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Pike Place Market sign Alternative names Public Market Center Clock & Sign Type Neon sign and clockLocation 1501 Pike PlaceSeattle , Washington, U.S.
The Pike Place Market sign , officially the Public Market Center Clock & Sign , is a landmark neon sign at Pike Place Market in Seattle , Washington United States. It is considered an icon of the market and the city. The sign sits above the Pike Street entrance of the Main Arcade (also known as the Fairley Building) and faces 1st Avenue . A smaller "Public Market" sign was also installed over the North Arcade at Pike Place and Stewart Street in the late 1920s.
Design and description [ edit ]
Moderne style[ 1]
Neon has never been replaced[ 2]
Christmas lighting with trees
Protected trademarks[ 3]
Preceded by smaller Fish Market sign[ 4]
1927 or 1937?
Designed by Bea Haverfield[ 5]
Also claimed to be designed by Andrew Willatsen in 1935[ 6]
"During this period, Andrew Willatsen also designed a new Moderne neon "Farmers Market" sign and entry bay that replaced the older illuminated entrance feature at the foot of Pike Street in front of the Leland Building." (NRHP)[ 7]
1971 Market referendum
Restorations and changes
May/June 2022 repainting and restoration[ 8] [ 9]
Influence and replicas [ edit ]
Most-photographed place in the market according to 2008 study[ 2] [ 10]
Buildings Business
People Related Key : † Defunct
History
Campus Way intersection and flyover ramp (2011)
BAT lanes from Kenmore to Bothell
New widening in Bothell for BRT
Erben, John (October 25, 1987). "Fifty years of skiing" . SportsNorthwest. Tri-City Herald . pp. 4 –5 – via Newspapers.com.
"A Pictorial History of Downhill Skiing" (Stan Cohen)
"Snoqualmie Pass: From Indian Trail to Interstate (Yvonne Prater)
"Cascade concrete"
Seattle-style teriyaki Type Teriyaki Place of origin United States Region or state Seattle , Washington, U.S.Created by Toshihiro Kasahara (1976) Main ingredients Teriyaki sauce, chicken
Seattle-style teriyaki is an American style of grilled chicken dish that uses teriyaki sauce adapted from Japanese cuisine . It is considered the "signature fast food dish" of Seattle , which has a large Asian American population. The Seattle metropolitan area is estimated to have hundreds of teriyaki restaurants, mostly independent outlets.
Sources
Notes
"meat, sauce, rice and salad — the constituent ingredients of a teriyaki plate"[ 2]
Creation credited to Toshihiro Kasahara , a Japanese immigrant from Ashikaga, Tochigi in 1976[ 3] [ 4]
Wrestler at Portland State, moved to Seattle to work in Japanese restaurants
Founded original Toshi's Teriyaki on March 2, 1976 in Lower Queen Anne,[ 5] later moved to Mill Creek[ 6]
"A plate of chicken teriyaki was $1.85 and the chicken-beef combo, $2.10. A review from a Seattle Times restaurant critic sent business soaring."
Originally served on skewers[ 7]
Toshi's opened 10 locations; later copycats with same or similar names
Spread by Korean immigrants[ 8]
By 1990s, it had become widespread, with 107 restaurants in King County using "teriyaki" in their name[ 9] [ 10]
1996: 175 in King County, including 17 Toshi's franchises[ 11]
"Even Canlis serves teriyaki, albeit just in the bar"[ 12]
Spread outside of Seattle in the 2010s[ 13]
^ Dern, Judith (2018). The Food and Drink of Seattle: From Wild Salmon to Craft Beer . Rowman & Littlefield . ISBN 9781442259775 .
^ Edge, John T. (January 5, 2010). "A City's Specialty, Japanese in Name Only" . The New York Times .
^ Kauffman, Jonathan (August 14, 2007). "How Teriyaki Became Seattle's Own Fast-Food Phenomenon" . Seattle Weekly .
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/life/food-drink/seattle-restaurant-classics-why-we-love-teriyaki-so-much-and-where-to-go-if-you-dont-thanks-toshi/
^ https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-herald-fast-food-cheap-with/160324240/
^ Brown, Andrea (February 8, 2022). "Teriyaki trailblazer: Mill Creek's Toshi created our regional dish" . The Everett Herald .
^ https://www.thestranger.com/features/2020/02/12/42825267/seattles-comfort-food
^ https://www.eater.com/2019/6/5/18637620/john-chung-seattle-teriyaki-korean
^ Rhodes, Elizabeth (June 12, 1992). "Teriyaki takes the town" . The Seattle Times .
^ https://www.kuow.org/stories/did-you-know-teriyaki-was-and-wasn-t-invented-in-seattle
^ https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/19960612/2334099/teriyaki----secret-is-in-sauces-for-popular-fast-food
^ https://www.cascadepbs.org/2010/12/a-seminal-moment-for-seattle-teriyaki
^ https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704405704576064131970576572
May 2006 levy rejected, leading to September service cut
2006/08: Levies rejected, service cut
2009: Weekend service cut; restoration planned in 2019 after 2017 house action[ 1] [ 2]
2014: Courthouse Square reopens after major repairs due to shoddy contractor work[ 3] [ 4]
2016: Cherriots brand phased in
Other notes
Fareless Square: Free buses in downtown Salem, circa early 2000s
Annual budget
CEO/GM
Board of directors
Number of employees
Maintenance facilities
Seattle Commons was a proposed urban park located in the South Lake Union neighborhood of Seattle , Washington . The 61-acre (25 ha) park was the centerpiece of a larger redevelopment of the neighborhood, first proposed in 1991 by architect Fred Bassetti and Seattle Times columnist John Hinterberger. Two municipal elections were held by the City of Seattle to fund the project, with voters rejecting the initial $111 million property tax levy in September 1995 and a smaller plan with a $50 million property tax in May 1996. 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) of land in the proposed park area that had been bought by Paul Allen for the Seattle Commons Committee was later used by Vulcan Inc. to begin the redevelopment of South Lake Union. The smaller Lake Union Park was opened in two phases from 2008 to 2010 as a realization of the waterfront aspect of the Seattle Commons plan.
Dedication on July 4, 2000
Housing
5,145 new multifamily housing units, 20% being affordable
Transportation
Westlake Boulevard
Terry Boulevard
Mercer Freeway and lid
Aurora Avenue lid (to be completed in 2016)
Bike lanes on Dexter and Fairview, among others
New bus and streetcar routes
Parklands
Acreage
1993 map: 74 acres, covering [ 1]
1995 ballot: 60 acres[ 2]
1993 (second draft): 85 acres
1994 DEIS Alternative 3: 38 acres (option)
Denny Triangle plaza at Denny & Westlake
Cascade Playground expansion to full block (later completed)
Privately owned public space
Resources
Seattle Times 1995 Q&A[ 3]
Previous proposals
1911: Bogue Plan?[ 4]
1954–1972: Bay Freeway plan, including waterfront park at Lake Union and an "aesthetically-pleasing
elevated freeway"
Resources
Proposal history
1991: Fred Bassetti (Seattle architect) and John Hinterberger (Seattle Times columnist) propose Seattle Commons, a park similar to Boston Common or Central Park[ 5] [ 6]
1992: Seattle Commons Committee forms, with $20 million loan from Paul Allen
1995-09-19: City of Seattle Proposition 1 (South Lake Union/athletic-fields levy) rejected by a narrow 47 to 53 percent margin[ 7] [ 8]
Final plan: $111 million property tax levy to fund development and construction; park reduced to 60 acres[ 2]
1996-05-21: Second attempt rejected by voters, City Council decides to build smaller Lake Union Park [ 9]
Ownership of 11.5 acres acquired by Commons committee reverts to Paul Allen and Vulcan Inc.[ 10]
Lake Union Park
2003-07-10: Seattle Parks Board approves $22-28 million Lake Union Park plan, designed by Hargreaves Associates , to begin construction in 2005[ 11]
2006-11: Phase I construction begins
2008-04-30: Phase I opens first 1.6 acres (70,000 sq ft; 6,500 m2 ) of Lake Union Park; includes rebuilt seawall, terraced steps to Lake Union, boardwalk, pedestrian bridges and pathways to Center for Wooden Boats[ 12]
2008: Phase II construction begins
2010-09-25: 12-acre (520,000 sq ft; 49,000 m2 ) Lake Union Park officially dedicated, finishing Phase II project at a total cost of $31 million; includes stop on South Lake Union Streetcar , MOHAI museum[ 13]
^ Seattle Commons Draft Plan (Map). 1:4,530. Seattle Commons Committee. June 1993 – via Seattle Municipal Archives .
^ a b "Seattle Commons Proposition" . The Seattle Times . September 14, 1995.
^ "Voting On A Vision -- A New Urban Park Would Be Only The Start Of A Bigger Redesign For South Lake Union -- Q&A" . The Seattle Times . September 11, 1995. p. A5.
^ Bogue, Virgil (1911). Plan of Seattle: Report of the Municipal Plans Commission . Seattle, Washington: Lowman & Hanford. OCLC 1440455 – via Google Books .
^ Conklin, Ellis E. (May 21, 2013). "Fast Times and Tall Tales from Amazonia" . Seattle Weekly . Sound Publishing .
^ Hinterberger, John (April 17, 1991). "Park Here -- Whispering Firs And Salmon Runs: A Different Sort Of Downtown Space" . The Seattle Times .
^ Broom, Jack (September 20, 1995). "Skepticism, Cost Helped Kill Commons" . The Seattle Times .
^ Becker, Paula (August 8, 2007). "Seattle voters reject the Seattle Commons levy on September 19, 1995" . HistoryLink .
^ Serrano, Barbara A.; Lewis, Peter; Seven, Richard (May 22, 1996). "No Third Try For Commons -- Park Backers Call It Quits After Voters Say No Again" . The Seattle Times .
^ "Timeline of Paul Allen and Vulcan's interest in South Lake Union" . The Seattle Times . August 30, 2012.
^ Young, Bob (July 12, 2003). "Board approves South Lake Union Park proposal" . The Seattle Times .
^ Gilmore, Susan (April 30, 2008). "New park opens on Lake Union" . The Seattle Times .
^ Krishnan, Sonia (September 15, 2010). "At Lake Union, a field of dreams and fun" . The Seattle Times .
The Seattle Center is a 74-acre (30 ha) urban park and civic center in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle , Washington , built for the Century 21 Exposition in 1962.
Resources
Timeline
1881: James Osborne donates land
1889: David and Louisa Denny donates land
1912-03-05: Bogue Plan rejected, scrapping proposed civic center in Lower Queen Anne
1927: Civic Auditorium, Civic Field, and ice arena open
1956: Lower Queen Anne site selected for World's Fair
Century 21 Exposition [ edit ]
1964: Proposals to adopt permanent name, candidates from advisory committee included "Puget Gardens" (widespread opposition);[ 3] other suggestions included Denny Gardens, Denny Center, Deny Park, Space Plaza[ 4]
Seattle Center Foundation [ edit ]
Bus routes
West side (1st Avenue N and Queen Anne Avenue N): RapidRide D Line , 1, 2, 8, 13, 32
South side (Denny Way): 8
East side (5th Avenue N): 3, 4, 82 (night owl)
Monorail
Federal
City parks and preserves
Greater than 50 acres (20 ha) 10–50 acres (4.0–20.2 ha) 0.02–10 acres (0.0081–4.0469 ha) Under 0.02 acres (0.0081 ha)
Other
Farms, gardens and P-Patches Green belts Zoos and aquariums Arboretums and botanical gardens Landscape architecture Multi-use trails
Size[ 1]
Area: 98.3 acres (0.398 km2 )
Volume: 472,370,319 cubic feet (13,376,037.9 m3 )
Expansions (listed west-to-east)[ 1]
Boeing 747 (original, 1966): 3 bays; 205,600,000 cubic feet (5,820,000 m3 ), 42.8 acres (0.173 km2 )
Boeing 767 (1980): 1 bay; 298,220,043 cubic feet (8,444,651.2 m3 ), 63.3 acres (0.256 km2 )
Boeing 777 (1993): 2 bays; 472,370,319 cubic feet (13,376,037.9 m3 ), 98.3 acres (0.398 km2 )
Plant restructured based on Toyota way[ 2]
Building prefixes[ 3]
40: Assembly plant and support buildings (north of SR 526)
45: Paine Field and Kasch Park areas (south of SR 526)
47: WDTA Mockup Facility
2006-03: Guinness Book of World Records recognizes the mural as the largest digital image in the world
2014-05: "Day Cycle" mural, designed by Paul Burgess and Holly Livingston, selected in votes from 23,000 Boeing employees
2014-07: "Day Cycle" mural begins[ 4]
Aircraft production [ edit ]
^ Only refers to years produced in Everett
Previous Boeing facilities in Everett, since 1943
Timeline[ 1] [ 5] [ 6]
1966-06-17: Boeing selects South Everett site for 747 production[ 7]
Other finalists: Cleveland, San Diego, Moses Lake, McChord AFB[ 8]
1966-08: Construction on Everett factory begins
Main contractor: The Austin Company[ 9]
1967: First employees arrive
1967: First, unofficial tours begin
1967-05-01: 747 production begins at unfinished Everett factory[ 10]
1968-09-30: First 747
1968: Boeing Tour Center established
1980: Factory expanded for 767 production
1984: Permanent tour center opens
1991-07: Boeing begins expansion for 777 production
19 months to approve site development master plan, $50 million in mitigation for expected congestion and growth (including SR 526 projects)[ 11]
1993-10: Factory expansion for 777 production completed
2001: Proposal to consolidate some Renton production lines into Everett (mainly 737 and 757)[ 12]
2005-12: Future of Flight Aviation Center & Boeing Tour opens
2005–2009: "Future Factory" project moves 4,000 office workers into renovated space
Cafeteria upgrades[ 13]
2017: Tully's closes all locations[ 14]
2013: New Everett Delivery Center opens
777X program: uses existing 777 wing assembly line in new location; new wing production building on east side; other changes[ 15]
Robotic assembly[ 16] later dropped
2023: MAX plan announced, to take over former 787 rework area at east side;[ 17] on hold since January 2024 due to door plug incident
Potential west expansion[ 18]
Resources
State Route 526 exits at Airport Road (Paine Field operations) and Seaway Boulevard (main building)
Built in 1960s to serve plant
Expanded in 1990s as part of 777 prep
Mitigation fees paid for traffic caused[ 19]
Caped at 21,000 parking spaces
Staggered shift times introduced in 2016 to fix traffic, ended in 2017[ 20]
Rail
Spur up Japanese Gulch, connecting to shipping terminal on the sound
Bus service
Prior to 2019: buses used Perimeter Road with many stops[ 21] [ 22]
After 2019: Swift Green Line at Seaway Transit Center, also home to Boeing shuttles
^ a b c "Future of Flight Aviation Center & Boeing Tour Background Information" . Boeing. Archived from the original on January 7, 2015.
^ Arkell, Debby (May 2006). "Widebodies in motion" . Boeing Frontiers . Archived from the original on September 10, 2015.
^ Washington – Everett (PDF) (Map). The Boeing Company. May 2007.
^ Catchpole, Dan (September 12, 2014). "New giant artwork coming together at Boeing's Everett plan" . The Everett Herald . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
^ "History of Boeing and the Everett site" . Boeing. Archived from the original on January 7, 2015.
^ https://www.mukilteobeacon.com/stories/the-history-of-the-boeing-everett-plant-muk-revisited,39331
^ Twiss, Robert L. (June 17, 1966). "Final Decision On Plane Job Due By Aug. 1". The Seattle Times . p. 1.
^ http://web.archive.org/web/20160528075059/http://www.theheraldbusinessjournal.com/article/20061231/BIZ01/612310770
^ https://theaustin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Building-for-a-Century-of-Flight_ebook.pdf
^ Twiss, Robert L. (May 1, 1967). "Production Of 747 Under Way At Everett". The Seattle Times . p. 21.
^ Lane, Polly (December 1, 1991). "Wandering eye: Aerospace company may be rethinking commitment to the Puget Sound Area" . The Seattle Times .
^ Wallace, James (October 20, 2001). "Boeing looks again at move to Everett". Seattle Post-Intelligencer . p. A1.
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/business/boeing-cafeteria-gets-1st-class-upgrade/
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/retail/12-tullys-coffee-locations-at-boeing-to-close-with-each-side-blaming-the-other/
^ Technical Support Document for the Boeing Company: Boeing Everett 777X Project (PDF) (Report). Washington State Department of Ecology . September 9, 2014.
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/boeing-revs-up-robots-for-777x-in-everett-factory-signals-that-a-797-awaits/
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/boeing-to-set-up-a-fourth-737-max-assembly-line-in-everett/
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/boeing-explores-potential-expansion-at-paine-field-could-it-be-for-the-797/
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/news/boeing-city-of-everett-are-discussing-mititgation-fees/
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/news/some-at-boeing-worry-new-work-shifts-will-cause-traffic-woes/
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/news/major-changes-coming-to-community-transit-in-march/
^ "Going to Boeing: Commute to Boeing Everett" . Everett Transit.
^ "Bus Service Direct to Boeing" . Community Transit.
^ "Route 952: Boeing Everett–Kennydale, Auburn" . King County Metro. September 27, 2014.
The Spheres are located along Lenora Street between 6th and 7th avenues, under Day 1 in Amazon's Seattle headquarters campus.[ 1] It consists of three intersecting spherical domes, ranging from 80 to 95 feet (24 to 29 m) in height and taking up half of a city block. The domes are made of glass and steel, arranged with five-sided panels of a pentagonal hexecontrahedron .
five-sided panels of a pentagonal hexecontrahedron[ 2]
Panel patterns: stars, Space Needle?
tallest: 90 ft tall, 130 ft wide
72F, 60 percent humidity[ 3]
57,000 square feet[ 4]
800 person capacity
2,643 panes of glass[ 5]
retail space
Restaurant: Renee Erickson's Italian restaurant and bar[ 6]
Woodinville/Redmond greenhouse
Endangered species
55-foot Ficus rubiginosa[ 7]
90 LED fixtures to provide sunlight[ 8]
Team of horticulturalists working during day
Nicknamed "Bezos's Balls"[ 9] [ 10] [ 11]
Names: domes, biodomes, biospheres, bubbles[ 12]
New landmark/tourist spot
Public access
Compared to Space Needle and EMP in terms of architectural oddity[ 13]
Public visits begin on January 30, through "Spheres Discover at Understory" (Monday to Saturday) or Amazon HQ tour (Wednesdays)[ 14]
The Port of Everett is a public seaport authority located on Port Gardner Bay in Everett, Washington , United States. Founded in 1918, it operates a small cargo terminal, a public marina , waterfront real estate, and public recreational lands. The Port of Everett is the third-largest container port in the state of Washington, behind Tacoma and Seattle .[ 2]
The Port of Everett was established on July 13, 1918, via a referendum of Everett citizens. The port was formed in hopes of luring a naval shipyard amid a maritime boom caused by World War I , which would end a few months later.[ 3] The new port instead became a major lumber exporter
Timeline[ 4]
1928: Ebey Island Airport created
District expands to Hat Island
1948: Port explores district expansion to entire county, triggering establishment of Port of Edmonds[ 5]
1964: Marina expansion
1987: Naval Base
2005: 40-ton gantry crane from Seattle installed
2010: Weyerhauser House
2011: District redrawn
Waterfront redevelopment
2019: Pacific Rim Plaza and Indigo hotel (142 rooms) open[ 6]
Hewitt Terminal (grain)
Shipping terminals
Largest public marina on West Coast
Waterfront redevelopment[ 7]
Jetty Island
Hat Island Ferry (private)[ 8]
Free trade zone[ 9]
Riverside Industrial Parks (2010s): Amazon, FedEx, Safran
Site of former Weyerhaeuser sawmill, later purchased in 1999[ 10]
2004 plan: Sierra Pacific sawmill/cogeneration plant planned but withdrawn[ 11]
2016: Sold to developer[ 12]
2018–19: Constructed
Size compared to Seattle, Tacoma, Bellingham?
3rd in containers, higher than Seattle in export value[ 13]
Small property tax collected to supplant revenue[ 14]
International partnerships with Port of Ishinomaki and Hiroshima Prefecture [ 15]
3 commissioners with 6 year terms[ 1] [ 16]
Encompasses Everett and Hat Island, and portions of Mukilteo, Marysville, and Tulalip[ 17]
^ a b "Financial Statements Audit Report: Port of Everett, For the period January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016" . Washington State Auditor . July 20, 2017. pp. 10– 16. Retrieved November 22, 2017 .
^ Dehm, M. L. (December 29, 2010). "Port of Everett forges ahead after developer's failure" . The Everett Herald . Retrieved November 22, 2017 .
^ Riddle, Margaret (May 4, 2010). "Port of Everett is created by a special election held on July 13, 1918" . HistoryLink . Retrieved November 22, 2017 .
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/business/port-of-everett-history-at-a-glance/
^ http://www.historylink.org/File/9446
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/business/areas-largest-waterfront-hotel-debuts-with-a-splash/
^ http://www.portofeverett.com/your-port/port-plans
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/news/close-yet-another-world-its-quite-a-voyage-to-hat-island/
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/news/port-hopes-to-ready-kimberly-clark-site-for-jobs-by-mid-2021/
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/sawmill-buildings-part-of-everetts-past-future/
^ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/port-deals-failure-a-big-setback/
^ https://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/news/2016/03/11/everett-port-sells-site-to-california-real-estate.html
^ https://www.heraldnet.com/business/by-export-value-everetts-quiet-port-surpasses-seattles/
^ http://www.heraldnet.com/news/guide-to-the-port-of-everett-2/
^ https://snohomishcountywa.gov/2204/Partners
^ http://www.portofeverett.com/your-port/port-commission/your-commissioners
^ http://www.portofeverett.com/your-port/port-commission/port-district-boundaries
The Global Innovation Exchange (GIX ) is an academic institution in Bellevue, Washington , United States, formed of a partnership between the University of Washington (UW) and Tsinghua University . The institution's campus, located in Bellevue's Spring District , opened in September 2017.
2013: Conceptual discussions between Microsoft and UW[ 1]
2015: Formation and announcement
Microsoft investment of $40 million
2017-09: Construction begins on campus[ 2]
2017-09: Campus opens
100,000 sq ft
Amenities: Design studios, maker spaces, prototyping labs
seeking LEED certification
National Weather Service Seattle (code SEW ) is a weather station office in Seattle , Washington, US, and is part of the National Weather Service . It is charged with monitoring weather conditions in most of Western Washington , including the Seattle metropolitan area . The Seattle office was established in Downtown Seattle on May 1, 1893, and was moved to its present headquarters at Magnuson Park in 1982.
Historic observations
1870: Smithsonian observation at Whitworth Home
Signal Service established in Olympia in 1877
NWS office[ 1]
1893-05-01: Established at New York Block (2nd & Cherry)[ 2]
Flagpole used to display forecasts (in flags)
1905 construction of Alaska Building interfered with wind measurements
1905-05-01: Weather Bureau office moves to Alaska Building (2nd & Cherry)
1911-11-01: Moved to Hoge Building (2nd & Cherry; third corner)
1933-04-15: Moved to Federal Building (1st & Madison)
1982-12: Moved to Sand Point office (part of NOAA complex)[ 3]
Remote locations
1928-07-26: Boeing Field office established
1944-11: Sea-Tac Airport office established[ 4]
County warning area: Whatcom to Lewis
Weather radio?
Most Twitter followers among NWS offices (nearly 210,000)[ 5]
2 major NWS Doppler radars in Western Washington: Camano Island and Copalis Beach (built in 2011)[ 5]
Alaska Region
Anchorage, Alaska (AFC)
Fairbanks, Alaska (AFG)
Juneau, Alaska (AJK)
Central Region
Denver/Boulder, Colorado (BOU)
Grand Junction, Colorado (GJT)
Pueblo, Colorado (PUB)
Chicago, Illinois (LOT)
Lincoln, Illinois (ILX)
Indianapolis, Indiana (IND)
Northern Indiana (IWX)
Quad Cities, IL/IA (DVN)
Des Moines, Iowa (DMX)
Dodge City, Kansas (DDC)
Goodland, Kansas (GLD)
Topeka, Kansas (TOP)
Wichita, Kansas (ICT)
Jackson, Kentucky (JKL)
Louisville, Kentucky (LMK)
Paducah, Kentucky (PAH)
Detroit/Pontiac, Michigan (DTX)
Gaylord, Michigan (APX)
Grand Rapids, Michigan (GRR)
Marquette, Michigan (MQT)
Duluth, Minnesota (DLH)
Minneapolis/Twin Cities, Minnesota (MPX)
Kansas City/Pleasant Hill (EAX)
Springfield, Missouri (SGF)
St. Louis, Missouri (LSX)
Hastings, Nebraska (GID)
North Platte, Nebraska (LBF)
Omaha/Valley, Nebraska (OAX)
Bismarck, North Dakota (BIS)
Grand Forks, North Dakota (FGF)
Aberdeen, South Dakota (ABR)
Rapid City, South Dakota (UNR)
Sioux Falls, South Dakota (FSD)
Green Bay, Wisconsin (GRB)
La Crosse, Wisconsin (ARX)
Milwaukee/Sullivan, Wisconsin (MKX)
Cheyenne, Wyoming (CYS)
Riverton, Wyoming (RIW)
Eastern Region
Caribou, Maine (CAR)
Gray/Portland, Maine (GYX)
Boston, Massachusetts (BOX)
Mount Holly/Philadelphia, New Jersey (PHI)
Albany, New York (ALY)
Binghamton, New York (BGM)
Buffalo, New York (BUF)
New York/Upton, New York (OKX)
Newport/Morehead City, North Carolina (MHX)
Raleigh, North Carolina (RAH)
Wilmington, North Carolina (ILM)
Cleveland, Ohio (CLE)
Wilmington, Ohio (ILN)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (PBZ)
State College, Pennsylvania (CTP)
Charleston, South Carolina (CHS)
Columbia, South Carolina (CAE)
Greenville-Spartanburg, South Carolina (GSP)
Burlington, Vermont (BTV)
Baltimore/Washington, Virginia (LWX)
Blacksburg, Virginia (RNK)
Wakefield, Virginia (AKQ)
Charleston, West Virginia (RLX)
Pacific Region
Tiyan, Guam (GUM)
Honolulu, Hawaii (HFO)
Pago Pago, American Samoa (PPG)
Southern Region
Birmingham, Alabama (BMX)
Huntsville, Alabama (HUN)
Mobile/Pensacola, Alabama (MOB)
North Little Rock, Arkansas (LZK)
Jacksonville, Florida (JAX)
Key West, Florida (KEY)
Melbourne, Florida (MLB)
Miami, Florida (MFL)
Tallahassee, Florida (TAE)
Tampa, Florida (TBW)
Peachtree City/Atlanta, Georgia (FFC)
Lake Charles, Louisiana (LCH)
New Orleans/Baton Rouge, Louisiana (LIX)
Shreveport, Louisiana (SHV)
Jackson, Mississippi (JAN)
Albuquerque, New Mexico (ABQ)
Norman/Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (OUN)
Tulsa, Oklahoma (TSA)
San Juan, Puerto Rico (SJU)
Memphis, Tennessee (MEG)
Morristown/Knoxville, Tennessee (MRX)
Nashville, Tennessee (OHX)
Amarillo, Texas (AMA)
Austin/San Antonio, Texas (EWX)
Brownsville, Texas (BRO)
Corpus Christi, Texas (CRP)
Fort Worth-Dallas, Texas (FWD)
El Paso, Texas (EPZ)
Houston/Galveston, Texas (HGX)
Lubbock, Texas (LUB)
Midland/Odessa, Texas (MAF)
San Angelo, Texas (SJT)
Western Region
Flagstaff, Arizona (FGZ)
Phoenix, Arizona (PSR)
Tucson, Arizona (TWC)
Eureka, California (EKA)
Los Angeles/Oxnard, California (LOX)
Sacramento, California (STO)
San Diego, California (SGX)
San Francisco Bay Area/Monterey, California (MTR)
San Joaquin Valley/Hanford, California (HNX)
Boise, Idaho (BOI)
Pocatello, Idaho (PIH)
Billings, Montana (BYZ)
Glasgow, Montana (GGW)
Great Falls, Montana (TFX)
Missoula, Montana (MSO)
Elko, Nevada (LKN)
Las Vegas, Nevada (VEF)
Reno, Nevada (REV)
Medford, Oregon (MFR)
Pendleton, Oregon (PDT)
Portland, Oregon (PQR)
Salt Lake City, Utah (SLC)
Seattle, Washington (SEW)
Spokane, Washington (OTX)
War on Cars , or War on the car , is a phrase used in North America to describe policies and legislation that promote non-automobile transportation , including mass transit and bicycling , often in mass media .[ 1] It is also used to describe
Seattle, Chicago, Toronto, Boston, Washington DC[ 2]
Conservative opposition (Koch, etc)[ 3] [ 4]
The term gained prominence in 2009, after the introduction of The Big Move , a regional transportation plan for the Greater Toronto Area .[ 1]
Category:Metaphors referring to war and violence
13 Coins is a restaurant in Seattle , Washington, US. It has three locations, in Seattle, Bellevue, and SeaTac. The Seattle location in 1967 and was moved from South Lake Union to Pioneer Square in 2018. The restaurant is noted for its 24-hour service and interior decor.
13 Coins opened in 1967, under the ownership of restauranteur Jim Ward. The name refers to "Las Trece Monedas", a restaurant in Lima, Peru.[ 1]
Sea-Tac
2014: Bellevue location opens[ 2]
2018 redevelopment
24-hour menu
"Never changes, never closes"[ 3]
The Economic Alliance Snohomish County is an economic development organization and chamber of commerce in Snohomish County, Washington , US.
2011: Formed from merger with South Snohomish County Chamber of Commerce, the Everett Area Chamber of Commerce and the Economic Development Council of Snohomish County[ 1] [ 2]
The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency for Snohomish County, Washington , part of the Seattle metropolitan area . It is headquartered in Everett, Washington .
2020: Sheriff Fortney calls COVID-19 stay-home order unconstitutional, causing backlash[ 1]
31st: Ty Trenary (July 8, 2013 – December 30, 2019)[ 2]
32nd: Adam Fortney, since December 30, 2019
Annexations[ 1]
1955 to 1958: First major annexations, in all directions
May 12, 1959: Highway 99 corridor at 220th
1960 to 1963: Peak expansion
July 1961: Lake Ballinger (disputed with Mountlake Terrace)
late 1961: Westgate west side (200 acres) and Talbot Park (660 acres; includes North Edmonds and University Colony)
1962: Westgate east side (265 acres)
August 1963: northern; largest annexation by area (1615 acres; 2.5 sq mi) and population (7,345 of 19,000)[ 2]
July 2 vote was pro annexation but against indebtness[ 3]
1963: Esperance votes against
1976: Esperance declines
1980: Esperance declines again
1994 to 1997: Southwest Edmonds (1269 acres)
Geography[ 4]
Crossing EIS p. 3-96 (Draft): post-glacial processes
Glacial erratic
Eastern plateau: higher than 400 feet
Edmonds Marsh and Willow Creek[ 5]
Demographics
Higher percentage of retired and senior citizens than county (Comp Plan, p. 11)
Asian population along Highway 99
13 percent of growth from 1980 to 1990 attributed to annexation
Economy
Transportation
1986: Replica trolley operated by Community Transit
Sources
1969 to 1979: "Sonic crowds just keep on growing...". The Seattle Times . January 27, 1980. p. L10.
1995 to 2007: Johns, Greg (December 27, 2007). "Sonics working to fill up KeyArena seats" . Seattle Post-Intelligencer . p. A1. Retrieved March 24, 2024 – via NewsBank.
The Seattle Seawolves hosted the San Diego Legion in a 2022 playoffs game at Starfire Sports in Tukwila, Washington .
The Seattle Seawolves are a professional American rugby union team based in Seattle , Washington, that play in Major League Rugby (MLR). They were established in 2017 as one of the seven inaugural MLR teams and began play in the 2018 season . The team is a member of the Western Conference and play their home matches at Starfire Sports , a 4,500-seat multipurpose stadium in Tukwila, Washington .[ 1]
The Seawolves have won two MLR championships, tied for the most in league history with the New England Free Jacks , and have appeared in four finals.[ 2] They won the inaugural championship in 2018 under player-coach Phil Mack and the 2019 final under Richie Walker , an interim replacement for head coach.[ 3] The team missed the playoffs in the 2021 season , which they played under three coaches,[ 4] and did not initially qualify for the 2022 playoffs until the disqualification of Western Conference leaders Austin Gilgronis and the LA Giltinis .[ 5] The Seawolves qualified in a replacement berth under head coach Allen Clarke and finished as runners-up in the 2022 final , where they lost to Rugby New York .[ 6] The team finished as runners-up in the 2024 final to the New England Free Jacks, who won their second consecutive championship.[ 2]
2024 season format: 16 games with round-robin for intra-conference and one game per team in opposite conference[ 7]
Sources
Key to colors
^ Major League Rugby divided its league into two conferences beginning in the 2020 season .[ 9] The league initially announced that the 2024 season would use a single-table format, but retained the conferences.[ 10] [ 11]
^ a b The 2020 season was postponed on March 12 after the fifth round of the regular season. The remainder of the season, including the playoffs, were cancelled on March 19.[ 14]
^ The two highest-ranked Western Conference teams, Austin Gilgronis and the LA Giltinis , were disqualified from postseason play due to a breach of salary cap rules. As a result, Seattle were moved to second place and hosted the Western Conference Eliminator.[ 5]
^ Leonard, Tod (July 6, 2018). "In San Diego for title match, Major League Rugby reflects on inaugural season, future" . San Diego Union-Tribune .
^ a b Ackermann, Dylan (August 4, 2024). "Seawolves unable to keep Free Jacks from back-to-back Major League Rugby titles" . The Seattle Times .
^ Arthur, Ben (March 4, 2020). "A budding dynasty? Seattle Seawolves gunning for 3rd straight Major League Rugby title" . Seattle Post-Intelligencer .
^ Hanson, Scott (February 4, 2022). "Seattle Seawolves look to rebound from disappointing 2021 as Major League Rugby season starts" . The Seattle Times .
^ a b Pengelly, Martin (June 7, 2022). "Major League Rugby in crisis as LA and Austin disqualified from playoffs" . The Guardian .
^ Bernstein, Jason (June 25, 2022). "Seawolves' unexpected postseason run ends with loss in Major League Rugby championship game" . The Seattle Times .
^ https://x.com/usmlr/status/1755659035955630104
^ https://www.ksl.com/article/50944756/utah-warriors-embark-on-home-opener-in-very-different-major-league-rugby-from-a-year-ago
^ "Major League Rugby to add three new teams in 2020" . ESPN. Reuters. April 12, 2019.
^ Marrion, Jack (December 19, 2023). "Sabercats open 2024 season on March 2 in smaller league, expanded playoffs" . Houston Chronicle .
^ Walker, Sean (March 9, 2024). "Utah Warriors embark on home opener in very different Major League Rugby from a year ago" . KSL.com . Salt Lake City.
^ "2018 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ "2019 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ Davidson, Neil (March 19, 2020). "Major League Rugby calls off season instead of contending with coronavirus uncertainty" . The Globe and Mail . The Canadian Press .
^ "2020 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ "2021 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ "2022 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ "2023 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
^ "2024 Major League Rugby" . Americas Rugby News .
Fix links from Seattle Magazine
Seattle is a monthly news and culture magazine published in Seattle , Washington, United States.
Relationship with Seattle Business
1966: Founded by Harriet Bullitt (daughter of Dorothy Bullitt ) as Pacific Search [ 1]
1980: Pacific Search renamed to Pacific Northwest
1982: Finalist for National Magazine Awards for General Excellence
1987: Sold to Micromedia Corp. of New Jersey
1992: Sold to Adams Publishing
1994: Pacific Northwest consolidated into Seattle [ 2]
1999: Sold to Tiger Oak Publications of Minneapolis
Rebranded to Seattle , reusing name of an older 1964 magazine founded by Stimson Bullitt
2012: Seattle and competitor Seattle Metropolitan accidentally use same photo for World's Fair commemorative issue[ 3]
Seattle has older readership
2019: Tiger Oak Media files for bankruptcy[ 4]
2020: Acquired by Jonathan Sposato[ 5]
The Everett Silvertips are an American junior ice hockey team based in Everett, Washington , that plays in the Western Hockey League (WHL).
As of 2024/25, never missed a playoffs since joining in 2003/04
"The club has collected nine U.S. Division titles over its WHL tenure and has reached the WHL Championship Series twice, most recently in 2018, where they fell to the Swift Current Broncos in six games."[ 1]
"Since the 2020-21 season, the Silvertips have compiled a 142-67 record, clinching a playoff spot each year in addition to winning their second all-time Western Conference title in 2021-22."[ 2]
"Everett hasn’t drawn this consistently well since late last decade [2010s], when a demographic shift of workers from the area began cutting into a fan base that had flocked to what’s now known as Angel of the Winds Arena since their 2003-04 franchise launch."[ 3]
Interactive map of major malls in Washington
Interactive map of the N Line
Interactive map of the S Line