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On February 29, 2016, the Northwest Seaport Alliance invited the CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin, the largest cargo ship to visit the United States, to dock at the Port of Seattle's Terminal 18. The move was used to test the terminal's capabilities in handling a ship of that size (in the range of 18,000 twenty-foot equivalent units , or TEUs) and ...
Now part of Terminal 18. 16 Terminal 18 [150] [151] (T-18 [151] [115]) Terminal 18 in 2006 (roughly the east/near half of Harbor Island) by 1971 extant container terminal [151] roughly the east half of Harbor Island 196 of Harbor Island's 430 acres. [151] 1971 harbor map lists "POS [Port of Seattle] container terminal, Matson Navigation Co., U ...
Terminal 18 Park, on Harbor Island along the West Waterway of the Duwamish, slightly north of the West Seattle Bridge. [130] Terminal 91 Bike Trail (part of the Elliott Bay Trail) [131] t̓uʔəlaltxʷ Village Park and Shoreline Habitat (formerly Terminal 105 Park) on the west shore of the Duwamish Waterway at 4260 W Marginal Way SW. [132]
The terminal at the renamed Seattle–Tacoma International Airport was formally dedicated by Governor Arthur Langlie on July 9, 1949, in front of a crowd of 30,000 spectators. [18] The 71,000-square-foot (6,600 m 2) building, designed by architect Herman A. Moldenhour, included a rooftop control tower and glass courting walls in the concourses.
On September 22, 2006, Sound Transit and the Port of Seattle broke ground on the Airport Link extension, beginning three years of light rail and roadway construction. [48] [49] The airport's return-to-terminal ramps were closed for demolition in October, clearing the site of the future station. [50]
A runaway barge broke free from its allocated dock and smashed into a pier in Seattle on Thursday 2 November. It was first seen moving towards Pier 62 and 63, near the Seattle Aquarium, prompting ...
Main Terminal South station, showing the color-coded Blue Line boarding area on the left and the Yellow Line on the right SEA Underground is located within secure areas of the airport. The system consists of six stations serving each of the four gate concourses extending from the main terminal (Concourses A, B, C and D), and the North and South ...
The clock from the old Colman Dock tower, dunked into the bay in the 1912 Alameda accident and removed in the 1936 renovation, was rediscovered (lying in pieces) in 1976, purchased by the Port of Seattle in 1985, restored, given as a gift to the Washington State Department of Transportation, and reinstalled on the present Colman Dock on May 18 ...