![]() | This is a user sandbox of Sounder Bruce. A user sandbox is a subpage of the user's user page. It serves as a testing spot and page development space for the user and is not an encyclopedia article. Please refrain from making changes of your own in the sandboxes without leaving a message. For a sandbox of your own, create it here. Main sandbox | Index, Topics | Notes, Resources | To do | Challenges Roads: Interstates, U.S. routes, State routes, Freeways, Streets ( MLK Way), Bridges and tunnels Transit: DSTT, Link LR ( Tacoma), Rail, Streetcars, Buses ( Routes), Ferries Cycling | Soccer | Geography ( Neighborhoods), Buildings ( Skyscrapers, Retail, Libraries) | Politics ( Dore, 2001) |
OR 19 begins at a junction with U.S. Route 26 at the bottom of Picture Gorge within the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument northwest of Dayville. The southernmost four miles (6.4 km) of the highway run along the west side of the John Day River in the gorge, all contained with the national monument. It passes the Thomas Condon Paleontology Center, where
Seattle Commons | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | South Lake Union in Seattle, Washington |
Area | 61 acres (25 ha) |
Status | Never built |
Rejected | September 19, 1995 May 21, 1996 (Second proposal) | (First proposal)
Seattle Commons was a proposed urban park located in the South Lake Union neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. The 61-acre (25 ha) park was the centerpiece of a larger redevelopment of the neighborhood, first proposed in 1991 by architect Fred Bassetti and Seattle Times columnist John Hinterberger. Two municipal elections were held by the City of Seattle to fund the project, with voters rejecting the initial $111 million property tax levy in September 1995 and a smaller plan with a $50 million property tax in May 1996. 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) of land in the proposed park area that had been bought by Paul Allen for the Seattle Commons Committee was later used by Vulcan Inc. to begin the redevelopment of South Lake Union. The smaller Lake Union Park was opened in two phases from 2008 to 2010 as a realization of the waterfront aspect of the Seattle Commons plan.
elevated freeway"
Seattle Center | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | Lower Queen Anne in Seattle, Washington |
Area | 74 acres (30 ha) |
Opened | April 21, 1962 |
Designer | Paul Thiry |
Operated by | City of Seattle |
Visitors | 12 million (in 2013) [2] |
Open | 7 am to 9 pm daily |
Status | Open all year |
Budget | $43,443,092 (2014) [1] |
Parking | 2,967 spaces in 3 garages |
Public transit access | Seattle Center Monorail, King County Metro |
Website |
seattlecenter |
The Seattle Center is a 74-acre (30 ha) urban park and civic center in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, built for the Century 21 Exposition in 1962.
Model(s) | Type | Years produced [a] | Number produced | Variants | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing 747 | Widebody | 1967–2022 | 1,574 | 400, 8, 8F, etc. |
The Spheres are located along Lenora Street between 6th and 7th avenues, under Day 1 in Amazon's Seattle headquarters campus. [1] It consists of three intersecting spherical domes, ranging from 80 to 95 feet (24 to 29 m) in height and taking up half of a city block. The domes are made of glass and steel, arranged with five-sided panels of a pentagonal hexecontrahedron.
Port of Everett | |
---|---|
Location | |
Location | Everett, Washington, US |
Details | |
Opened | 1918 |
Operated by | Port of Everett Commission |
Land area | 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) |
CEO and Executive Director | Les Reardanz |
Statistics | |
Vessel arrivals | 142 (2016) |
Annual cargo tonnage | 257,000 short tons (233,000 t) |
Annual revenue | $29.9 million (2016) [1] |
Website portofeverett |
The Port of Everett is a public seaport authority located on Port Gardner Bay in Everett, Washington, United States. Founded in 1918, it operates a small cargo terminal, a public marina, waterfront real estate, and public recreational lands. The Port of Everett is the third-largest container port in the state of Washington, behind Tacoma and Seattle. [2]
The Port of Everett was established on July 13, 1918, via a referendum of Everett citizens. The port was formed in hopes of luring a naval shipyard amid a maritime boom caused by World War I, which would end a few months later. [3] The new port instead became a major lumber exporter
Established | 2017 |
---|---|
Parent institution | University of Washington |
Location | |
Website |
gix |
The Global Innovation Exchange (GIX) is an academic institution in Bellevue, Washington, United States, formed of a partnership between the University of Washington (UW) and Tsinghua University. The institution's campus, located in Bellevue's Spring District, opened in September 2017.
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | May 1, 1893 |
Headquarters | 7600 Sand Point Way Seattle, Washington, US |
Parent agency | National Weather Service |
Website |
weather |
National Weather Service Seattle (code SEW) is a weather station office in Seattle, Washington, US, and is part of the National Weather Service. It is charged with monitoring weather conditions in most of Western Washington, including the Seattle metropolitan area. The Seattle office was established in Downtown Seattle on May 1, 1893, and was moved to its present headquarters at Magnuson Park in 1982.
War on Cars, or War on the car, is a phrase used in North America to describe policies and legislation that promote non-automobile transportation, including mass transit and bicycling, often in mass media. [1] It is also used to describe
The term gained prominence in 2009, after the introduction of The Big Move, a regional transportation plan for the Greater Toronto Area. [1]
Category:Metaphors referring to war and violence
13 Coins is a restaurant in Seattle, Washington, US. It has three locations, in Seattle, Bellevue, and SeaTac. The Seattle location in 1967 and was moved from South Lake Union to Pioneer Square in 2018. The restaurant is noted for its 24-hour service and interior decor.
13 Coins opened in 1967, under the ownership of restauranteur Jim Ward. The name refers to "Las Trece Monedas", a restaurant in Lima, Peru. [1]
The Economic Alliance Snohomish County is an economic development organization and chamber of commerce in Snohomish County, Washington, US.
Snohomish County Sheriff's Office | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SCSO |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Legal jurisdiction | Snohomish County, Washington, U.S. |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Everett, Washington, U.S. |
Website | |
snohomishcountywa.gov |
The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency for Snohomish County, Washington, part of the Seattle metropolitan area. It is headquartered in Everett, Washington.
No. | Date | Time ( PT) | Opponent | Result | Sounders goalscorers | Venue | Att. | Details | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | March 1 | 12:00 p.m. | Chicago Fire FC | 2–1 (W) |
Morris ![]() Delem ![]() João Paulo ![]() |
CenturyLink Field (H), Seattle | 40,126 | Referee: Alex Chilowicz | |
21 | October 27 | 7:00 p.m. | Vancouver Whitecaps FC | 2–0 (W) |
Ruidíaz ![]() Lodeiro ![]() |
Providence Park (A), Portland, Oregon | 0 (behind closed doors) | Referee: Fotis Bazakos | Match played in Portland due to travel restrictions between Canada and the United States due to COVID-19. Match was not eligible for Cascadia Cup due to lack of fans in attendance. |
Season | Total | Games | Average | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969–70 | 278,444 | 36 | 7,734 | Seattle Center Coliseum |
1970–71 | 372,612 | 40 | 9,315 | |
1971–72 | 444,302 | 40 | 11,107 | |
1972–73 | 387,382 | 41 | 9,448 | |
1973–74 | 491,856 | 41 | 11,996 | |
1974–75 | 524,692 | 41 | 12,797 | |
1975–76 | 557,304 | 41 | 13,592 | |
1976–77 | 532,196 | 41 | 12,980 | |
1977–78 | 504,668 | 41 | 12,309 | |
1978–79 | 747,243 | 41 | 18,225 | Kingdome |
1995–96 | 41 | 17,007 | KeyArena (17,072) | |
1996–97 | 41 | 17,072 | ||
1997–98 | 41 | 17,072 | ||
1998–99 | 25 [a] | 17,072 | ||
1999–2000 | 41 | 15,018 | ||
2000–01 | 41 | 15,630 | ||
2001–02 | 41 | 16,452 | ||
2002–03 | 41 | 15,541 | ||
2003–04 | 41 | 15,255 | ||
2004–05 | 41 | 16,475 | ||
2005–06 | 41 | 16,199 | ||
2006–07 | 41 | 15,955 | ||
2007–08 | ||||
All-time | — |
![]() | This is a user sandbox of Sounder Bruce. A user sandbox is a subpage of the user's user page. It serves as a testing spot and page development space for the user and is not an encyclopedia article. Please refrain from making changes of your own in the sandboxes without leaving a message. For a sandbox of your own, create it here. Main sandbox | Index, Topics | Notes, Resources | To do | Challenges Roads: Interstates, U.S. routes, State routes, Freeways, Streets ( MLK Way), Bridges and tunnels Transit: DSTT, Link LR ( Tacoma), Rail, Streetcars, Buses ( Routes), Ferries Cycling | Soccer | Geography ( Neighborhoods), Buildings ( Skyscrapers, Retail, Libraries) | Politics ( Dore, 2001) |
OR 19 begins at a junction with U.S. Route 26 at the bottom of Picture Gorge within the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument northwest of Dayville. The southernmost four miles (6.4 km) of the highway run along the west side of the John Day River in the gorge, all contained with the national monument. It passes the Thomas Condon Paleontology Center, where
Seattle Commons | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | South Lake Union in Seattle, Washington |
Area | 61 acres (25 ha) |
Status | Never built |
Rejected | September 19, 1995 May 21, 1996 (Second proposal) | (First proposal)
Seattle Commons was a proposed urban park located in the South Lake Union neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. The 61-acre (25 ha) park was the centerpiece of a larger redevelopment of the neighborhood, first proposed in 1991 by architect Fred Bassetti and Seattle Times columnist John Hinterberger. Two municipal elections were held by the City of Seattle to fund the project, with voters rejecting the initial $111 million property tax levy in September 1995 and a smaller plan with a $50 million property tax in May 1996. 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) of land in the proposed park area that had been bought by Paul Allen for the Seattle Commons Committee was later used by Vulcan Inc. to begin the redevelopment of South Lake Union. The smaller Lake Union Park was opened in two phases from 2008 to 2010 as a realization of the waterfront aspect of the Seattle Commons plan.
elevated freeway"
Seattle Center | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | Lower Queen Anne in Seattle, Washington |
Area | 74 acres (30 ha) |
Opened | April 21, 1962 |
Designer | Paul Thiry |
Operated by | City of Seattle |
Visitors | 12 million (in 2013) [2] |
Open | 7 am to 9 pm daily |
Status | Open all year |
Budget | $43,443,092 (2014) [1] |
Parking | 2,967 spaces in 3 garages |
Public transit access | Seattle Center Monorail, King County Metro |
Website |
seattlecenter |
The Seattle Center is a 74-acre (30 ha) urban park and civic center in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, built for the Century 21 Exposition in 1962.
Model(s) | Type | Years produced [a] | Number produced | Variants | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing 747 | Widebody | 1967–2022 | 1,574 | 400, 8, 8F, etc. |
The Spheres are located along Lenora Street between 6th and 7th avenues, under Day 1 in Amazon's Seattle headquarters campus. [1] It consists of three intersecting spherical domes, ranging from 80 to 95 feet (24 to 29 m) in height and taking up half of a city block. The domes are made of glass and steel, arranged with five-sided panels of a pentagonal hexecontrahedron.
Port of Everett | |
---|---|
Location | |
Location | Everett, Washington, US |
Details | |
Opened | 1918 |
Operated by | Port of Everett Commission |
Land area | 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) |
CEO and Executive Director | Les Reardanz |
Statistics | |
Vessel arrivals | 142 (2016) |
Annual cargo tonnage | 257,000 short tons (233,000 t) |
Annual revenue | $29.9 million (2016) [1] |
Website portofeverett |
The Port of Everett is a public seaport authority located on Port Gardner Bay in Everett, Washington, United States. Founded in 1918, it operates a small cargo terminal, a public marina, waterfront real estate, and public recreational lands. The Port of Everett is the third-largest container port in the state of Washington, behind Tacoma and Seattle. [2]
The Port of Everett was established on July 13, 1918, via a referendum of Everett citizens. The port was formed in hopes of luring a naval shipyard amid a maritime boom caused by World War I, which would end a few months later. [3] The new port instead became a major lumber exporter
Established | 2017 |
---|---|
Parent institution | University of Washington |
Location | |
Website |
gix |
The Global Innovation Exchange (GIX) is an academic institution in Bellevue, Washington, United States, formed of a partnership between the University of Washington (UW) and Tsinghua University. The institution's campus, located in Bellevue's Spring District, opened in September 2017.
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | May 1, 1893 |
Headquarters | 7600 Sand Point Way Seattle, Washington, US |
Parent agency | National Weather Service |
Website |
weather |
National Weather Service Seattle (code SEW) is a weather station office in Seattle, Washington, US, and is part of the National Weather Service. It is charged with monitoring weather conditions in most of Western Washington, including the Seattle metropolitan area. The Seattle office was established in Downtown Seattle on May 1, 1893, and was moved to its present headquarters at Magnuson Park in 1982.
War on Cars, or War on the car, is a phrase used in North America to describe policies and legislation that promote non-automobile transportation, including mass transit and bicycling, often in mass media. [1] It is also used to describe
The term gained prominence in 2009, after the introduction of The Big Move, a regional transportation plan for the Greater Toronto Area. [1]
Category:Metaphors referring to war and violence
13 Coins is a restaurant in Seattle, Washington, US. It has three locations, in Seattle, Bellevue, and SeaTac. The Seattle location in 1967 and was moved from South Lake Union to Pioneer Square in 2018. The restaurant is noted for its 24-hour service and interior decor.
13 Coins opened in 1967, under the ownership of restauranteur Jim Ward. The name refers to "Las Trece Monedas", a restaurant in Lima, Peru. [1]
The Economic Alliance Snohomish County is an economic development organization and chamber of commerce in Snohomish County, Washington, US.
Snohomish County Sheriff's Office | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SCSO |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Legal jurisdiction | Snohomish County, Washington, U.S. |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Everett, Washington, U.S. |
Website | |
snohomishcountywa.gov |
The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency for Snohomish County, Washington, part of the Seattle metropolitan area. It is headquartered in Everett, Washington.
No. | Date | Time ( PT) | Opponent | Result | Sounders goalscorers | Venue | Att. | Details | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | March 1 | 12:00 p.m. | Chicago Fire FC | 2–1 (W) |
Morris ![]() Delem ![]() João Paulo ![]() |
CenturyLink Field (H), Seattle | 40,126 | Referee: Alex Chilowicz | |
21 | October 27 | 7:00 p.m. | Vancouver Whitecaps FC | 2–0 (W) |
Ruidíaz ![]() Lodeiro ![]() |
Providence Park (A), Portland, Oregon | 0 (behind closed doors) | Referee: Fotis Bazakos | Match played in Portland due to travel restrictions between Canada and the United States due to COVID-19. Match was not eligible for Cascadia Cup due to lack of fans in attendance. |
Season | Total | Games | Average | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969–70 | 278,444 | 36 | 7,734 | Seattle Center Coliseum |
1970–71 | 372,612 | 40 | 9,315 | |
1971–72 | 444,302 | 40 | 11,107 | |
1972–73 | 387,382 | 41 | 9,448 | |
1973–74 | 491,856 | 41 | 11,996 | |
1974–75 | 524,692 | 41 | 12,797 | |
1975–76 | 557,304 | 41 | 13,592 | |
1976–77 | 532,196 | 41 | 12,980 | |
1977–78 | 504,668 | 41 | 12,309 | |
1978–79 | 747,243 | 41 | 18,225 | Kingdome |
1995–96 | 41 | 17,007 | KeyArena (17,072) | |
1996–97 | 41 | 17,072 | ||
1997–98 | 41 | 17,072 | ||
1998–99 | 25 [a] | 17,072 | ||
1999–2000 | 41 | 15,018 | ||
2000–01 | 41 | 15,630 | ||
2001–02 | 41 | 16,452 | ||
2002–03 | 41 | 15,541 | ||
2003–04 | 41 | 15,255 | ||
2004–05 | 41 | 16,475 | ||
2005–06 | 41 | 16,199 | ||
2006–07 | 41 | 15,955 | ||
2007–08 | ||||
All-time | — |