The Seattle waterfront has changed drastically since I lived in Seattle in the mid-1970s. At that time, the horrible 2-level Alaskan Viaduct snaked along the waterfront. Underneath was a sort of nether-land, similar to the underside of the Southeast Expressway in Boston. But at least there was parking under the concrete. Back then, waterfront Seattle was a working district, with warehouses, small factories, and industrial activities.
Today, the viaduct is gone! Alaskan Way is sunny. Now there are bike lanes, gardens, and a clean new surface street, Elliott Way. Warehouses have been rebuilt into condominiums, and totally new buildings have been erected. And the traffic flows underneath through the SR99 tunnel.
Alaskan Way
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Pier 50 view north along Alaskan Way (Kodak Tri-X film, Rolleiflex 3.5E camera) |
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Pier 70 view south along Alaskan Way from the Olympia Sculpture Park |
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Sounder commuter train |
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BNSF tracks near Pier 66 |
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Great Northern Tunnel north entrance (Samsung phone digital file) |
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BNSF freight train near Pier 70 |
Pike Place Market
Everyone takes pictures and selfies at the famous Pike Place Market. My Olympia photography friend comes here often and does excellent work. I took pictures in the Market in 1973 when I lived in Seattle.
The famous Pioneer Building is a Richardsonian Romanesque edifice of stone, red brick, terra cotta, and cast iron. It faces Pioneer Square, now rather grungy because of the homeless and filth.
I remember entering the Pioneer Building when it was being renovated in the early 1970s. There was an inner atrium with iron railings. Somewhere in the basement was the well-known French restaurant, the Brasserie Pittsbourg. I remember eating here with friends and, possibly, my dad. Do I have any photographs from those happy and innocent 1970s?
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Entrance to the Brasserie Pittsbourg, March 3, 1970 (courtesy of the Seattle Public Library, photograph by Werner W. Lenggenhager, 1899-1988) |
This ends our short walk in downtown Seattle and along the waterfront. I took these photographs on Kodak Tri-X 400 film with a Rolleiflex 3.5E camera with 75mm ƒ/3.5 Xenotar lens. This is a 1959 model still going strong. Most Rolleiflex twin lens cameras are superb picture machines. Praus Productions in Rochester, NY, developed the film.
This was article Sea 05
2 comments:
For better or worse the place is unrecognizable from when I was a kid in Seattle. That cruise ship is the stuff of nightmares. Nice shots from the Rollei.
Yes, those cruise ships are the things of nightmares. And they tend to be disease incubators. Everyone I know who has been of a cruise returns home with illnesses of some sort or another.
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