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Smith Tower, Seattle WA | Nearby Businesses


500 2nd Ave
Seattle, WA 98104

(877) 412-2776

Experience the iconic, world-famous Smith Tower Observatory with its historic Otis elevators, stunning 360-degree views of Seattle, and open-air viewing deck. On your way to the top of the tower, enjoy amenities bound to delight visitors of all ages, and explore some of the stories and moments that have made Smith Tower a beloved Seattle gem via The Legends of Smith Tower Exhibits. Take your time perusing the exhibits, or head straight for the elevator to get up to the Observatory. All tickets include: The journey begins at Smith Tower Provisions general store, a charming spot to sip and snack, browse and shop, or purchase tickets. Access to the The Legends of Smith Tower Exhibits begins "behind the curtain" at Provisions general store, and continues through the second and Observatory levels. The exhibits take you on a journey through time through the lens of Smith Tower, providing a glimpse into a time when Seattleites were coming to terms with early Prohibition and technology that would soon transform their city. Linger as long as you like at the exhibits before riding up to the thirty-fifth floor Observatory in our historic Otis elevator. The experience culminates in Smith Tower Observatory, now featuring speakeasy-inspired Temperance café and bar. With an intriguing and fun menu offering a pinch of Prohibition and twist of Asian influence, Temperance pays homage to Smith Tower's rum-running roots and Chinese Room history.

Historical Place Near Smith Tower

Pike Place Market
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
85 Pike St
Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 682-7453

Established in 1907 to connect citizens and farmers, the Market continues its “Meet the Producer” tradition with a year-round farmers market, crafts, owner-operated bakeries, fish markets, butcher shops, produce stands and specialty food stores. The Market is also home to more than 300 residents, many of who are low-income seniors.

Seattle Waterfront
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
1301 Alaskan Way
Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 623-8607

Business Closed September 21, 2014 Looking for a new location. We will keep you posted and let you know when and where the new location will open.

Gum Wall
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
Unexpected Productions' Market Theater 1428 Post Alley
Seattle, WA 98101

The Market Theater Gum Wall is a brick wall covered in used chewing gum, in an alleyway in downtown Seattle. It is located in Post Alley under Pike Place Market. Similar to Bubblegum Alley in San Luis Obispo, California, the Market Theater Gum Wall is a local landmark. Parts of the wall can be covered several inches thick, 15 feet high for 50 feet.The wall is by the box office for the Market Theater, and the tradition began around 1993 when patrons of Unexpected Productions' Seattle Theatresports stuck gum to the wall and placed coins in the gum blobs. Theater workers scraped the gum away twice, but eventually gave up after market officials deemed the gum wall a tourist attraction around 1999. Some people created small works of art out of gum.It was named one of the top 5 germiest tourist attractions in 2009, second to the Blarney Stone. It is the location of the start of a ghost tour, and it is a popular site with wedding photographers.A scene for the 2009 Jennifer Aniston film Love Happens was shot at the wall in 2008.On November 3, 2015, it was announced by the Pike Place Market Preservation & Development Authority that for the first time in 20 years the gum wall would be receiving a total scrub down for maintenance and steam cleaning, to prevent further erosion of the bricks on the walls from the sugar in the gum. Work began on November 10 and took 130 hours to complete, with over 2,350lbs of gum removed and disposed of. After the cleaning was finished on November 13, gum began to be re-added to the wall; among the first additions were memorials to the November 2015 Paris attacks.

Fairmont Olympic Hotel
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
411 University St
Seattle, WA 98101

Occidental Park
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
S Main St & Occidental Ave S
Seattle, WA 97140

(206) 684-4075

Union Station (Seattle)
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
401 South Jackson Street
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 706-1965

Union Station is a former train station in Seattle, Washington, United States, constructed between 1910 and 1911 to serve the Union Pacific Railroad and the Milwaukee Road. It was originally named Oregon and Washington Station, after a subsidiary line of the Union Pacific. Located at the corner of S. Jackson Street and 4th Avenue S. in the Pioneer Square neighborhood, the station opened on May 20, 1911. The Milwaukee Road discontinued passenger service to Union Station 50 years later, on May 22, 1961, and the Union Pacific followed suit on April 30, 1971. With no passenger rail service serving Seattle from Union Station, the building remained largely empty. After nearly 30 years of sitting idle, the station finally experienced an expansive renovation supported by Nitze-Stagen with financial backing from Paul Allen. The Union Station renovation was the winner of the 2000 National Historic Preservation Award. It now serves as the headquarters of Sound Transit; its grand hall is rented out to the public for weddings and other events.In Seattle, the term Union Station refers not only to the main station building, but also to the several adjacent office buildings at 505, 605, 625 and 705 5th Avenue South. Until 2011, Amazon.com was a major tenant of these properties, all but one owned by Opus Northwest, and the other by Vulcan. The entire complex is earthquake-proofed by an underground ring of rubber.

Pioneer Square station
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
3rd Ave
Seattle, WA 98103

(206) 340-1151

Pioneer Square is a Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel station located in Pioneer Square, served by Sound Transit Central Link light rail trains, Sound Transit buses and King County Metro buses. It is completely underground, with entrances in the former Public Safety and Lyon buildings and next to Prefontaine Place on 3rd Avenue. 3,300 daily Link light rail boardings are predicted for the year 2020.Originally constructed as a bus-only station by Metro and opened in 1990 for use by dual-mode buses/trolleybuses, it was rebuilt in 2005-2007 by Sound Transit for eventual use by light rail trains. Light rail service at this station started on July 18, 2009, with the opening of the Link system.There are entrances to the underground station at 3rd & James and 3rd & Cherry. There is also an accessible entrance along 3rd between Cherry and James.

Stimson-Green Mansion
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
1204 Minor Ave
Seattle, WA 98101-2825

(206) 298-0123

Over a century old, the Stimson-Green Mansion, located in Seattle’s First Hill neighborhood, stands as a memorial to Seattle’s thriving lumber, trading and transport industries of the late 19th to early 20th century as well as the significant individuals that built and inhabited the house. Commissioned in 1899 by Charles D. Stimson, a prominent timber and real estate businessman, along with his wife Harriet, the Mansion was designed by the Spokane architect Kirtland Cutter. Dominating the corner of Seneca Street and Minor Avenue, the Mansion was built to impress and could easily hold its own next to First Hill’s most opulent homes of the period. Completed in 1901, the Mansion reflected the architect’s aptitude for incorporating several different architectural styles – considered “eclectic architecture” – employing English Tudor Revival, Moorish, Neoclassical, Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance to create something truly impressive. Eclectic architecture allowed a person to experience architectural history simply by moving from room to room instead of travelling abroad to tour castles and grand estates of Europe. The Mansion’s exterior half-timber construction, wooden gables and pointed arches are stylistically English Tudor Revival, but the interior features many different architectural styles. At the time, it took $30,000 to build the 14,000 square-foot house and another $16,000 to furnish and decorate the interior Today, the Stimson-Green Mansion retains much of its original interior décor including exquisite hand-painted details, fine woodwork, and imported tiles. The Mansion, once home to two of Seattle’s most influential families, the Stimsons and the Greens, is an important landmark that is recognized locally and nationally. The property was listed on the State and National Registers in 1976, and gained City of Seattle landmark status in 1977. It’s one of Seattle’s few remaining grand residential structures of the period, and one of the city’s most impressive examples of eclectic architecture. Mansion Timeline 1899 – Commissioned by Charles D. Stimson 1901 – Completed (Architect Kirtland Cutter) 1914 – Traded to the Frinks for a downtown property 1915 – Sold to the Joshua Green family 1975 – Purchased by Historic Seattle 1976 – Listed State and National Register 1977 – Designated City of Seattle Landmark 1986 – Sold to Patsy Bullitt Collins (C.D. Stimson’s grand-daughter) 2001 – Donated to the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation For a tour of the Stimson-Green Mansion, sign up at stimsongreenmansion.brownpapertickets.com!

Bemis Arts
Distance: 0.8 mi Competitive Analysis
55 S Atlantic St
Seattle, WA 98134

Panama Hotel (Seattle, Washington)
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
605 1/2 SOUTH MAIN STREET
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 515-4000

The Panama Hotel in Seattle, Washington's International District was built in 1910. The hotel was built by the first Japanese-American architect in Seattle, Sabro Ozasa, and contains the last remaining Japanese bathhouse community was established to keep races segregated, but it allowed cultural bonds to be formed. Japanese immigrants from all the regions of Japan came to Seattle and became interconnected because of the Nihonmachi. Even though the Japanese people of Japantown faced poverty due to economic hardships, skilled workers in all different industries came together because of the immigration from different prefectures in Japan.

Pike Place Market Seattle Washington
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
90 Pike St
Seattle, WA 98105

Federal Office Building (Seattle, Washington)
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
909 1st Ave
Seattle, WA 98104

The Federal Office Building, Seattle, Washington is a historic federal office building and courthouse located at Seattle in King County, Washington. It is the courthouse for the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington.Building historyAccording to local tradition, the Federal Office Building in Seattle is located on the site where city founders A.A. Denny, William Bell, and C.D. Boren docked their boat after making initial surveys of Puget Sound and its harbors in 1851. On June 6, 1889, the Great Seattle fire, which destroyed more than 64acre of the commercial district, started in a cabinet shop at the site of the Federal Office Building.Seattle rebuilt after the fire, and in 1897 its port became the "Gateway to Alaska" for steamships bearing prospectors bound for Alaska and the Klondike Gold Rush. The city's population burgeoned, and the federal government decided to consolidate the location of its services. In 1928, Congress approved more than $2 million for site acquisition and construction. Officials selected a site bounded by Madison and Marion streets and First and Western avenues. The building was designed between 1930 and 1931 by the office of James A. Wetmore, acting supervising architect of the U.S. Treasury Department. One of the earliest federal buildings in the Art Deco style of architecture, the building's design was a departure from the more traditional styles of Classical Revival and Beaux Arts Classicism and a step toward more modern architectural styles that were gaining popularity. However, the building retains conventional symmetrical massing and proportion.

King Street Center
Distance: 0.2 mi Competitive Analysis
201 S Jackson St
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 405-4085

Seattle Tower
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
1218 3rd Ave
Seattle, WA 98101

Pioneer Building
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
600 1st Ave
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 624-1783

Rent a private office at Level and you get a fully-furnished experience, complete with indoor bike racks, a shower room and all the standard business amenities you would expect like high-speed (250 Mbps) direct fiber internet and building-wide WiFi, 24×7 secured access, mail service and receptionist. We offer an abundance of other features, like company logo display, dedicated phone number and VOIP phones, a beautiful amenity space and included utilities and taxes with your regular rental fees. And yes, we’re dog friendly! We offer small businesses cutting-edge design, affordable rents, and a dynamic environment to take your business to the next level. If your business has between 1 and 50 people, call or email us to take a tour today and learn how you can have a great experience at a low price, whether you have a coworking need, choose a private office or our custom-designed office suites (suitable for larger organizations). Coworking is a hot term in the business world today, as are shared office spaces. With Level Office, you can focus on your business and eliminate worry over all the traditional hassles with finding and leasing an office space. In fact, we are perfect for individuals seeking coworking memberships, daily offices or private offices for rent, and for larger organizations looking for Seattle office suites for rent.

Immanuel Lutheran Church (Seattle, Washington)
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
1215 Thomas St
Seattle, WA 98109

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.

King St. Station
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
3rd St, S and S King St
Seattle, WA 98104

King Street Station is a train station in Seattle, Washington, United States. Located between South King and South Jackson streets and Second and Fourth Avenues South in the Pioneer Square neighborhood of Seattle, the station is just south of downtown. Built between 1904 and 1906, it served the Great Northern Railway and Northern Pacific Railway from its grand opening on May 10, 1906, until the creation and start of Amtrak on May 1, 1971. The station was designed by the St. Paul, Minnesota architectural firm of Charles A. Reed and Allen H. Stem, who were later associate designers for the New York Central Railroad's Grand Central Terminal in New York City. King Street Station was Seattle's primary train terminal until the construction of the adjacent Oregon & Washington Depot, later named Union Station, in 1911. King Street Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places and the Washington Heritage Register in 1973. Since the early 1990s the station was in various states of repair to undo remodels done during the middle of the Twentieth Century to \"modernize\" the facility, including the restoration of the elegant main waiting room.

Iron Pergola at Pioneer Square
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
108 Yesler Way
Seattle, WA 98104

Nippon Kan Theatre
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
622 S Washington St
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 224-0181

The is a former Japanese theater in Seattle, Washington, United States. Built in 1909 as a hotel, it was boarded up in 1942 during the Japanese American internment, but reopened in 1981 through the restorative efforts of Seattle architect Edward M. Burke and his wife Betty. It is located in the Kobe Park Building at 628 S. Washington Street, in the former Japantown section of Seattle's International District. In 2005 it was sold to ABC Legal Services and was used as converted office space. A replica of the curtain hangs on the wall along with several historic photographs. Its original closure has been attributed to the decreasing number of people of Japanese descent in Seattle.The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.The theater's original stage curtain (used 1909–1915) survives, and now serves a similar purpose on the stage of the Tateuchi Story Theater of the nearby Wing Luke Museum. The curtain covered with advertisements was rediscovered in the 1970s. Because it used an asbestos material, it is now encased in a resin.

Bell Apartments
Distance: 1.1 mi Competitive Analysis
2324 1st Avenue
Seattle, WA 98121

The Bell Apartments, also known as the Austin A. Bell Building is a historic building located at 2326 1st Avenue in the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle Washington. The building was named for Austin Americus Bell, son of one of Seattle's earliest pioneers, but built under the supervision of his wife Eva following Bell's unexpected suicide in 1889 soon after proposing the building. It was designed with a mix of Richardsonian, Gothic and Italianate design elements by notable northwest architect, Elmer Fisher, who designed many of Seattle's commercial buildings following the Great Seattle fire.The Bell Building, along with the adjacent Barnes and Hull buildings, form the nucleus of a development attempt in Belltown in the 1890s that never materialized. Early on, the building earned the moniker of Bell's Folly for being built so far away from the central business district in the then underdeveloped and economically depressed Belltown neighborhood, named for Bell's father, William Nathaniel Bell, once landowner of the entire north end of Seattle. The area today is considered the heart of Belltown and the Bell building remains one of Belltown's most historic landmarks.The building fell into disrepair throughout most of the 20th century, eventually losing its massive cornice to a fire in 1913. The building was first surveyed in June 1969 and included on the Municipal Art Commission List of Historic Buildings, at which time it was nominated for inclusion on the National Register. It was finally listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 12, 1974. It also became a Seattle City Landmark in 1978. The upper floors stayed vacant until the 1990s, sustaining much weather damage in the meantime and later being destroyed by fire. Most of the building was rebuilt behind the main facade in 1997-8 and now houses condominiums with a Starbucks Coffee on the first level.

Attractions/Things to Do Near Smith Tower

Beneath the Streets
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
102 Cherry St
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 624-1237

Beneath the Streets is a guided walking history tour of Seattle's Pioneer Square neighborhood. We visit three of the unrestored passageways beneath the sidewalks. Our highly experienced tour guides share their favorite tales and make Seattle's history come alive. We offer tours daily at 10:30, 11:30, 12:30 1:30, 2:30 and 3:30. Tours last approximately one hour. Tickets are sold at 102 Cherry St. (Also the home of Spooked in Seattle.) The ticket office is open between 10:00am and 3:30pm. Tickets are first come, first served.

Great Pumpkin Beer Festival
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
542 1st Avenue S
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 860-3977

GPBF returns! 2016 marks the 12th Annual Great Pumpkin Beer Festival – we invite you to join us inside and outside Elysian Fields in the North Lot of CenturyLink Field, where more than eighty pumpkin beers from near and far will be poured, including 20 or so from Elysian’s pumpkin-crazed brewers and their collaborators. For those who haven’t been to GPBF: we have a giant, several-hundred pound pumpkin that is scooped, scorched, filled with Elysian pumpkin beer, sealed and conditioned, and then tapped at the fest for all to enjoy!

Diane's Market Kitchen
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
1101 Post Ave
Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 624-6114

Dramatic changes in her life that left her without her children, her home and neighborhood and nothing more that the prospect of minimum wage employment at an age when most of her friends were looking forward to relaxation and retirement, Diane LaVonne was forced to redefine herself and to create a new vision for her life. When this former wife, mother, part-time caterer, martial arts instructor and community volunteer told friends about her dream to open a beautiful “home kitchen” in the heart of urban Seattle near the Pike Place Market, a place where the community could gather to connect and learn how to prepare and enjoy food, many thought it was a pipe dream. Certainly traditional small business lenders thought so, and refused to lend needed capital. But despite a lack of the necessary funding, and the construction surprises that came from turning a garage into a commercial kitchen – Diane kept moving forward. A straight-forward, passionate, friendly force who believes in asking for what one needs - when she couldn’t afford the high end appliances necessary, she asked manufacturers and local dealers to donate them... and they did. At Diane’s Market Kitchen, you’ll find the newest Miele equipment donated by Albert Lee Appliance as well as countertop equipment donated by Kitchenaid and Cuisinart. The final cost to build and equip this incredible display kitchen? Just $50,000. The kitchen is an intimate, beautiful, state-of-the-art "home" kitchen where Diane shares her culinary skills and experience with her "guests". Food and menus are based on what is fresh, seasonal and local; most of the items are supplied by her vendor friends at the Pike Place Market. This unique environment was created to allow her to model what cooking, surrounded by friends, can look like at its best; lots of conversation and good food without having to choose between the two. Guests can observe, or they can tie on an apron and help prepare the meal! Diane’s vision is about balance - about how to place food in its appropriate context for a life well-lived and enjoyed. Recent guests have included a group of Microsoft Human Resource Managers after a long day of strategy and planning; a woman who received the evening class for her and her friends as a birthday gift from her boyfriend; and a local resident who gathered family together for a Thanksgiving meal. Besides regular classes and special guest chefs, future plans include children’s classes and parties. Diane has not forgotten how difficult her transition out of hopelessness and through challenging times was, and a large part of her vision includes support of her local community by donating classes and money to benefit children’s education and women in transition.

Chinatown Discovery Tours
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
719 S King St
Seattle, WA 98104

(206) 623-5124

Chinatown Discovery Tours offers walking tours of the Seattle's Chinatown-International District. Including our *official* Bitter and Sweet Tour based on the New York Bestselling novel, HOTEL ON THE CORNER OF BITTER AND SWEET, Jamie Ford. All tickets can be purchased within the Wing Luke Museum. All tours start inside The Wing and includes access to self-view their galleries and exhibitions the day of your tour. Walk-in/Drop-in Tours (90 minutes): Tuesday through Friday are offered at 10:15am and 2pm. Saturday tours are at 10:15am, 1pm and 3pm. BITTER AND SWEET Walk-in/Drop-in Tour (90 minutes): Saturdays at 1pm Have a large group or special occasion you’d like to celebrate? Give us a call and we’ll create tour for you!

Copperworks Distilling & Tasting Room
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
1250 Alaskan Way
Seattle, WA 98101-2918

(206) 504-7604

Copperworks Distilling is a distillery, tasting room and retail store located on Seattle’s downtown waterfront. We create small-batch spirits from a base of malted barley (essentially a high-quality craft beer). We offer Copperworks American Single Malt Whiskey, a series of gins, and a vodka. All our spirits are distilled onsite in traditional copper stills that were handcrafted especially for us in the highlands of Scotland. Copperworks opened its doors in 2013 offering tastings, tours and other events focused on enjoying and learning about fine distilled spirits.

Wings Over Washington
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
1301 Alaskan Way
Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 602-1808

Brand new, interactive, state-of-the-art flying theater that takes you on an aerial adventure over Washington State

Seattle Boat Show
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
800 Occidental Ave S
Seattle, WA 98134

(206) 634-0911

CenturyLink Event Center MON-THU: 11 am - 8 pm FRIDAYS: 11 am - 9 pm SATURDAYS: 10 am - 8 pm SUNDAYS: 10 am - 6 pm* Chandler's Cove South Lake Union WEEKDAYS: 11 - 5pm SATURDAYS: 10 - 5pm SUNDAYS: 10 - 5pm* *- Note: The Seattle Boat Show closes at 4pm on Sunday, February 3.

Northwest Flower & Garden Show
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
705 Pike St
Seattle, WA 98101

(253) 238-3807

The Northwest Flower & Garden Show is not just a bunch of pretty flowers. It’s the best annual event for gardeners to gather ideas and inspiration to help them create gracious outdoor living spaces just right for the entire family. On six acres of dazzling beauty, our Display Gardens are the heart and soul of the show, featuring fully landscaped gardens showcasing the most up-to-date design trends from the region’s top designers. Whether you garden on an acre or a small balcony, you’ll take home hundreds of ideas from the show that will perfectly fit your garden. Our Marketplace is a shopping destination, with 350 exhibitors offering practical garden gear and unique nature-inspired art, plus loads of cool plants ready for your garden. These mini-stores have been hand-picked to represent the very best in gardening products. The show is known for its outstanding educational programs – over 100 in all, all free – featuring gardening luminaries from around the US, sharing the latest trends and information with both stunning visuals and practical DIY tops. As the 2nd largest garden show in the U.S., the Northwest Flower & Garden Show receives countless accolades from both seasoned gardeners and those just starting to dig in the dirt. It's a true gardener's extravaganza. Join us! February 22-26th, 2017 at the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle, WA.

Christmas in Seattle Gift & Gourmet Food Show
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
800 Convention Pl
Seattle, WA 98101

(425) 889-9494

Unique gifts, arts & crafts, handmade items and specialty foods including Artists In Action and cooking demonstrations. Ticket Prices: Kids 12 & under: Get in FREE Adults: $12.50 w/ $2 website or $12 w/ Facebook Coupon includes .64 Seattle City Tax One Ticket Price Return For FREE!

Public Market Tours
Distance: 0.8 mi Competitive Analysis
1916 Pike Place, Suite 12-480
Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 582-3504

The best way to explore and discover Pike Place Market! On these 1-hour tours, get an insider’s look at the “soul of Seattle.” Hear its fascinating stories – past and present. See fish fly, seasonal produce stands, and hardworking flower growers that make the Pike Place Market famous.

Melrose Market
Distance: 0.9 mi Competitive Analysis
1531 Melrose Ave
Seattle, WA 98122

Melrose Market is located in a triangular block of historic automotive buildings constructed in 1919 and 1926, in the west end of the Pike-Pine neighborhood, and just east of Seattle's downtown shopping district. The buildings feature exposed wood beams and ceilings, exposed brick and concrete walls, high ceilings and floor-to-ceiling glazing.

Viva WorldLee
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1111 E Union St
Seattle, WA 98122

Dockside Cannabis
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1728 4th Ave S
Seattle, WA 98134

(206) 223-3724

Dockside SODO (1728 4th Ave S. Seattle 98134) is open from 8:00am to 11:30pm Monday through Saturday and 9:00am to 10:00pm on Sundays. Dockside Shoreline (15029 Aurora Ave N. Shoreline 98133) is open 9:00am to 10:00pm Monday through Saturday and 11:00am to 7:00pm on Sundays. @LiveDockside on Twitter @DocksideCannabis on Instagram

Sherlocked Seattle
Distance: 1.1 mi Competitive Analysis
915 E Pine St
Seattle, WA 98122

Capitol Hill Sunday Market
Distance: 1.1 mi Competitive Analysis
923 E Pike St
Seattle, WA 98122

The Capitol Hill Sunday Market is a european style street market in the popular Pike & Pine District of Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood. Expected to launch in summer 2013 with over 100 local businesses from original hand crafts, antiques and street food vendors every Sunday year round. For more information

Lovecitylove
Distance: 1.2 mi Competitive Analysis
1406 E Pike St
Seattle, WA 98122

Our current urban landscape: Watch the Seattle skyline today. Then watch it tomorrow. In the blink of an eye, it changes. The city we lived and worked in just ten years ago is truly unrecognizable. The growth, fueled in part by the meteoric expansion of a handful of larger corporations, is the private developer’s dream. Rents and housing prices are some of the highest in the nation. Those with resources can find an endless supply of investment opportunities in Seattle and an equal number of new commercial outlets to enjoy the windfall. The primary focus is economic. We’re left with an explosion of new office buildings, condos, and com- mercial spaces whose core motive is profitability. The fallout? We find ourselves separated more by class, race, and socio-economic levels. The urban environment feels increasingly sterile. Culture be- comes an afterthought. And spontaneous, collective artistic expression and the experience of blending with all walks of life are limited only to the streets where raw life and interaction is always happening. The potential to build our culture intentionally: Love City Love is taking this raw life that has always happened on the streets throughout time, across culture and in every major city in the world, and nurturing it within safe, beautiful spaces adjacent to the frenetic development all around us. In a neighborhood where upscale housing development and bars have claimed the landscape, Love City Love emerged as a blank canvas for the creative community to convene. We believe continuing to craft this alternative is not only possible but crucial to keep art and culture alive and thriving in our city. The project’s purpose is: • To be more intentional about creating an authentic culture here in Seattle that gives space for emerging artistic collaborations, for people of all ages, backgrounds and economic means to experience and participate in artistic expression and experiences that weave us together as a unified whole. • To create a vessel for the emerging artist in all of us to grow, learn and expand beyond what we think is possible for ourselves and pursue creative ambitions in a holistic, sustainable way. • And to build a culture that gives us an alternative to the digital world so we remain fertile to new ideas, broader perspectives, the visceral experience of a city, and our own humanity. Love City Love has already established itself as a cultural catalyst in three buildings in Seattle, the Bauhaus building on Melrose and Pine, and the CK Graphics building at Summit and Pike, and the Azteca building on Eastlake Ave. E. By activating these otherwise empty spaces, the audience for Love City Love’s open and inclusive format has grown rapidly and received significant attention. In each venue, Love City Love hosted art shows and pop-up shops from local artists and designers, produced on-going music and dance collaborations drawing hundreds of people every week, showcased the work of young artists in spaces they would not otherwise have access to, and supported art-making workshops and classes for a wide range of participants. The energy and excitement is palpable, as collaborations and projects emerge amongst unlikely players, and as more people gravitate to this unique space. The project has sustained itself through broader collaborations, photo shoots, space rentals and other paying clients who were drawn to the beauty and aesthetic vibration of Love City Love’s talented staff and curators. For public events, they have held to the principle of no alcohol to support every individual in the space to stay conscious and awake to the exchange and cultural possibilities between them. Recent LCL Press: LCL Doc by Zach Self & Atuanya Priester- http://vimeo.com/70914690 LCL Doc by Avi Loud- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BdtmLq3Qvw KIRO Radio Interview & Article- http://bit.ly/1uFXBqy City Arts Magazine (Feb. 14)- http://www.cityartsonline.com/articles/room-grow Crosscut- http://bit.ly/1BIoT4y Seattle Met Magazine- http://bit.ly/1I49L5g Do 206- http://do206.com/p/Theoretics-record-release

Black Market Skates
Distance: 1.2 mi Competitive Analysis
2404 7th Ave
Seattle, WA 98121

(206) 462-1343

South Lake Union Saturday Market
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
139 9th Ave N
Seattle, WA 98109

Welcome to Seattle's All Food Market , a refreshing European-style market place for locals and tourists, and deservedly so. South Lake Union is the creative and cultural heart of Seattle, where you can shop and eat 100% local on Saturdays. Featuring some of Seattle's finest street food, farm fresh goods and purveyors on one street. Reopens May 2016.

Comedy On Trial
Distance: 1.4 mi Competitive Analysis
235 Broadway E
Seattle, WA 98102

(803) 979-0349

Comedy on Trial - A free weekly comedy showcase at the bar inside Jai Thai on Broadway. Come out & watch some amazing local comedy. Featured in 2014's Bumbershoot festival.