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  2. The Edgewater (Seattle) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Edgewater_(Seattle)

    The Edgewater (formerly the Edgewater Inn and, briefly when first constructed in 1962, the Camelot) is a four-story, 232-room hotel in Seattle, Washington, United States.It is located on the Central Waterfront on a pier over Elliott Bay (a bay of Puget Sound) and is the only over-water, and water-front hotel in the Seattle area.

  3. Elliott Bay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliott_Bay

    Elliott Bay Park along the waterfront, downtown Seattle. Two marinas are in Elliott Bay. The larger of them is the privately owned Elliott Bay Marina, in the Magnolia/Interbay neighborhoods at Smith Cove, with 1,200 slips. [19] [20] Bell Harbor Marina, operated by the Port of Seattle, is in the Central Waterfront along Belltown. Up to 70 ...

  4. Central Waterfront, Seattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Waterfront,_Seattle

    Waterfront Park and the Alaskan Way Viaduct, in 2008. As of 2020, the main route along the Central Waterfront is Alaskan Way.Alaskan Way follows the route of the earlier railway line and one-time Railroad Avenue along the "Ram's Horn" from just north of S. Holgate Street in the Industrial District to Broad Street at the north end of the Central Waterfront.

  5. File:Seattle, WA - Downtown - OpenStreetMap.png - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Seattle,_WA...

    The ODbL does not require any particular license for maps produced from ODbL data. Prior to 1 August 2020, map tiles produced by the OpenStreetMap Foundation were licensed under the CC-BY-SA-2.0 license.

  6. Alaskan Way - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaskan_Way

    Alaskan Way, originally Railroad Avenue, is a major north-south street in Seattle, Washington, that runs along the Elliott Bay waterfront from just north of S. Holgate Street in the Industrial District—south of which it becomes East Marginal Way S.— to Broad Street in Belltown, north of which is Myrtle Edwards Park and the Olympic Sculpture Park.

  7. Camlin Hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camlin_Hotel

    The building of the Camlin Hotel was sponsored by Adolph Linden and Edmund W. Campbell, the President and Vice-President/Secretary of the Puget Sound Savings & Loan. However, in May, 1926, the month of the hotel's opening, a bank employee had noticed some questionable withdrawals, and had brought them to the attention of the bank's board.

  8. List of neighborhoods in Seattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Neighborhoods_in...

    This 1909 map of Seattle shows many neighborhood names that remain in common use today—for example, Ballard, Fremont, Queen Anne Hill, Capitol Hill, West Seattle, and Beacon Hill—but also many that have fallen out of use—for example, "Ross" and "Edgewater" on either side of Fremont, "Brooklyn" for today's University District, and "Renton Hill" near the confluence of Capitol Hill, First ...

  9. Bodies of water of Seattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodies_of_water_of_Seattle

    It was founded on the harbor of Elliott Bay, home to the Port of Seattle—in 2002, the 9th busiest port in the United States by TEUs of container traffic and the 46th busiest in the world. [2] [3] Seattle is divided in half by the Lake Washington Ship Canal, which connects Lake Washington to Puget Sound.