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The path along the cut was designated a National Recreation Trail as Montlake Cut National Waterside in 1971. [1] The cut provides a connection between Union Bay, part of Lake Washington, to the east and Portage Bay, an arm of Lake Union, to the west. It is spanned by the Montlake Bridge, a bascule drawbridge carrying Montlake Boulevard (State ...
from the Washington Park Arboretum west to Portage Bay/15th Avenue E., from the Montlake Cut in the north to Interlaken Park at its south end, Seattle, Washington Coordinates 47°38′28″N 122°18′14″W / 47.641°N 122.304°W / 47.641; -122
The Montlake Landfill (in use from 1926 to 1967) was the fictional home of television clown J. P. Patches, resident 1958 through 1981. [4] The University Village shopping center (1956) and most of the east main campus of the University of Washington (UW) but for Husky Stadium sit on this land today.
The Montlake Bridge is celebrated as the site of boating season's "opening day" festivities the first Saturday in May. The bridge and the Montlake Cut together are a City of Seattle Designated Landmark (ID 107995), [15] and the bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, as well as the Washington Heritage Register.
It is located along the Montlake Cut of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, bounded to the north by Portage Bay, to the east by the Washington Park Arboretum, [1] and to the south and west by Interlaken Park. [citation needed] Capitol Hill is on its south and west sides, and the University of Washington campus lies across the Montlake Cut to the north.
The National Weather Center, located on a 22-acre site just south and east of Lloyd Noble Center on the OU campus, cost $69 million to build and opened to much fanfare in 2006. With 244,000 square ...
Portage Bay is a body of water, often thought of as the eastern arm of Lake Union, that forms a part of the Lake Washington Ship Canal in Seattle, Washington.. To the east, Portage Bay is connected with Union Bay—a part of Lake Washington—by the Montlake Cut, over which spans the Montlake Bridge carrying State Route 513.
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