Decent offering. Seattle is one of the American cities that I need to visit sooner or later.
|
Well god damn! You must have been in One Convention Place, which apparently has some awesome views! Phenomenal post.
|
Had to do a double-take. I work near there, and if that guy was taller, not carrying water, and wearing a hat he'd look a lot like me! Well, not really, but I wear jeans every day and have black jackets.
http://i275.photobucket.com/albums/j...il2012/078.jpg [/QUOTE] |
Great set. Looks like you covered a lot of ground. Hope you had a nice visit.
|
Gorgeous natural setting, dense cityscape, some great architecture, my kind of politics...Seattle has to be heaven in an urban form. The U of Washington is high on my list of prospective grad schools (astronomy/physics), and its location right in Seattle is a large factor.
|
Nice work.
|
Pacific North West...totally sweet.
|
Sweet stuff here!
|
I had no idea that Seattle had such an extensive amount of 4 to 7 floor pre war apartment buildings. Some of them may be from the 50's but wow, there are a shit load of them. Did this surprise anyone else? I'm not sure if it was just the way they were shot in this thread that made it look more dense than it really is. Compared to San Diego it looks like Seattle has 5 times the amount of 4+ floor residential structures in its core area...
|
Quote:
My wife described it as a 'clean' San Francisco, without the chaos. Excellent photos Thundertubs, some real gems in there. |
I might be moving to Seattle this fall. I've only been there for two days and didn't get to see much of the city. This thread gives me even more to be excited about. I expect that I'll greatly enjoy it there.
|
Another great thread. I see Seattle has something going on.
|
makin' it rain in the city of rain with tubs. real nice profilin', homie. rainier above the clouds is something else.
i dig this the most. http://i275.photobucket.com/albums/j...il2012/051.jpg |
That is a breathtakingly beautiful city.
|
Quote:
|
Does the fact that they are built on a slightly inclining hill give an illusion that there are more of them? I'm speaking of the multiple shots where he shows the neighborhood with "El Capitan" apartments at the bottom. That area looks like it is uber dense, almost like Westlake in LA. What is that neighborhood like, is it as dense as it looks in these shots from Thundertubs?
|
Quote:
|
^^^ Thanks Seasky, how dense are those inner Seattle Census tracts? Do they have corner stores and urban amenities everywhere? Not to highjack this thread but pics of those areas would be appreciated.
|
Quote:
The first 2010 density map I found is the one below. The area you're interested in is the darker red area just east of I-5 from Downtown (I-5 is the eastern highway shown on the map - the western one is Highway 99). The blogger looked at block groups (smaller than tracts) and estimated the density in the densest one in this area at 65K people/square mile. Not sure about the accuracy of his calculations. http://buildthecity.wordpress.com/20...n-density-map/ Retail is primarily concentrated along the Pike/Pine Corridor, along Olive Way, and on Broadway which is the next major north-south arterial east of Downtown. I can't think of an urban amenity that wouldn't be available in this area. A lot of folks are also able to walk to work Downtown and it's a fairly quick commute to the UW for students. The light rail station on Broadway opens in 2016 and in advance of that a streetcar that goes down Broadway to First Hill (where the hospitals are) and the International District before arriving at the big train station and Pioneer Square should be running prior to that. There's also a ton of bus service. The City of Seattle doesn't have the 2010 data up yet - for reference here's their 2000 density map by census tract: http://www.seattle.gov/dpd/cms/group...pds_006728.pdf |
All times are GMT. The time now is 7:57 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.