The Seattle Times Store | Art & Photo Prints

Show Navigation
  • GALLERIES
  • SEARCH
  • CUSTOM REQUESTS
  • CONTACT
  • ABOUT
  • MY ACCOUNT
  • SHOPPING CART
  • Back to Seattle Times Store

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 69 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Troy Laundry Building during construction. The building is being developed while the facade is preserved. <br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Troy Building Construction
  • The Museum of History and Industry building in South Lake Union Park. <br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    MOHAI Building
  • The historic Seattle Times building, former headquarters of The Seattle Times at Fairview and John St. in the South Lake Neighborhood of Seattle.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Historic Seattle Times Building
  • The historic Troy Laundry Building on Fairview Avenue in the South Lake Union area of Seattle.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Historic Troy Building
  • The eye-catching Federal Building on First Avenue. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Federal Building, Madison Street
  • In 2011, painter Jane Richlovsky and some hundred other artists were evicted from the building that sits directly above Bertha's path. (Gabi Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Onetime artists' haunt hosts new crowd
  • The historic property at 619 Western Ave. escaped demolition when the state gave it an extensive upgrade to bring it up to code. Once restored, the building's six floors became prime office space and new tenants started moving in. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    619 Western Ave.
  • Sketch of the Theo Chocolate Factory Building in Fremont neighborhood of Seattle. <br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Theo Chocolate Factory
  • Burlington's old city hall building dates from 1926. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Old City Hall, Burlington
  • The King Street Station is reflected in the Vulcan building in Seattle.  (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Vulcan image meld
  • Great Blue Heron's arriving at a rookery guarding and building their nests. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Heron rookery
  • A tired and hot fire fighter found a way to cool off while fighting a stubborn blaze at the Poison Building at Western Avenue and Columbia Street. This fireman filled his hat with water and dumped it on his head. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1974)
    Fireman keeps his cool
  • The Burlington Carnegie Library building celebrated its 100th anniversary. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Carnegie Library, Burlington
  • A seven-story apartment building was planned for this Northeast Seattle lot. The house was in disrepair, but the property also included a couple of sizeable trees that stood out at an intersection laced with parking lots. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Leafy giants at risk
  • Denny Hall is the first building that opened on the current University of Washington campus, back in 1895. <br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Denny Hall University of Washington
  • A Great Blue Heron rests on a tree beside the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks as it builds its nest in Ballard on the first day of spring. (Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times, 2014)
    Sticking with it
  • 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
  • A tired and hot fire fighter found a way to cool off while fighting a stubborn blaze. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1974)
    Cooling off
  • Construction on the Experience Music Project rock 'n' roll museum in 2000 featured a tunnel through which the Seattle Center Monorail passes, giving passengers a view of the museum. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    EMP and the Monorail
  • Burlington is a railroad town where you can hear the trains whistle when they go by. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Postcard from Burlington
  • Seattle First Baptist at the corner of Harvard Avenue and Seneca Street, built in 1912 was one of the most expensive projects of the time. Except for terra-cotta pinnacles that were replaced with fiberglass replicas after the 2001 quake (when one pinnacle went through the roof), the exterior hasn’t changed much. Its main feature is a majestic steeple typical of English gothic medieval architecture that rises 16 stories — one of few in Seattle so prominent, and so old.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Seattle First Baptist Church
  • The Dakota Creek shipyard, right next to downtown, is an example of the balance Anacortes seeks between business and beauty. Mount Baker is in the background. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Anacortes shipyard
  • Seattle's most widely known architectural icon, the Space Needle, peeks between the tracks of the monorail and the undulating metal sides of the EMP, which has become an icon in its own right. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    EMP still perplexing
  • Assumptions that the trees of this property would be cut were wrong. Plans filed with the city and other public records indicate that the tall beech tree in front of the house will be preserved. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    As city booms, leafy giants at risk.tiff
  • 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
  • Firefighters battle a blaze at the former Borracchini’s Bakery & Mediterranean Market building near Rainier Avenue South and South Walker Street in Seattle. The building has been vacant since the bakery closed in 2021. (Daniel Kim / The Seattle Times)
    Vacant Borracchini’s Bakery building..urns
  • Lights in a building in downtown Seattle stand out on the Seattle skyline, showing support for the 12th Man: fans of the Seattle Seahawks.<br />
Ellen Banner/The Seattle Times
    12th Man Building
  • This little building dating from the 1920s was most recently used as a printing shop, but it speaks of Pathé’s great international reach in the early years of the film industry. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    The Pathé building in Belltown
  • Sears sold thousands of kit homes in the earlier part of the 20th century. Homeowners would choose from a catalog of more than 300 home designs and Sears would ship the materials so they could build the houses themselves. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Former Sears kit home
  • Woolworth and WaMu. The legendary Seattle institutions no longer exist, but the buildings they once occupied on Third Avenue caught the Seattle Sketcher's eye. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Elegant skyscraper
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Jack Block Park Seattle skyline
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Sorrento Hotel
  • The sound of cranes digging in the rubble and pounding on half-demolished walls was louder than the morning traffic going by. The Seattle Sketcher stood at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Union Street watching the wrecking ball come down on the shopping center adjacent to Rainier Tower. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Rainier Square tumbles down
  • A flock of yellow rubber ducks floats in a parking-lot puddle in South Lake Union.<br />
Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times
    Duck Weather
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Rainier Brewery sites
  • One crow shares the stage with a Chinook salmon weather vane at the Issaquah Fish Hatchery. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Salmon weathervane
  • Alki Point Lighthouse stands a solitary vigil on wintry evenings, its windows aglow in contrast to the snow all around and the off-stormy sea beyond. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1950)
    A beacon on the beach
  • Clear skies bring out Mt. Rainier in the distance on a sunny April day in Seattle.<br />
<br />
Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times
    Mount Rainier in the Distance
  • The Smith Tower in downtown Seattle. Seattle's first skyscraper was built in 1914.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Smith Tower
  • Dramatic clouds pass by the Seattle skyline at Smith Tower. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Smith Tower and Seattle skyline
  • 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
  • An Iron worker climbs the outside steel beam at the very top of the AT&T Gateway Tower. The 62-story view behind him looks North with downtown Seattle in the foreground. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1989)
    Guy in the sky
  • His hood drawn protectively over his face, a welder reinforces steel together in a section of the lower deck nearly ready for the pouring of concrete. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1952)
    Building the Viaduct
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Ammazon Doppler Building
  • Auctioneer Donne pointed his cane to the successful bidder as he sold this brick apartment building at 603 E. 43rd St., on June 21, 1958 in a State Highway Department auction of buildings in the Seattle freeway path. (The Seattle Times archives)
    Sold!
  • A ray of sunlight creates a rainbow in the mist of water coming from Seattle firefighters who worked to control the blaze at an abandoned building in Seattle. (John Lok / The Seattle Times)
    Firefighter and rainbow
  • House movers lead this four-unit brick apartment building on oak rollers on 18-by-20-inch beams along East 43rd Street from Pasadena Place to a new site at Eighth Avenue Northeast and East (now Northeast) 43rd Street on Aug. 28, 1958. (Seattle Times archive)
    Seattle homes saved from the I-5 wre..ball
  • The Pathé building is one of the last remnants of Belltown’s historic “Film Row,” a cluster of movie-distribution centers for major Hollywood studios and film companies that began forming in the neighborhood in the era of silent movies. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Part of ‘Film Row’ may soon take its.. bow
  • Members of the Port of Seattle Police Tactical Services Unit rappel off a building during a family day at the Port of Seattle fire police, and operations departments.  (The Seattle Times, 1990)
    Tactical Services Unit rappel
  • Aerial view of construction of the Northgate Shopping Center on March 3, 1950. This view is looking southeast, with Fifth Avenue Northeast in the background and Northeast Northgate Way running left to right in foreground. The building under construction in the foreground is Northgate Hospital. (Seattle Times archive)
    Northgate Mall in the 1950s
  • Concrete monorail tracks, through an optical illusion, appear to merge at the Medical Dental Building and Frederick & Nelson in this view looking south down Fifth Avenue from Virginia Street. (Vic Condiotty / The Seattle Times, 1961)
    A matter of perspective
  • The Space Needle stands tall in the sunshine before a dramatic backdrop of building cumulous clouds. (Peter Haley / The Seattle Times, 1983)
    Accumulating clouds
  • The demise of Rocky the Goat, symbol of the Great Northern Railway, extended to its removal from atop a building at 1902 Fourth Ave. The Burlington Northern trademark replaced the 56-foot-wide, 60-foot-high sign. (Bruce McKim / The Seattle Times, 1970)
    Symbolic departure
  • Built in 1906, the King Street Station replaced the old Great Northern depot on Railroad Avenue between Marion and Columbia. A large clock tower dominated the new building providing time for the entire Skid Road area. (The Seattle Times, 1930)
    Training day
  • The 20 x 30-foot Stars & Stripes is raised and lowered five times a week atop the Two Union Square building (weather permitting) It's one of the most prominent flags on the Seattle Skyline.<br />
<br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Stars and Stripes
  • John Grade works inside his sculpture, "Wawona," as it takes shape in MOHAI's new South Lake Union building.   Floor-to-ceiling scaffolding gives workers access to the entire height of the piece as it's assembled.  Only the old growth Douglas fir from below the water line could be salvaged from the sailing ship Wawona.  The platform that Grade stands on is lowered by chains as the piece is assembled.<br />
Alan Berner / The Seattle Times
    Wawona Scaffolding MOHAI
  • An old liquor cabinet at The Central Saloon. The Central’s longtime steward Guy Curtis and his business partner Eric Manegold acquired the three-story building for $2.75 million. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    The Central Saloon
  • The city is on the move, getting bigger, building up and reaching out. The emergence of a new generation of white-collar workers has changed the socioeconomic landscape of Seattle. Its resource-extraction and manufacturing past is being overshadowed by the work of the so-called creative class in science and technology.<br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Growing Pains in Jet City
  • Workmen with machines stay busy as work progresses on construction of the Connecticut Street Interchange of the freeway on May 16, 1965. Connecticut Street was renamed Royal Brougham Way after the beloved Seattle sports writer. In the background is the PacMed building, also known as Pacific Tower. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times)
    Connecticut Street Interchange cons..tion
  • The F5 Tower rising behind the old First United Methodist church building. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Fifth Avenue, Madison Street
  • The Bullitt Center, a six-story office building hailed as one of the greenest ever built. The roof is all made of solar panels. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Bullitt Center, Madison StreetMadiso..nter
  • Compared to the old 1963 span, the new bridge feels massive. A safer structure with three-lanes in each direction, wider shoulders and a pedestrian-bike pathway justified building this supersized replacement. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Highway 520 span
  • This south-facing view on Yesler Way under the viaduct includes towering Port of Seattle cranes and a little brick building that has been home to Al Boccalino’s Italian restaurant for decades. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Viaduct view
  • This little Seattle University building was<br />
originally used as a powerhouse and barn<br />
for the streetcar line that provided transportation along Madison Street until 1940. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle University, Madison Street
  • Some of the more inspired ideas for repurposing the Battery Street Tunnel included building a giant swimming pool and water park, a big bocce court, a skateboard park, a marijuana pea patch or a night club. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Battery Street Tunnel North Portal
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. The novelty drew long lines around the Day 1 building. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Long lines in
  • 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
  • Cranes dot buildings along the Seattle skyline alongside the space needle. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Cranes in the sky
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x