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Odd architecture |
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People visiting Seattle love this
whimsical parking garage and the way it appears to
be slipping beneath the waves. People who live in
Seattle hate this parking garage and wish it would
finally slip beneath the waves and never be seen again.
Though some revile it for its visual impact, most
who despise the garage do so because of what came
before it. This was formerly the location of the Seattle
Hotel. The hotel was a landmark in the city, serving
guests for as long as anyone can remember. By the
late 1950's, the Pioneer Square area was a downtrodden
shell of its former self, and the hotel had lapsed
into a seedy coma, looking like a junkie propped up
against the hill. But that didn't mean people didn't
love it. And when a developer decided that the cause
of urban renewal was best served by razing the structure,
people were outraged. You don't throw grandma in the
trash just because her stockings sag and she smells
funny. That is, more or less, exactly what happened
on the morning of 3 April, 1961 when demolition crews
turned the Seattle Hotel to dust. In its place came
this odd-looking piece of work. Squeezed into a triangle-shaped
piece of sloping land, it leans backward into the
hill at an angle that wouldn't seem so steep if it
wasn't for the fact that everything else in the area
leans the other way, and that the structure comes
to a point. Over the years there have been dozens
of plans to do away with the parking garage, and dozens
of reasons why it should be done. But the fact remains
that in this section of Seattle, parking is at a premium,
and though it is considered an eyesore, the Sinking
Ship is a needed eyesore.
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"Why
don't you adults use your heads? The Seattle Hotel
is one of our most historic buildings, and you
are letting some million of dollars be wasted
on a gas station to be built on top of it."
12-year-old
Christy Nelsen
Seattle Times, 1961
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