From Wikitravel
Pioneer Square is Seattle's oldest neighborhood, showcasing a
wealth of art galleries, bookstores, antique shops, cool
restaurants, and buzzing nightclubs within easy walking (or free
bus) distance of most downtown Seattle hotels. The cobblestone
streets and horse-drawn carriages are a reminder of life a century
ago. The classic red brick buildings give a warmth to the area not
found in most sprawling US suburbias. Local lore holds that the
term "skid row" originated in Pioneer Square -- when timber would
be slid down Yesler Way to a steam powered mill on the Seattle
waterfront. The area sits, from east to west, between 3rd Ave. and
the waterfront; and between downtown proper to the north, and the
sports stadiums to the
south.
Just to its east, the International District is
the name given to Seattle's Asian neighborhood. It is located
southeast of downtown, loosely bounded by 4th Avenue S. and S.
Dearborn Street. While the old Chinatown stops around the
Interstate 5 freeway, the area to the east is called Little
Saigon, centered on 12th and Jackson. From there, going
south along Rainier Avenue, the stores transform from Vietnamese to
Cambodian, beyond which it slowly merges into South Seattle.
Get In
There really isn’t a square to Pioneer Square.
It is easy to get here from the downtown hotels – the square is
part of the Seattle Metro ride free zone; any bus traveling south
from downtown will get you with in a few blocks. There are a few
pay parking lots, and limited street parking is available too.
Often the best parking bet is the metered spaces under the viaduct
– these parking spots are usually overlooked by all but the locals.
Occidental St, which sits between 1st Avenue and 2nd Ave is closed
to cars between Washington St. and Jackson St, and forms a
pedestrian mall which backs up to many of the galleries and
shops.
Most city buses that go to downtown Seattle from other parts
terminate in or pass through Pioneer Square or the International
District. From central downtown, it's about a five-minute walk due
south toward the stadiums. One tourist-focused line is the
Route 99 Waterfront Shuttle in distinctive yellow livery,
which runs along Alaskan Way past the ferry terminal, aquariums,
and Pike Place Market downtown. This route is always free.
Buses and trains in the Downtown Seattle Transit
Tunnel make stops at Pioneer Square Station (a few blocks
north of the main neighborhood) and International District Station.
King Street Station, served by Amtrak and Sounder
commuter rail, sits directly in the center of the area at 4th and
Jackson.
- Pioneer Square. Pioneer Square proper is just a small corner
park that's often occupied by homeless folks, but generally safe
during the day. edit
- Occidental Park. This urban park is best known for its four
totem poles carved by local artist Duane Pasco. edit
- Hing Hay Park, 423 Maynard Ave. S,
[1]. A small park in the center of
Chinatown. Though you're not too likely to see old folks doing
tai chi or playing checkers, it still has
character. edit
- Waterfall Garden, Second Avenue at S. Main
Steet. This small, tranquil
park features a 22-foot high waterfall cascading over natural
granite boulders. The park occupies the site where two 19-year
olds, James Casey and Claude Ryan, began a messenger service in
1907 in the basement of a tavern. That messenger service grew up to
become United Parcel Service. The Annie E. Casey Foundation,
started by James Casey and his siblings in honor of their mother,
created the park and maintains it "in honor of the men and women of
United Parcel Service." edit
- Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park - Seattle
Unit, 319 2nd
Ave. S. (at S. Jackson
St.), [2]. Daily 9
AM-5 PM except Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day.
A key attraction in the Pioneer Square
area. It is the Seattle branch of the Klondike Gold Rush National
Historical Park, the remainder of which is in Alaska. Highlights the city's key role as the
"Gateway to the Gold Fields" in supplying most of the Klondike
stampeders of 1897 - 1898. National Park Service Rangers and
volunteers staff the Seattle unit. They can provide information and
perspective not only on the Gold Rush but also on Seattle's past
and present. The Seattle unit contains many artifacts and
historical photographs related to the Gold Rush. Movies about the
Gold Rush (27 minutes), Seattle (15 minutes) and the Chilkoot Pass
(15 minutes) are shown upon request except in summer when they're
shown on a regular schedule. Rangers conduct free walking tours of
the Pioneer Square area in the summer. They also demonstrate gold
panning for school groups. Free.
edit
- Wing Luke Asian Museum, 719 S. King
St., ☎ (206)
623-5124, [3]. Tu-Su
10 AM-5 PM. The first Smithsonian
affiliate in the Pacific Northwest, this museum features exhibits
and programs related to pan-Asian American art, history, and
culture as well as historic immersion and neighborhood walking
tours. $8 adult, $6 students, $5
children. edit
- Seattle Buddhist Church, 1427 S Main
St. (south of Yesler
Way), [4]. In the summer the community hosts a Japanese
bon odori festival on the street out front.
edit
- Art
Walk. The Art Walk is almost
synonymous with Pioneer Square and takes place on the first
Thursday of every month. Galleries are open until 9PM. Show up
early for the free wine and hor d'hoevres. edit
- SceneInSeattle Fine Art Tours, [5]. If you aren't in town for "Art Walk" but still
want to know about what is happening in Seattle's art scene try the
SceneInSeattle Fine Art Tours. This tour was started by a local
gallery and is headed by a curator or gallery owner. You walk
through the "East Edge" galleries and learn about Seattle's art
history, up-and-coming artists, scandals, and public works. It is a
lovely insiders view about makes it a lot easier to find the
galleries which can be hidden away. They also tour other
neighborhoods like the West Edge. edit
- Underground Tour. The underground tour starts at Pioneer Square.
On June 6, 1889, a great fire burned down most of downtown Seattle.
City engineers rebuilt the city several feet above the high tide
line to prevent flooding, giving rise to a complex underground
tunnel system which housed the old downtown. Take a trip sub-level
from the rest of Seattle. edit
- Smith
Tower, 506
2nd Avenue, [6]. The Smith Tower is probably the only tall
building left in Seattle where uniformed attendants operate the
elevators. Instead of stepping into a metal box with no view,
you'll observe the different floors and peer into offices as you
ascend or descend. How many people under the age of, say, 20 or so
have ever had that experience? Smith Tower, named for the
typewriter and firearms manufacturer L. C. Smith, stands 42 stories
(522 feet; 160 meters) and was the tallest building in the United
States west of New York when it was completed in 1914. An outdoor
observation deck on the 35th floor wraps completely around the four
sides of the tower, providing panoramic views of the Olympic and
Cascade mountain ranges, including Mt. Rainier, as well as of
Elliott Bay, downtown Seattle, and Pioneer Square. edit
- Venus Karaoke, 601 S King St, Ste 102. One of the few karaoke rooms in the city.
Rented by the hour, a good selection of Cantonese, Mandarin, and
English songs. Open late, with two bars upstairs. In the lobby,
view the anime models with exceedingly unrealistic presentations of
the female body. edit
- Uwajimaya Village, 600 5th Ave S, ☎ (206) 624-6248, [7]. M-Sa 8
AM-10 PM, Su 9 AM-9 PM. The
commercial, if not cultural, hub of the I.D. is Uwajimaya Village,
a huge Japanese supermarket with many smaller eateries and a branch
of the Kinokuniya bookstore. If you need anything at all from Japan
while in Seattle, this is the place to find it. edit
Most of the older businesses in the I.D. are, of course,
Chinese, and there are a few general stores where you can pick up
good woks and other imported items. Over in Little Saigon, the Viet
Wah supermarket has Asian foods for a lot cheaper than
Uwajimaya.
- Grand Central Bakery, in the arcade between 1st Avenue and
Occidental Park, just off South Jackson, [8]. One of the best sources for artisan bread in
Seattle, this place offers an excellent lunch, cafeteria style (but
stylish!). Not open on Sundays. edit
- Moonlight Cafe, 1919 S Jackson St (on the
north edge of the International District), +1 206
322-3378. Serves excellent vegan mock-meat versions of Vietnamese
and Chinese dishes such as noodle bowls and sesame beef. In fact
they boast a full vegan menu with as many dishes as their separate
carnivorous menu offers. $7-$10.
- The New Orleans, 114 1st Ave S, [9]. Great gumbo and jambalaya, but the real winner
is the fried oyster po-boy sandwich. Great lunch spot on the
cheap. edit
- Salumi, 309 3rd Ave S, [10]. This is the place to eat lunch in
Pioneer Square. There is often a line that can take over an hour to
get through. Salami sandwiches on artisan bread... can't beat
it. edit
- Trattoria Mitchelli, 84 Yesler Way. A longtime Seattle favorite with good pizzas
and pasta. Open until 4 AM, it's hands-down the best place for
recuperating after a pub crawl. edit
Uwajimaya
The food court at Uwajimaya, and the accompanying Uwajimaya
grocery store, deserve special mention. The grocery store offers
specialty items for almost all forms of Asian cooking: Chinese,
Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Filipino, etc. They have great
produce, though not always the best prices. But most importantly,
they have obscure items like Kafir lime leaves or entire lotus
roots, labeled in English.
The food court offers a wide variety of Asian cuisines, ranging
from Hawaiian BBQ to Hong Kong style baked goods, and everything
in-between. The Thai offering is not so good. The Chinese steam
tables offer reliable, western-style treats in large quantites for
cheap. There is no real Japanese offering, but the grocery store
deli has plenty of sushi and other Japanese lunch items available.
The Korean establishment, Shilla Korean Bar-B-Q is probably the
best out of the entire court, with very reasonable prices and large
portions.
Uwajimaya is located at 600 5th Avenue South.
Chinese
While tourists and most non-Asian Seattleites stick to the large
Chinese restaurants, the smaller places serve mostly locals and
offer quite authentic atmosphere as well as food.
Seafood
Chinese seafood restaurants are a Seattle institution popular
with locals, many with "live tanks". Not particularly elegant, but
the food is great (if a bit venturesome for some tastes).
Dim Sum
Aside from the seafood places, try dim sum
lunch, even on weekdays. Roving servers bring steam carts of exotic
(e.g., chicken feet) but often delicious food, then stamp your meal
ticket for each dish. When you're done, take your ticket up to the
register and pay. If you aren't a complete master of chopsticks,
bring your own fork for the slippery shrimp and rice noodles,
because the staff will rarely get around to bringing one. If you're
not getting what you want, or you don't see it, ask the staff - you
may have to be a little aggressive.
- Jade
Garden. Authentic Dim Sum. While
very popular, don't let the seemingly long wait for a table sway
you -- it is usually less than 30 minutes. edit
- House of Hong. While more expensive, they do have parking
on-site, which is a good clue that this is not very authentic.
Their Lo Mai Gai is larger than other restaurants, as you are
served only one bundle per order instead of the standard two or
three. This makes sharing your Lo Mai gai awkward, and it tends to
stick to the leaves in a glutenious unnatural manner.
edit
- Purple Dot Cafe. Despite the name, this is pretty good Dim Sum,
(I thought much better than the House of Hong) and not as
expensive. edit
- Vegetarian Bistro, 668 S King St. Vegetarian dim sum. Includes the use of faux
meats. edit
Cantonese
- Canton Won Ton House, 608 S Weller St. M-Sa 11AM-Midnight. Hong Kong-style noodle soup and congee
(jook); great with a side order of Chinese donuts (yau
tiu). Very inexpensive. edit
- J &
B Cafe (also confusingly called J
& L), 670
S Weller St. Cheap, simple
Hong Kong food, but don't expect dim sum (or English) here; it's
Westernized dishes like curry and Portuguese baked fish. They even
have Horlick's. edit
- Purple Dot Cafe, 515 Maynard Ave S. This is not a fusion restaurant, but rather a
Macau style restaurant. This
explains why you can order your Hong Kong style dishes with
spaghetti and cream sauce. Purple Dot is open really late on the
weekends, where packs of 80lb. red-faced co-eds can be spotted
stumbling around in their glittery halter tops. The restaurant's
decor may remind one of a Hong Kong style Mickey Mouse Club, with
its colorful curved soffits and fiesta patterned carpet. But at
Purple Dot, the draw for authentic food overpowers the teeny bopper
atmosphere, as during the day there are just as many families as
there are clubbers at night. Wash down the cajun chicken wings with
an iced lemon tea, or stick to Cantonese soul food like jook and
wonton mein. Purple Dot is also located in Vancouver B.C.
edit
Szechuan
- Szechuan Noodle Bowl, 420 8th Ave S. The name of the shop in Chinese means "Great
King of Beef Noodles". edit
- Seven Stars Pepper, 1207 S Jackson St, Suite 211 (Ding How
Plaza). Great hand-shaven
dandan noodles, chonggin hot chicken, hotpot. edit
- Sichuanese Cuisine, 1048 S Jackson St. The name in Chinese is Lo Sichuan. Great
dry-fried beans with chicken. Simpler hotpot than at Seven Stars
Pepper, with tasty dumplings. edit
- Saigon Bistro, 1032 S Jackson St. The noodle soup with duck and plums is
delicious. Also try the sea snails (or slugs?). edit
- Pho
Bac, 1240 S
Jackson St. An
oddly-located pink shack serving Vietnamese noodle soup. Don't ask
for a menu; the only choices are regular or large, and what kind of
beef you want. edit
- Tamarind Tree, 1036 S Jackson St. It is worth the awkward crawl through Seattle's
steepest and most congested parking lot to relax with a Tamarind
Soda next cool contempo style fountain. Tamarind Tree is an anomoly
in Little Saigon, to say the least. Three Vietnamese brothers
created an atmosphere that feels like it should be located in a
Belltown Hotel rather than a Vietnamese ghetto. Tamarind Tree packs
in more flavors for under $9.00 than any other restaurant. Try the
Fish Paste with Bacon, or the Seven Courses of Beef. Be amazed at
how high quality service, sauces, and appetizers can be served up
artfully for Little Saigon prices. Eat your spring rolls with a
side of fresh peanut sauce. edit
- Phnom Penh Noodle House, 414 Maynard Ave
S. Cambodian noodles and
rice dishes which are considerably more exciting than Al Gore, who
appears in a photo with the owner. edit
- Malay Satay Hut, 212 12th Ave S. Worth trying mango chicken. edit
Japanese
While most of Seattle's immigrant Japanese population has long
since moved out to the suburbs (as have the upscale sushi bars), a
few restaurants still stick it out in the I.D.
- Fort St. George, 601 S King St. A restaurant/bar that serves Japanese-style
Western foods like spaghetti and curry rice. Popular with exchange
students and occasional Seattle Mariners. edit
- Maneki, 306 6th Ave S, [11]. Very good sushi, as well as many non-sushi
Japanese dishes. The restaurant claims to be at least 100 years
old, although it has moved since its estimated founding date in
1904, and is considerably smaller than the grand space it occupied
prior to World War II. Their sushi pieces are very large, and their
prices are very reasonable. Only open for dinner. edit
- Fuji
Sushi, 520 S
Main St. Open for lunch,
just around the corner from Maneki. Smaller pieces, a bit pricer,
but fresh and tasty. edit
Bakeries
If it's a snack rather than a meal you want, the I.D. has some
good Chinese bakeries with treats like almond cookies and pineapple
buns.
- Mon Hei Chinese Bakery, 669 S King
St. A one woman show with
lots of variety at a reasonable price. Eat your sesame roll while
chatting with the old timers sitting in the back. edit
- A
Piece of Cake, 514 S King St. edit
Drink
Bubble Tea
Bubbletea arrived in Seattle's ID around 1998. It was originally
served in basic plastic cups with the signature dome lids. All the
bubble tea cafes in the ID now vacuum seal the tops of each cup
with a semi-permanent plastic covers.
- Ambrosia, 619 S King St, ☎ +1 206 623-9028. This was Seattle's first bubble tea
establishment. Well known for its long lines and the curt Taiwanese
"bubbletea nazi" that ran the cash register. Other bubble tea cafes
followed suit, thus thinning out Ambrosia's clientele.
edit
- Gossip Espresso & Tea, 651 S King
St, ☎ +1 206
624-5402. This prime corner
storefront used to be Seattle's oldest meat market. Gossip is now a
popular hangout for bubbletea drinking neighborhood teens. A spiral
staircase leads to a second level lounge where the original ornate
ceiling panels still exist. Cash only, also has karaoke
downstairs. edit
- Oasis Tea Zone, 519 6th Ave S, ☎ +1 206 447-8098. Pool tables, Ikea furniture, and music videos
entertain a mostly younger crowd of bubbletea drinkers. Oasis is
known for its more fragrant tasting bubbleteas. edit
- Pearl
Cafe, 674 S
Weller St, ☎ +1 206
287-9000. A basic, low
overhead establishment that quietly competes with the jazzier
neighborhood cafes. Older folks sit and watch whatever Hong Kong
movie or gameshow that is constantly playing inside. Icecream,
Lotto tickets, and public internet access available. Credit cards
accepted. edit
- Maekawa Bar, 601 S King St, Suite 206.
Seattle's only Izakaya. Serves Japanese
pub grub, which is delicious. Generally busy, it is a good place to
spend an evening eating and drinking. Have an award above the bar
for being Seattle's best Izakaya. They do not appreciate you
pointing out they are the only one. Go downstairs for Karaoke. Next
to Ft. St. George. edit
- All City Coffee, 4th Ave S, Prefontaine Pl S and S Washington
St, [12]. A great artsy coffee/wine/beer shop together in
a fabulous corner setting in an up and coming artist loft
building. edit
- Elliott Bay Books Cafe, S Main St and 1st Ave
S. Known for their
generosity in allowing clients the ability to plunder the books in
the store and proofread them before buying while sipping on a
latte. It is a great experience surrounded by all the bookshelves
in the basement of the store. edit
- Panama Hotel Tea & Coffee House, 607 S Main
St, ☎ +1 206
515-4000. A unique
renovation. Panama Hotel is both a teahouse and historical museum.
Fine tea connoisseurs appreciate the wide selection of teas served
with a high standard of quality. The Panama Hotel once housed the
personal belongings of interned Japanese Americans who had to sell
their homes and abandon their businesses. The belongings that were
never claimed, including pieces of furniture and a piano are on
display here. edit
- Trabant Coffee & Chai, 2nd Ave and James
St, [13]. Trabant has won many accolates for their
coffee, including Citysearch.com's "Best Coffee" award in 2005,
2007, and 2008. Modern design, great espresso and Clover coffee
brewer, and competition-level baristas. edit
- Zeitgeist, 2nd Ave Extension and Jackson
St, [14]. Elegant and arty. edit
- The Last Supper Club, 124 S Washington St, [15]. One of the most popular nightclubs in Seattle.
The sexual and erotic atmosphere is ideal for singles. The DJ's
usally spin hip-hop on Friday nights, and dance/techno on Saturday
nights. edit
- Best
Western Pioneer Square Hotel, 77 Yesler Way, ☎ +1 206 340-1234 (toll free: +1 800
800-5514). Close to Safeco
Field, Qwest Field, and other Seattle attractions. edit
- Hostelling International Seattle (formerly the American Hotel), 520 S King
St (at 6th Ave
S), ☎ +1 206
622-5443 (seattle@hiusa.org, fax: +1 206 299-4141), [16]. checkin: 3PM; checkout: 11AM. Starting at
$35. edit
- Panama Hotel [17]. If you want a
private old-fashioned room, modest but clean, with bathroom down
the hall -- consider the historic Panama Hotel, in the Pioneer
Square-International District. Very relaxing tea and coffee house,
with free wireless internet connections, on the street level.
Contact
The City of Seattle provides free wi-fi access in Occidental
Park. Use the SSID seattlewifi.
- International District/Chinatown Library,
713 8th Ave.
S.,
[18]. M-Tu 1-8 PM, W-Th 10 AM-8 PM, F-Sa 10
AM-6 PM, Su closed. Public
Internet terminals available. edit
| This is a usable article. It has
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| This article contains content that was once found at Seattle/Pioneer Square. View
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