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  • A flag pole painter gave onlookers below a moment of excitment as he dangled from the Smith Tower without hands or feet. The tower is 500 feet tall and has 42 floors. (Jimi Lott / The Seattle Times, 1985)
    Top this
  • The Seattle skyline from the King Street coal bunkers, the year the Smith Tower's steel frame was topped off. (Seattle Times Archives, 1913)
    King Street view
  • Smith Tower, the tallest building on the West Coast when it was completed in 1914, now looks up to the bigger kids on nearby blocks. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times)
    Seattle architecture
  • Dramatic clouds pass by the Seattle skyline at Smith Tower. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Smith Tower and Seattle skyline
  • The Smith Tower in downtown Seattle. Seattle's first skyscraper was built in 1914.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Smith Tower
  • A shimmery reflection of Seattle's original skyscraper, the 38-story Smith Tower, completed in 1914 on Second Avenue in the Pioneer Square neighborhood, is seen in the glass panels of downtown's new, 48-story F5 Tower on Fifth Avenue. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Old meets new
  • A rainbow of flare (a photographic term for the change an image undergoes when the lens is pointed directly into the sun) occurs during sunrise when the sun is reflected off a building in downtown Seattle.  The Smith tower is at right. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Downtown flare
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