Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The market was created in 1907 when city councilman Thomas P. Revelle took advantage of the precedent of an 1896 Seattle city ordinance that allowed the city to designate tracts of land as public markets [12] and designated a portion of the area of Western Avenue above the Elliott Bay tideflats off Pike Street and First Avenue. [13]
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]
The MarketFront is an addition to Seattle's Pike Place Market. [1] Designed by Miller Hull Partnership, [2] The $74 million expansion was unveiled in 2017. [3] A grand opening was held on June 29. [4] The MarketFront occupies the former site of the Municipal Market, demolished in 1974. [5]
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.
Pike Place Market Centennial celebration, August 17, 2007: start of concert. Pike Place Market celebrated its 100-year anniversary on August 17, 2007. A wide variety of activities and events took place, and a concert was held in Victor Steinbrueck Park in the evening, [29] consisting entirely of songs related in one way or another to Seattle.
Post Alley is a short street in Seattle. The northern end of the street runs under and through Pike Place Market.The alley is mostly paved with bricks. [1] It was called "Seattle's best-known alley for its pedestrian environment and abutting shops and restaurants" out of all 425 alleys in the city, [2] and has been described as having a "European feel".
The former J. C. Penney store at Pike at 2nd in 1982, with Pike Place Market in the background. 5th Avenue and Pike is the heart of the Seattle downtown shopping district, the Pike–Pine retail corridor, [14] which includes Westlake Center and Pacific Place, both of which are on blocks touching Pike Street. [15]
Curbed Seattle has described Golden Age Collectables as "Seattle's longest-running comic book shop" and "a popular tourist-photo spot because of a convenient Pike Place Market location and a selfie-ready Batman statue outside". [1] Thrillist has called the shop as "a hodgepodge of nerdy/kitschy knick knacks, comic books and bric-a-brac". [2]