget Sound and the surrounding Cascade and Olympic Mountains, including Mount Rainier.

The hotel is accompanied by a modern village of restaurants, artisan shops, an entertainment center, and shoreline pathways. Rooms are spacious, and the service friendly. The on-site restaurant is a nice place for enjoying outdoor scenery while catching up on the latest sports scores at the upscale bar. While parks in the nearby vicinity have dog-friendly spaces, there's a no pet policy at the hotel.

Travel Tacoma

Visit Washington State

Trending Stories NorCal

View all Stories
  1. Camp at Goose Lake in the Lakes Basin

    Duck, Duck, Goose!

    Try to get a first-come, first-served campsite at one of the Lakes Basin’s lakeside campgrounds. We love Goose Lake Campground, where there are just 13 sites and no motorized boats.

    View
  2. This Is Paradise

    Granite mountain-scape, superb sunset views, crystal lakes, and shoreline campsites … the trip to Paradise Lake in Tahoe National Forest lives up to its idyllic name.

    View
  3. Aloha from California

    Say Aloha without leaving California with a 7-mile out-and-back hiking adventure to Lake Aloha in El Dorado National Forest. You can also camp here, a premier place for stargazing.

    View
  4. Sequoia Re-opens Crystal Cave

    Step inside Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park's hidden world by visiting the newly re-opened Crystal Cave—the only cave in the parks open to the public. Closed for four years, this rare marble karst cavern is welcoming visitors once again, but only through the summer season!

    View

Trending Stories SoCal

View all Stories
  1. Sponsored

    Let's Go to Paso!

    Paso Robles is a good idea in all seasons, but one season brings a special bounty: harvest season! Road-trip ready and teeming with fall colors and fun events, Paso Robles is the ultimate destination for unique autumn experiences.

    View
  2. Can't Top This

    San Francisco’s Presidio was already a fantastic place to hang out for the afternoon, a beautiful site within the largest urban national park in the United States (the Golden Gate National Recreation Area). And Presidio Tunnel Tops is like a cherry on top. Make that two cherries on top, with the newly opened (July 2025) Outpost Meadow, a 1.5-acre green space located at Old Mason Street across from the Crissy Field Marsh in the Presidio.

    View
  3. Underground Garden

    Looking to escape the summer heat? Head to Fresno and discover its cool secret: the Forestiere Underground Gardens–an enchanting garden and architecture oasis like no other.

    View
  4. Oh Ryan

    Sure, it’s those whimsical trees that give Joshua Tree National Park its marquee billing; but this beautiful landscape also has surrounding mountains and its night sky—one of the darkest in Southern California and designated an International Dark Sky Park. Joshua Tree has four allowable stargazing parking lots, and a newly opened haven for spending the night nearby...

    View