7th Ave
Seattle, WA 98101
Mithun is an integrated design firm dedicated to creating positive change in people’s lives. As a national practice with offices in San Francisco and Seattle, we are a unified design studio with an open and collaborative spirit founded on a process of inquiry and listening. Our team of Architects, Landscape Architects, Interior Designers, Urban Designers and Planners creates seamless experiences that are unique expressions of each client, community and place. We work in a wide range of typologies and scales – with a focus on urban environments and places where people live, work, and learn. Mithun is an internationally recognized leader in sustainability, combining exemplary design with a focus on building and site performance, human health and social equity. Since the inception of the practice in 1949, our work has been recognized with hundreds of peer and industry awards including five AIA Committee on the Environment Top Ten project recognitions as well as recently ranking in the nation’s top fifteen design firms.
Suyama Peterson Deguchi (SPD), founded by George Suyama FAIA in 1971, is an architecture firm based in Seattle, Washington. Ric Peterson, FAIA, joined George as partner in 1983, Jay Deguchi became a partner in 2002 and Chris Haddad a partner in 2014. The firm specializes in northwest contemporary design and offers a comprehensive range of services from architecture to interiors and furniture design. Our Belltown studio houses architectural offices for our professional staff, as well as Suyama Space, a renowned art installation gallery, and 3x10 [Three by Ten], our furniture and accessory showroom.
We are an architecture firm based in Seattle, Washington. The name PUBLIC47 is a reference to our interest in site specificity—Seattle is located at the 47th parallel—and a belief that good architecture of all scales has an important influence on the public realm. Our mission is simple: to design pragmatic, elegant and enduring buildings that enrich the lives of inhabitants and the greater community alike. We thoughtfully tailor each building to its situation, the realities of construction, and the budget. Each project begins with careful analysis of the client’s ambitions, the opportunities of the site, the possibilities of the program, and the potential of materials. We generate design solutions that are specific to each project; combining observation, innovation, tradition, and common sense. We meticulously detail our projects with the intent that our buildings last for generations. The partners at PUBLIC47 – Scot Carr, Jeff Boone and Kevin Tabari – are known in the community for their design work. They have enjoyed working with a diverse range of clients on everything from single-family residences to public, institutional and multi-family developments.
Five Ply Design is an award winning multi-discipline design studio based in Seattle, Washington. Our name reflects our commitment to viewing design and creative problem solving from multiple perspectives and scales. While many traditional design firms rely on a single approach to design resolution, Five Ply Design embraces the full spectrum of design sensibilities in order to solve our clients needs. Five Ply was founded in 2006 by Peter Benarcik, an award winning designer and educator. Our team includes experienced architects, interior, furniture and graphic design professionals who work collaboratively to provide seamless integration of design disciplines.
The University Street Station is a Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel Station located under Third Avenue between Union and Seneca Streets in Downtown Seattle. Sound Transit's Central Link light rail trains serve this station alongside King County Metro and Sound Transit Express buses. It is completely underground, with entrances in the 1201 Third Avenue Tower (Third Ave. & Seneca St.), the Cobb Building parking garage (Third Ave. & University St.), Benaroya Hall (Third Ave. & University St.) and a wheelchair accessible walkway to Second Avenue and University Street. 7,900 daily light rail boardings are predicted for the year 2020.The Second Avenue and University Street entry passage includes wall tiles with music-related inscriptions.Suggestions have been made to change the name of the station to "Benaroya Hall" or "Symphony" due to possible confusion with University of Washington and U District stations.
La Biblioteca Centrale di Seattle è la struttura più importante del sistema bibliotecario pubblico di Seattle. L'edificio, alto 11 piani e realizzato in vetro e acciaio, fu aperto al pubblico il 23 maggio 2004. La biblioteca ha una superficie di 34.000 m2 e può contenere fino a un milione e quattrocentocinquantamila libri. Nel primo anno di apertura fu visitata da oltre 2 milioni di persone.StoriaSin dal 1891 c'è sempre stata una biblioteca nel centro di Seattle, tuttavia inizialmente questa non aveva degli spazi dedicati e fu spesso costretta a cambiare edificio. La Seattle Carnegie Library fu la prima biblioteca permanente ad essere collocata in un edificio specifico; inizialmente aveva una superficie di 5100 m2 e fu ingrandita nel 1946. Nonostante i lavori di espansione, la biblioteca si rivelò progressivamente troppo piccola per una città che, nel frattempo, aveva aumentato notevolmente la popolazione. Una seconda biblioteca di 19.100 m2 fu costruita al posto della vecchia Carnegie Library nel 1960 ma verso la fine degli anni '90 anche questa nuova biblioteca cominciò ad essere troppo piccola e iniziarono i progetti per costruirne una nuova.Realizzazione e DesignI fondi per la costruzione della nuova biblioteca furono trovati tramite l'emissione di una obbligazione per un valore complessivo di 196,4 milioni di dollari, inoltre anche Bill Gates, fondatore della Microsoft contribuì con 20 milioni di dollari. L'edificio fu progettato da Rem Koolhaas e Joshua Prince-Ramus in collaborazione con lo studio di architetti di Seattle LMN Architects. La biblioteca fu concepita come un'opera di celebrazione dei libri e la sua forma dall'esterno è inusuale poiché si è scelto di assoggettare la struttura dell'edificio alle funzioni che dovevano essere svolte all'interno piuttosto che il contrario.
Crossfit Fundamentals (Intro to group classes) Tuesday/Thursday 6:00pm Group classes: Monday/Wednesday 7/11 am; 4/5/6 pm Tuesday/Thursday 7/11am; 5/6pm Friday 7/11am; 4pm Saturday 9:00am
Immanuel Lutheran Church is a historic church at 1215 Thomas Street in Seattle, Washington.It was built in 1907 and added to the National Register in 1982.
Welcome to Miners Landing on Pier 57, home of The Seattle Great Wheel. With great dining, shopping, and unique experiences on Seattle’s famous waterfront, this is the first place to visit on your next trip. Thank you for visiting and sharing your good times on The Seattle Great Wheel! PAGE RULES: This page is a place for our fans. However, we do need to have certain rules. Please be aware that we must reserve the right to remove any posting or other material that we find off-topic, inappropriate, or objectionable, or that we deem to be an unsolicited idea submission.
Come visit Columbia Center's Sky View Observatory for a spectacular view. We are open 7 days a week 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. The fee is $14.75 for adults and $9 for seniors, military, students and children six to twelve. It is free for children five and under. Twitter: @ColumbiaSkyView Instagram: @SkyViewObservatory Sky View Observatory Cafe: Come vista us for happy hour between 3-6pm. Enjoy $1 off taps and house wine, and $2 off our Signature Mezze Plate. Menu and information: http://www.ravishingradish.com/skyviewcafe.html Sky View Observatory Events: The Sky View Observatory offers a one-of-a-kind event space in the highest public observatory in the Pacific Northwest, with award-winning, full-service catering from Ravishing Radish Catering. Whether it’s an intimate wedding, a cocktail party, or a corporate event, the Observatory and Ravishing Radish will meet every event need. Seated events for up to 75 and stand-up, reception-style events for up to 100. Contact us today to plan your event: 206.860.7449 | [email protected] The 76- story Columbia Center has been a landmark of the Seattle skyline since its opening in 1985. It was formerly known as the Bank of America Tower and Columbia Seafirst Center. This Seattle landmark is the tallest building in Washington State and the Pacific Northwest region. Reaching heights of 284.2 m (932 ft) it is nearly twice the size of the Space Needle, and at one point it was the tallest skyscraper west of the Mississippi River! It is currently the fourth tallest building west of the Mississippi, the second tallest building on the West Coast, and the twentieth tallest building in the United States. It contains seventy-six stories of class-A office and retail space and six stories of subterranean parking, making it the building with the most stories west of the Mississippi. Building Facts: •Architect: Chester Lindsey •Cost of Construction: $285 million •Construction Time: 2 years •Tallest building, by number of stories, west of the Mississippi River •76 stories above Fourth Avenue •943 feet (295 meters) tall at Fourth Avenue (nearly twice the height of the Space Needle) •1,049 feet (328 meters) above sea level •1.5 million rentable square feet office and retail space •6 levels of subterranean parking with 705 parking spaces Retail Atrium: •Levels 1, 2, 3 and 4 with approx. 144,000 rentable square feet of shops, with approx. 173,000 square feet of public arcade •6 escalators connect retail levels with building lobby •The Atrium is connected to two other high-rise buildings via a pedestrian tunnel on the Level 2 Occupancy: •Approximately 5,000 people work at Columbia Center (when fully occupied) •Approximately 2,000 people visit the building every business day
Columbia Centre là một toàn nhà cao tầng tại trung tâm thành phố Seatle, tiểu bang Washington, Hoa Kỳ. Tòa nhà này được xây xong năm 1991. Columbia Centre có chiều cao 285 m, 76 tầng. Tòa nhà này được thiết kế bởi Chester L. Lindsey Architects, một đơn vị cũng thiết kế Fourth and Blanchard Building ở Belltown và được nhà thầu Howard S. Wright Construction Co thi công. Đến năm 2008, đây là tòa nhà cao thứ 51 thế giới.
You and eleven other people are trapped in a room. As you look around you start to notice strange messages—or are they clues?—hidden around the room. Can you and your friends solve the series of puzzles, find the key, and get out within an hour? Based on popular room escape video games, you now have an opportunity to flex your mental muscles in America's original immersive puzzle escape experience!
Seattle, a medley of lush green hills surrounded by snow capped mountains and sparking blue waters. In the middle of this lands a technologist from Silicon Valley who moves to Seattle looking for and opportunity for innovation and adventure. This page describes Seattle as seen by a Californian Migrant.
Still ahead of its time, the Space Needle features breathtaking views of the Seattle area and beyond. Journey skyward to the Observation Deck for 360 degrees of indoor and outdoor viewing at 520'. You can also join us 500' above ground at our world-famous revolving restaurant - SkyCity.
TheFilmSchool is a non-profit film program located in Seattle, Washington, that focuses on intensive training in screenwriting and directing. TheFilmSchool's mission statement 'to elevate the art of cinematic storytelling' guides the curriculum to heavily emphasize character, structure, and understanding the principles of storytelling. The program was founded in 2003 by Stewart Stern, John Jacobsen, Rick Stevenson, Warren Etheredge, and Tom Skerritt.ContestsTheFilmSchool launched the Great American Short Screenplay Contest in 2008, in partnership with the Seattle International Film Festival. Christopher McQuarrie, Academy Award-winning screenwriter of The Usual Suspects, called TheFilmSchool "probably the best place in the world to study story.”StaffActor Robert Redford joined TheFilmSchool Advisory Board in 2008. All the founders still teach in the 3 Week Intensive. Various other producers, writers, and directors teach at the establishment. These include: John Jacobsen, Rick Stevenson, Warren Etheredge, and Stewart Stern, screenwriter of Rebel Without A Cause.
Built as the "Helen" in 1926, in Back Bay, Biloxi, Mississippi by Jack Covacevich, for Thomas B. Denegre and his family, the Lavengro now works as a sail training vessel in the Puget Sound. We offer private 6-passenger charters upon request for $100 per hour, regardless of where we sail to, and free public sails every Sunday for the Center for Wooden Boats.