PHOTOS: PEMCO WEBSTER & STEVENS COLLECTION, MOHAI; UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON LIBRARIES, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, UW9939 / UW6991
PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER NELSON
P ioneer Square.org A PRESENTATION OF
many bear the elegant stamp of a single architect, Elmer Fisher. buildings rose from the ashes over the following five years, and immediately set about rebuilding. Virtually all of Pioneer Square’s
FUNDED BY with an eye to the future.
or visit
DowntownSeattle.com
(206) 441-3303 For more information, call the MID hotline at: BY TRAIN Amtrak stops at historic King Street Station in Pioneer Square. Commuter trains from Tacoma stop at Union Station. SMITH TOWER PHOTO: JEN KELLY
and by the 1930s Pioneer Square was abandoned.
WO N D E R S
districts, thereby saving Pioneer Square for future generations.
Seattle its first industry when he donated a substantial piece of
WANT TO KNOW WHAT EVENTS ARE HAPPENING DOWNTOWN?
BY CAR Exit 164 off Interstate 5 or the Fourth Ave Exit off Interstate 90. Easy access off Alaskan Way Viaduct (Route 99)
OF PIONEER SQUARE
to-be after Native American Chief Sealth. Over time the city’s
engine. Alas, Seattle’s business center gradually shifted north, Seattle” of today.
OCCIDENTAL PEDESTRIAN PARK
1970, Seattle created one of America’s first historic preservation
tippler, not necessarily in that order. It was Maynard who gave sheltered eastern shore of Elliott Bay, now Pioneer Square.
BY FOOT A 10-minute walk from Pike Place Market or a 15-20 minute walk from Seattle’s Downtown shopping district
PHOTO: JEN KELLY
argued for protection of buildings under law and they won. In
hospital. It was also Maynard who suggested renaming the city-
Booth or ask a Metropolitan Improvement
of prospectors, and the gold rush restarted Seattle’s economic sidewalks, which were later sealed to create the “Underground
HISTORY, GALLERIES, RESTAURANTS, SHOPPING, TOURS & FUN!
T H E S T RO L L I NG T O U R
store, pharmacy, restaurant, hotel, casino, saloon, brothel and
dressed in yellow and blue!
fathers unveiled an “urban renewal” plan to flatten its buildings
Republican, while Maynard was a Democrat, humanitarian and children shivered through a drizzly winter before relocating to the
7
of vintage architecture from the bulldozer. Community leaders
While Denny developed his real estate, and Yesler supplied
on July 17, 1897. The city became the provisioner for thousands This stranded many first-floor storefronts in subterranean
MAP & GUIDE BUS & LINK LIGHT RAIL TUNNEL
a civilizing spirit to the new settlement. He established its first
District Downtown Ambassador Visit the Occidental Square Information
Denny was a hardheaded entrepreneur and a teetotaling as Alki) on November 13, 1851. Two dozen men, women and
BY TROLLEY Hop aboard Seattle’s Waterfront Trolley running from Pioneer Square to the Olympic Sculpture Park BY METRO Part of Seattle’s Ride-Free Zone (including the Downtown bus tunnel to Pioneer Square Station and the International District Station)
PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER NELSON
Seattle spirit, proud of its past but always Pioneer Square still embodies the for parking lots. Horrified citizens rallied to save some 40 blocks Pioneer Square remained until the late 1960s, when city of a steamer loaded with a “ton of gold” from Canada’s Klondike Seattle’s success was secured once and for all with the arrival plumbing problem by elevating the Downtown street a full story. The citizenry resolved to fix a chronic and malodorous
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FROM THE
PIONEER SQUARE IS SEATTLE’S MOST ACCESSIBLE NEIGHBORHOOD!
Discover
2
SMITH TOWER
When opened on July 4, 1914, the Smith Tower was the tallest building west of the Mississippi River. Built by Cornelius Smith- a gun and typewriter tycoon whose initials
PHOTO: GIANLUCA SIRRI
4
still adorn the door handles-- it was one of several box-shaped buildings being erected at the time. Smith took the design to a new
OCCIDENTAL SQUARE & PEDESTRIAN WALK PHOTO: FRANK J. WOJCIK
for weary sightseers, shoppers and locals alike. Privately built and
the west houses an indoor mall and is covered in climbing ivy. To the
the Tower’s 10-foot-diameter cut glass and
Located at Main & Second, this secluded, lovely park offers an oasis
rants and a visitors’ information booth. The Grand Central Building to
formed operators. Standing 522 feet high,
This now peaceful pedestrian walk is flanked by shops, galleries, restau-
Within, brass elevators are still run by uni-
attack by Salish Native American warriors retreated to a blockhouse.
bell tower in Venice’s Piazza San Marco.
In 1855, on the southeast corner of Occidental and Main, settlers under
level by adding a tower reminiscent of the
copper ball at the top is lit at night.
PHOTO: JEN KELLY
6
WATERFALL GARD EN PARK
of United Parcel Service’s original offices.
by Duane Pasco, a nationally respected Chinookan carver and artist).
maintained by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the park marks the site
north, admire Sun and Raven, Tsonqua, Bear and Killer Whale (carved At the southern end, across Jackson Street, is easy access to King Street Station, the terminus for Amtrak, the Chinatown/International District
1
OPEN-AIR DINING PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER NELSON
Seattle to the ground in hours. Undaunted, Seattle’s citizens unattended on a stove, igniting a conflagration that burned souls. On June 6 of 1889, a furniture maker left a pot of glue The city grew slowly through the next decade to 3,500 name became Seattle. lumber to build Seattle and San Francisco, Doc Maynard brought his own property to Henry Yesler for a steam-powered lumber mill. the path to cityhood: Arthur Denny and David “Doc” Maynard. Among the founders, two very different men set the village on first landed on a windswept West Seattle beach (now known Seattle’s founders, led by Arthur and David Denny,
M UD UP
NEED HELP FINDING A D E S T I NAT I O N ?
D i s c o v e r S e a t t l e ’s H i s t o r i c
and a Metro Tunnel entrance.
PHOTO: SCOTT B
PIONE E R P L AC E & P E R G O L A
7
HISTORIC MUS EUMS
KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH NATIONAL PARK
interpretive talks, the museum is open between 9am and 5pm every day.
When an arsonist burned the pole in 1938, the city sent $5,000 to pay
and artifacts, gold panning demonstrations, several film shows and
fathers stole it from a Tlingit Native American village up the coast.
gold rush that put Seattle on the map a century ago. Featuring exhibits
totem pole was added in 1890, after an expedition of drunken city
The Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park commemorates the
This triangular park marks Seattle’s first permanent settlement. The
the Tlingits to carve a replacement. Legend has it that the cashed check
PHOTO: PAUL PEPERA
Admission is free and children are welcome.
Washington School of Arts.
parallel greased logs to the Yesler saw mill on the bay.
sculpture was chosen through a design competition at the University of
“skid.” Trees cut down on the hill above were “skidded” down a series of
Great Fire. The memorial was created by artist Hai Ying Wu, whose
first steam-powered lumber mill, the strip was used as a logging
The Seattle Fire Department was founded in 1889 just after the
Pioneer Square. When Henry Yesler chose to build the Puget Sound’s
dedicated to the history of the Seattle Police Department and of law en-
who have died in the line of duty throughout the department’s history.
Skid Road or Skid Row, originally a logging term, was coined in
The Seattle Metropolitan Police Museum was founded in 1997. It is
the life-size bronze sculptures are the names of 37 Seattle firefighters
were long tolerated.
the country. Pioneer Place’s ornate Pergola was added in 1905 to
SEATTLE METROPOLITAN POLICE MUSEUM
Seattle Fallen Firefighters’ Memorial. On slabs of granite surrounding
originally Maynardtown, where low-brow entertainment and vice
largest concentration of Victorian-Romanesque architecture in
Across Main Street from the Occidental Pedestrian Walk stands the
“the Deadline,” the northern border of the “restricted district,”
Fire of 1889. As a result, Pioneer Square is considered to have the
claim (to the south) and Carson Boren’s (to the north). It became
50 buildings in Pioneer Square, all constructed after the Great
Yesler was the dividing line between Doc Maynard’s original
in 1892. It was designed by Elmer Fisher who designed more than
through Pioneer Square. Immediately south of the square itself,
building west of Chicago” by the American Institute of Architects
Yesler Way, originally Mill Street, is the main east-west street
The Pioneer Building, located in the park, was voted the “finest
3
a new pole will cost another $5,000!”
bore this note: “Thanks for finally paying for the first one, however,
YESLER WAY
LAST RESORT FIRE DEPARTMENT MUSEUM A new fire museum was created in 2008 when the Last Resort Fire
HISTORIC PIONEER SQUARE
PHOTO: PEMCO WEBSTER & STEVENS COLLECTION, MOHAI
shelter passengers waiting for the cable car which once trundled up and down Yesler Way. In 2001, an 18-wheeled semi clipped the pergola and it came crashing down into thousands of pieces. It took Seidelhuber Iron & Bronze Works of Seattle six months to rebuild the pergola to today’s construction standards.
PHOTO: GIANLUCA SIRRI
5
Department moved a portion of its collection of apparatus and artifacts into Seattle Fire Department headquarters. The station, built in 1928,
FALLEN FIREFIGHTERS’ MEMORIAL
was home to Fire Station #10 for 80 years. The display includes eight historic rigs dating back to 1834.
forcement in the Seattle Metropolitan area. The museum is the official repository for the historical artifacts of the Seattle Police Department and the King County Sheriff’s Office dating back to the 1880s.
119 S Jackson St
214 1st Ave S B5
528 1st Ave S
(206) 323 2808
Delicatus
222 2nd Ave Ext S
103 1st Ave S
(206) 382 7413
(206) 264 8061
(206) 405 4040
(206) 612 3081
(206) 947 3388
214 1st Ave S B6
(206) 390 6537
(206) 343 9494
306 S Washington St (206) 223 1160
Underground Gallery (206) 587 0260
(206) 622 2833
G. Gibson Gallery
214 1st Ave S B12
(206) 340 9395
FURNITURE, INTERIORS & RUG GALLERIES
300 S Washington St (206) 587 4033
Antique Importers
Gallery 110
620 Alaskan Way
110 3rd Ave S
(206) 624 9336
Gallery IMA 123 S Jackson St
(206) 625 0055
Glasshouse Studio 311 Occidental Ave S
(206) 682 9939
Greg Kucera Gallery 212 3rd Ave S
407 2nd Ave Ext S
Turabi Rug Gallery
Elliott Bay Café
115 1st Ave S
200 1st Ave S
220 2nd Ave S
RESTAURANTS, CLUBS & NIGHTLIFE
75 Yesler Way
615 3rd Ave
Pizza Pro
Heaven Nightclub
315 2nd Ave S
172 S Washington
Al Boccalino 1 Yesler Way
(206) 622 7688
209 2nd Ave Ext S
700 1st Ave
312 2nd Ave S
(206) 621 8656
215 James St
Quizno’s
(206) 622 8717
528 2nd Ave S
(206) 622 3375
221 1st Ave S (206) 381 9090
(206) 467 7797
Imo Asian Bistro (206) 264 8844
704 1st Ave
AB@=::7<5 B=C@
201 1st Ave S
(206) 264 9570
(206) 467 2666
104 1st Ave S
Jimmyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s on First (206) 405 1920
1046 1st Ave S
Café Umbria
Julieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Garden
320 Occidental Ave S (206) 624 5847
81 Yesler Way
Caffé Vita
King Street Bar and Oven
125 Prefontaine Pl S
(206) 652 8331
170 S King St
(206) 223 3690
(206) 749 9890
103 Cherry St
(206) 621 9372
414 2nd Ave Ext S
(206) 623 1016
422 2nd Ave S
520 1st Ave S
Palace Rug Gallery
Comedy Underground
Last Supper Club
109 S Washington St
124 S Washington St
Cow Chip Cookies
217 2nd Ave S
102A 1st Ave S
(206) 628 0303
(206) 332 1728
Maharaja: Cuisine of India (206) 292 9808
105 1st Ave S
(206) 628 0200
(206) 264 7595
(206) 628 0474
(206) 654 8070
400 Occidental Ave S (206) 624 2561 102 1st Ave S (206) 382 2656 502 2nd Ave S (206) 381 0638
103 Yesler Way
(206) 622 7040
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(206) 622 9353
(206) 467 5940
157 Yesler Way
(206) 447 4140
Tullyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Coffee 408 2nd Ave S
(206) 332 0493
108 Cherry St
(206) 624 5687
(206) 264 TATS
617 Western Ave
Agate Designs
721 2nd Ave
(206) 223 1000
120 1st Ave S
Barneyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Jewelry & Loan
562 1st Ave S
401 2nd Ave Ext S
(206) 622 3738
410 1st Ave S
171 S Jackson St
(206) 583 0497
Bass Northwest (206) 652 2345
(206) 412 5985
119 Yesler Way
Fenix Tattoo & Piercing
Beyond Threads
106 1st Ave S
214 S Jackson St
(206) 623 1090
(206) 381 3699
(206) 624 6862
Cuttysark Nautical Antiques & Flags 320 1st Ave S
318 2nd Ave Ext S
(206) 623 2900
102 Occidental Ave S (206) 357 0660
Adam Tailor Alterations 206 S Jackson St
(206) 621 1171
(206) 726 5550
Argens Incorporated 84 S Main St
(206) 623 2662
Ars Obscura Bookbinding Co 214 1st Ave S B11
(206) 340 8810
Art Form Custom Framing 114 Prefontaine Pl S
(206) 467 7074
Azteca Travel 600 1st Ave
(206) 957 9500
b9 Architects 210 S Jackson St
(206) 297 1284
Bank of America 300 Occidental Ave S (206) 358 1066 701 2nd Ave (206) 358 0550
Bicycle Alliance of Washington 309A 3rd Ave S
68 S Washington St
89 Yesler Way, 3rd Fl
113 Cherry St
115 Cherry St
(206) 624 4332
117 S Main St
(206) 628 3137
311 3rd Ave S
(206) 224 9252
(206) 903 1333
321 3rd Ave #301
(206) 307 1179
(206) 621 8862
(206) 622 2643
(206) 262 0335
(206) 467 1800
(206) 624 2338
Emerald City Guitars (206) 382 0231
Fairlook Antiques Fireworks
214 1st Ave S B4
(206) 682 0098
(206) 262 9500
105 Yesler Way
218 1st Ave S
(206) 382 4118
600 Western Ave
(206) 235 1500
(206) 264 1192
(206) 343 2363
313B 1st Ave S
(206) 626 0904
322 Occidental Ave S (206) 284 4967
T&T Hair Salon & Spa
Karenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Vintage Couture
83 Yesler Way
623 Western Avenue
(206) 329 1614
214 1st Ave S
(206) 682 2769
Klondike Mercantile (206) 343 9879
164 S Jackson
(206) 220 4286
Laguna Vintage Pottery
91 S Jackson St
(800) 275 8777
116 S Washington St
(206) 344 2322
603 1st Ave
(206) 682 6162
Magic Mouse Toys
(206) 382 8566
(206) 623 1294
607 1st Ave
(206) 467 5105
(206) 244 1111
(206) 343 9762
(206) 325 7415
(206) 783 4474
Police Museum
317 3rd Ave S
(206) 748 9991
Smith Tower Observation Deck 506 2nd Ave, 35th Fl
(206) 622 3131
Sub Seattle Tour 608 1st Ave
(206) 682 4646
Underground Tour (206) 682 4646
Waterfall Garden Park 2nd Ave S & S Main St
Rialto Movie Art Rocket Mart (206) 223 9377
Saveway Grocery 109 Occidental Ave S (206) 622 7294
Seattle Flowers (206) 728 2588
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NEED HELP FINDING A DESTINATION?
Seattle Mystery Bookshop (206) 587 5737
Simo Silk 118 1st Ave S
(206) 264 7798
Visit the Occidental Square Information Booth
(206) 223 9377
- or-
Smoke Lounge 409 2nd Ave Ext S
Something Old Something New 200 3rd Ave S
(206) 748 9080
Sports Den 319 1st Ave S
(206) 624 2550
Synapse 206
323 Occidental Ave S (206) 518 6300
Tobacco Patch 89 Yesler Way
(206) 728 7291
For more information, call the MID hotline at:
(206) 441-3303 or visit
TrendStation (206) 467 8000
Utilikilts 620 1st Ave
Ask a Metropolitan Improvement District Downtown Ambassador dressed in yellow and blue!
(206) 447 7731
Tether
DowntownSeattle.com
(206) 282 4226
Ventures (206) 352-1945
Wessel & Lieberman Booksellers 208 1st Ave S
(206) 405 2828
301 2nd Ave S
608 1st Ave
Revolution Books
409 2nd Ave Ext S
(206) 220 4240
Last Resort Fire Department Museum Seattle Metropolitan
(206) 903 6325
Ragazziâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Flying Shuttle
314 1st Ave S (206) 682 8097
Maison Luxe 95 Yesler Way 2nd Fl
800 Occidental Ave
211 1st Ave S
United States Post Office
723 1st Ave
413 1st Ave S
206 1st Ave S (206) 264 0559
John Yaconetti Antiques
Studio 904 401 1st Ave S
214 1st Ave S B1
Interesting Stuff
Spa Botanica 220 1st Ave G5
(206) 682 6882
Heritage Photographs
Skyn
609 3rd Ave
117 Cherry St (206) 682 9697
Flanagan & Lane Antiques 165 S Jackson St
214 1st Ave S B13
600 2nd Ave
The Globe Bookstore
US Bank (206) 621 7533
Ebbets Field Flannels
210 1st Ave S
216 1st Ave S G7
81-1/2 S Washington St (206) 622 5099 (206) 652 2299
Seattle Printing
The Pottery School (206) 412 2015
(206) 682 2446
From the Heart Pottery
Seattle Fitness 83 S King St
624 1st Ave
319 2nd Ave S
Noble Horse Gallery
89 S Washington St
81-1/2 S Washington St (206) 622 5130
National Parks Infocenter & Gallery 313A 1st Ave S
(206) 262 1265
Diva Dollz
83 S Washington St
LMI Office Supply 208 James St
(206) 682 2564
408 Occidental Ave S (206) 382 7249
JRA Bicycle Shop Kinesia Pilates
Anzcro 85 Columbia St
101 Cherry St
Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park
Qwest Field Pro Shop
Deli 87 Yesler Way
(206) 518 5806
Pop In Market (206) 326 5557
219 James St
625 1st Ave
3rd Ave S & S Jackson St
Pioneer Mart (206) 442 6888
217 1st Ave S
Integrus Architecture
ABC Imaging
(206) 662 2277
Clog Factory
Gallery Frames
King Street Station (206) 246 8464
Philâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Guitars
Foxycut Salon
Hair on the Square SERVICES
(206) 623 6654
214 1st Ave S B10
TOURS & ATTRACTIONS
(206) 623 1960
Newberry Books (206) 621 3063
The Copy Machine, Inc
Hair Gallery Salon
Classical Cuts TooÂ
Tatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Deli
Neodandi Couture
608 2nd Ave
Chief Printing
Taco Del Mar
A J Smith & Co Antiques
Betty Blue
111 Yesler Way
112 1st Ave S
214 1st Ave S G13
(206) 624 9104
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Millstream
411 2nd Ave Ext S
(206) 622 7107
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Color One Photo Lab
108 5th Ave S
Bodytonic Pilates
Swannies Sports Bar
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SHOPPING
(206) 621 7190
Elite Performance & Learning
(206) 675-0668
Bicycle Paper
Subway
107 1st Ave S (206) 748 9975
(206) 467 SAKE
Starbucks
109 S Washington St
Kingdome Deli
301 Occidental Ave S (206) 859 6492
Renaissance Rug Gallery
(206) 839 1414
(206) 405 2872
Shane & Shellyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Sluggers 538 1st Ave S
(206) 204 9700
(206) 621 7787
Seattleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Historic Triangle Pub 553 1st Ave S
(206) 621 9500
(206) 340 8859
Seasons Cafe 100 Prefontaine Pl S
Jimmy Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s (206) 625 9833
(206) 628 4444
221 James St
602 2nd Ave
(206) 340 0561
Saké Nomi 76 S Washington
J & M Café (206) 381 0705
(206) 381 0599
Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory 99 Yesler Way
101 S Jackson St
(206) 381 0990
N
Legend
Trabant Coffee & Chai
Zeitgeist Coffee
Planet Java Diner 72 S Washington St
Ibiza Dinner Club (206) 264 0500
(206) 326 4800
104 Occidental Ave S (206) 623 5057 (206) 622 1863
Hole in the Wall BBQ
Kagedo Japanese Art
(206) 903 0627
DOWNTOWN SHOP P ING D ISTRICT & P I K E P L AC E M A R K E T
Happy Garden Chinese Cuisine
88 Keys Dueling Piano & Sports Bar (206) 839 1300
(206) 382 3557
(206) 382 8454
Zaina Food, Drink & Friends
Pioneer Square Saloon
526 2nd Ave S
117 Prefontaine Pl S
(206) 622 2563
Pho Ha Express
79 Yesler Way
Collinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pub
La Familia
E
DRY Soda Co
Trinity Nightclub (206) 935 7625
217 James St
Northwest Fine Woodworking
(206) 382 7401
109 Yesler Way
Guajilloâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s: The Shortcut to Mexico
(206) 204 9800
King Street Kafé
323 1st Ave S
(206) 341 9265
1046 1st Ave S
Ornamo
(206) 467 9077
(206) 652 5797
Pioneer Square Juice & Java
(206) 622 3644
Cherry Street Coffee House
(206) 625 0542
166 S King St
114 1st Ave S
(206) 405 3835
(206) 332 0844
173 S Washington St
New Orleans Creole Restaurant
(206) 340 4401
614 1st Ave
Tiki Bobâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cantina
214 1st Ave S
(206) 625 1111
Café Hue
(206) 662 5606
(206) 382 4498
(206) 621 8500
Silver Cloud Hotel Stadium
Café Bengodi
Masinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Furniture
(206) 390 4882
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Columbia Bank (206) 622 0209
McCoyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Firehouse BBQ
521 3rd Ave S
Designs By Ferdod
(206) 622 5980
616 1st Ave
Grand Central Bakery and Café
415 1st Ave S
322 1st Ave S
214 1st Ave S B15
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Clean Cut Barber Shop (206) 682 3242
TIG Asian Tapas
612 2nd Ave
310 Occidental Ave S (206) 903 1511
220 S Jackson St
Marioâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pizza
Pho Saigon
Bebaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Delicatessen
Iron Design Center
207 1st Ave S
90 Yesler Way
Artemide
(206) 622 3001
(206) 682 6664
The Central Saloon
(206) 624 3323
419 Occidental Ave S (206) 623 4800
212 1st Ave S
Jackson Street Gallery
Juan Alonso Studio
/
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(206) 682 1817
88 Yesler Way
164 S Washington
320 2nd Ave S
(206) 290 4360
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Marcusâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Martini Heaven
Merchants Café
411 1st Ave S
(206) 340 2868
(206) 464 9918
601 2nd Ave
F X McRoryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Steak, Chop and Oyster House
122 Cherry St
Distant Lands
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126 S Jackson St
Thai Taste
(206) 223 0042
Fuel Sports, Eats & Beats
93 Yesler Way
James Harris Gallery
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Temple Billiards (206) 381 0998
Courtyard Seattle Downtown / Pioneer Square
Café Paloma
(206) 407 0102
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106 James St
205 1st Ave S
Il Terrazzo Carmine
(206) 749 9511
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Marcelaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Creole Cookery
Mediterranean Mix
621 3rd Ave
(206) 340 1234
(206) 340 1457
301 2nd Ave Ext S
542 1st Ave S
Frontier Café
Elements Interiors
(206) 256 6399
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Elysian Fields Restaurants
77 Yesler Way
309 Occidental Ave S (206) 223 0816
Howard House
103 Main St
Best Western Pioneer Square Hotel
109 1st Ave S
312 2nd Ave S
(206) 340 4011
HOTELS & ACCOMMODATIONS
Grover/Thurston Gallery
604 2nd Ave
(206) 624 7726
Bakemanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Restaurant
(206) 467 5161
(206) 623 3780
Double Header Tavern
314 Occidental Ave S (206) 250 2415
Asia Ginger Teriyaki (206) 628 8905
111 Occidental Ave S
Apadana Rug Gallery
317 1st Ave S (206) 624 0770
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Main St Gyros (206) 340 0777
Dome Burger (206) 937 3333
Tashiro Kaplan Studios & Galleries
Foster/White Gallery 220 3rd Ave
(206) 622 4736
Woven Art (206) 621 1945
Tai Designs
Flury & Co 322 1st Ave S
(206) 326 5555
Stonington Gallery
214 1st Ave S B12
Flatcolor Gallery
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SODO (STADIUM DISTRICT)
112 3rd Ave S
Studio Brick
Fine Arts Italy
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Seattle Lighting Fixture Co
Statements Distinctive Tile & Stone
SOIL
(206) 340 9395
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79 S Main St
Edwards Photography
157 S. Jackson St
(206) 682 1710
(206) 518 5944
Sam Day Studio & Gallery
(206) 223 7709
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310 S Washington St
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119 Prefontaine Pl S
(206) 624 1324
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Punch Gallery
Design Commission Gallery
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114 3rd Ave S
319 3rd Ave S
313 Occidental Ave S
G3A:3@ E/G
207 2nd Ave S
Catherine Person Gallery
Davidson Galleries
B
(206) 682 0966
Platform Gallery
(206) 343 7736
A
125 S Jackson St
Pacini Lubel Gallery
108 S Jackson St
3A
421 1st Ave S
ArtXchange Gallery
Chidori Antiques
B
Cowgirls Inc
115 S Jackson St
(206) 624 3034
409 1st Ave S
(206) 763 5565
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Schoenfield Interiors
316 1st Ave S
Stacy Logan
(206) 622 5599
Linda Hodges Gallery
312 S Washington St
530 1st Ave S
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Monarch Contemporary
(206) 839 0377
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307 Occidental Ave S (206) 748 0187
Azuma Gallery
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512 1st Ave S
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Medici Gallery (206) 296 7580
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Downtown Seattle: The Big Picture
(206) 682 3545
Brochure design by: 321 3rd Ave. S. Seattle, WA 98107 (206) 262-9270