Ads
related to: seattle historic monuments and museum district
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Seattle Art Museum. July 20, 2016 ... Seattle Chinatown Historic District. November 6, 1986 : Roughly bounded by Main, Jackson, I-5, Waller, and Fifth 168: Seattle ...
Sand Point Naval Air Station Historic District [29] Magnuson Park: More images: Satterlee House: 4866 Beach Drive S.W. Schillestad Building: 2111 First Avenue: Schoenfeld Building [30] 1012 1st Avenue: Also known as Standard Building. Schooner Wawona: Historic Ships Wharf, 860 Terry Avenue N. More images: Archaeologically documented and ...
Seattle Asian Art Museum: Capitol Hill: Art: Asian art, facility of the Seattle Art Museum Seattle Central College M. Rosetta Hunter Art Gallery: Capitol Hill: Art: website: Seattle Children's Museum: Lower Queen Anne: Children's: Located in the Seattle Center Seattle Mariners Hall of Fame: SoDo: Sports: Located at T-Mobile Park: Seattle ...
Georgetown PowerPlant Museum (interior view of turbine hall) 5. 1409 East Prospect Street, immediately across the street from the south entrance to Volunteer Park 6. The P-I Globe. The City of Seattle Landmarks Preservation Board is responsible for designating and preserving structures of historical importance in Seattle, Washington.
There are 315 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. 222 of these listings are located in the city of Seattle, and are listed separately; the remaining 93 properties and districts are listed here. Another property in the county outside of Seattle was once listed on the National Register but has been removed.
The Harvard-Belmont Landmark District is a part of Capitol Hill in Seattle, Washington, United States, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is notable for the architectural styles displayed by homes there: Victorian, neoclassical, neo-Georgian, and Colonial. Most were built between 1900 and 1910. [1]
Federal Reserve Bank Building (Seattle) Pierre P. Ferry House; Fifth Church of Christ, Scientist (Seattle) Fire Station No. 18 (Seattle) Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle) Fire Station No. 25 (Seattle) First Methodist Protestant Church of Seattle; Ford Motor Company Assembly Plant (Seattle) Fort Lawton; Frank B. Cooper School; Freeway Park; Fremont ...
The Pergola was formerly a cable car stop built in 1909, [15] and the Seattle Totem Pole, which was originally carved around 1790, was stolen from a Tlingit village, and presented to the city of Seattle by its Chamber of Commerce in 1899. [16] 18: Port Gamble Historic District: Port Gamble Historic District