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Seattle's beloved Bartell’s, now owned by debt-laden Rite Aid, is closing many of its locations. It's the latest symptom of a national health care crisis that hurts all of us.
Pike Street in 1891, unpaved. The street was one of the original named streets of Seattle in Arthur A. Denny's 1869 platting. It was named by him for John Pike, architect and builder of the Washington Territorial University in what is now the Metropolitan Tract of downtown Seattle. [3]
The Pike Street Hill Climb, also known as Pike Street Hillclimb, [1] is a pathway consisting of steps [2] and escalators/elevators [3] that connect Seattle's Alaskan Way [4] and Central Waterfront along Elliott Bay to Pike Place Market in the U.S. state of Washington. [5] [6] The climb has been described by The Seattle Times as a "glute-burning ...
In Seattle, Hellenika Cultured Creamery operates at Pike Place Market and in the University District. [1] The Pike Place Market shop offers twelve flavors of cultured gelato. [2] Seating is not available. [3] The interior has blue and white tiles, [4] a stainless steel counter, and a kitchen at the back of the shop.
1101 East Pike Street, originally known as the Seattle Automobile Company and later the Baker Linen Building is a historic building in Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington. Built in 1916 as the fourth and final location of the Seattle Automobile Company, the city's first auto dealer, the structure has been designated a city landmark. [1] [2]
Pike Motorworks is a mixed-use development on Seattle's Capitol Hill, in the U.S. state of Washington. [1] Exxel Pacific built the complex, which is located at 714 E. Pike Street and has a historic storefront.
Sign for the shop, 2024. The shop Big Little News operated on Pike Street, near the intersection of 11th Avenue, on Seattle's Capitol Hill.The bodega-style newsstand carried approximately 200–250 domestic and international magazines, [2] newspapers, [3] and other publications. [4]
Overlook Walk is a bridge over Alaskan Way in Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington. Completed in 2024, the bridge serves as a pedestrian path to connect the Central Waterfront district and Pike Place Market. [1] Construction on the project began in June 2022. [2] [3] [4]