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  • Cozy time of year
  • Public Market Center, 1939. (Seattle Times archives)
    Public Market Center | Seattle | 1939
  • With 293 steps, Blaine Stairway in Capitol Hill is one of the longest outdoor public stairways in the city.<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Stairway Hike up to Capitol Hill
  • The concrete and wooden eyesore separates both public spaces, and prevents visitors from walking between the new Market Front area and Victor Steinbrueck Park. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times, 2017)
    Ugly wall will go away
  • Bridges help give Seattle its unique identity, but we also project the city’s quirky character onto them. Here, a pedestrian walks underneath the Aurora Bridge as the Fremont Troll, one of Seattle’s most popular public artworks, peers from the shadows. (Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times)
    Aurora Bridge Freemont Troll
  • A scene from Lake Crescent on Oct. 13, 1968. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times)
    Lake Crescent in Olympic national Park
  • "Black Sun" sculpture at Volunteer Park.  Created by Isamu Noguchi from a single piece of black granite, the work is 9 feet in diameter and weighs 12 tons. (Jim Bates / The Seattle Times, 1988)
    A rock-solid view
  • Seattle Times File, 1950
    Pike Place Market, 1950
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Seattle shoreline street-ends
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Seattle shoreline street-ends
  • A man loosens soil in the planter boxes above Pike Place Market. (Mark Harrison, The Seattle Times, 1997)
    Till he sees flowers
  • The sudden dark of a late-afternoon shower is broken by Seattle's landmark Pike Place Market sign. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Signs of brightening
  • Walkers are reflected in the windows of PACCAR Pavilion at the Seattle Art Museum's Olympic Sculpture Park, juxtaposed with artist Sandra Cinto's work Encontro das Águas (Encounter of Waters. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Olympic Sculpture Park reflections
  • The artful geometrical piece by Studio Fifty50 stands 20 feet tall and was installed in January [2018], adding the final touch to the park’s much awaited renovation and expansion. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Gateway to happiness
  • Iconic Seattle Central Library (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Book your visit
  • An umbrella and pedestrian on First Avenue  are silloueted against a darkening sky early in mid afternoon.  (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Rain in the forecast
  • A state ferry, juxtaposed with The Eagle sculpture by Alexander Calder at Olympic Sculpture Park, crosses Elliott Bay to Seattle’s waterfront. (Sy Bean / The Seattle Times)
    Setting sail
  • Sunlight streams into Pike Place Market as Seattleites get a break from gloomy skies and rain. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle sunshine
  • A cottontail, lower right, noshes near “Perre’s Ventaglio III,” a 1967 stainless steel and enamel sculpture by Beverly Pepper at Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Artful bunny
  • A crow sits in a polished stainless steel tree, a sculpture by Roxy Paine entitled Split which rises 50 feet above the Seattle Art Museum Olympic Sculpture Park, in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Crow's perch
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Jack Block Park Seattle skyline
  • A wet and gloomy commute greeted workaday Seattle for the evening commute home, shown here at the Pike Place Market downtown. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Rainy night at the Market
  • Downtown alley leaves dark days behind, welcomes pedestrians. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Nord Alley
  • School is out, the swim rafts are back in place. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Madison Park Beach, Madison Street hike
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Fishing at the Des Moines Marina
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Des Moines Marina Pier
  • A child rock hops near the West Point Lighthouse at Discovery Park. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Lighthouse sunset
  • The Space Needle is seen through the sculpture "Changing Form" by Doris Chase during twilight in Seattle. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle peek
  • The Aquabus Ferry prepares to take off from Granville Island in Vancouver, B.C. The ferries constantly carry pedestrians and cyclists across Vancouver's False Creek inlet.  The Granville Street Bridge is in the background. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Tiny passenger ferries
  • Alaska white geese fly over wetlands on the Alaskan tundra just outside Teshekpuk Lake. Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Arctic birds flying
  • This five-story rocket sits on the corner of Evanston Avenue North and North 35th Street in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood. A piece of fuselage repurposed from a military aircraft forms the whimsical spaceship. It comes with a mission: “De Libertas Quirkas — Freedom to Be Peculiar. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Soaring symbol of Fremont’s quirky s..irit
  • A bicyclist rides by Teresita Fernandez's glass bridge 'Seattle Cloud Cover' at the Olympic Sculpture Park. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Teresita Fernandez’s glass bridge
  • Visitors to Seattle stand inside "Changing Form," a sculpture by Doris Chase, while gazing over the Puget Sound as the sun sets at Kerry Park in the Queen Anne neighborhood in Seattle. (Sy Bean / The Seattle Times)
    Standing inside sculpture
  • Runners and readers enjoy the Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Sunny Seattle Art Museum Olympic Scu..Park
  • Under cloudy, rainy skies, a woman rushes past artist Jonathan Wakuda Fischer's giant mural entitled “Eternal Spring” in Seattle’s Chinatown International District. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times, 2015)
    Spring on the way
  • Under cloudy skies, the space needle looks dwarfed by a sculpture near MoPOP at the Seattle Center. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Sculpture near MoPOP
  • 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
  • A Sound Transit light-rail train heads over the Duwamish River in Tukwila.<br />
<br />
Ellen Banner / The Seattle Times
    Sound Transit train over the Duwamish
  • Gabriel Campanario / Seattle Times staff artist
    Elliott Bay Trail
  • Commuters travel by bus on Third Avenue during a stormy evening in downtown Seattle. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle winter
  • Discovery Park, Seattle. (Benjamin Benschneider / The Seattle Times)
    Discover Discovery Park
  • Local kids, scout groups and their families place flags on the grave sites of each Armed Forces service member at Veterans Memorial Cemetery located on the grounds of Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park in north Seattle. Veterans Day is an official United States holiday that honors people who have served in the U.S. Armed Forces. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Veterans Day
  • A polar bear framed by the remains of a dead bowhead whale sniffs the air near the coast of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The 3,800 polar bears that live off Alaska's coast face an uncertain future as global warming melts more of the Arctic's summer sea ice each year, forcing them to spend more time on land competing with grizzly bears and people. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2005)
    Polar bear and whale bones
  • The coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, with the Brooks Range in the distance, is visible across the sea ice from Barter Island in Alaska. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times)
    Arctic Refuge
  • "Sonic Bloom," solar-powered flower sculptures by artist Dan Corson, light up in front of the Boeing IMAX Theater at the Pacific Science Center in the Lower Queen Anne neighborhood. (Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times)
    Solar-powered "Sonic Boom"
  • Seattle’s First Hill Streetcar in Pioneer Square on S. Jackson Street. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times, 2016)
    Seattle's First Hill Streetcar
  • They call them "hidden gems" for a reason. Several parks mantained by the Port of Seattle near terminals in Harbor Island and the Duwamish River are not easy to find. With names like Terminal 18 Public Access Park or Duwamish Public Access at Terminal 105, don't bet on Google maps to navigate you either. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Terminal 18 Public Access Park
  • People read in the “living room” on the third level of the Central Library on the first day of its reopening to the in-person book-browsing public. The branch has three floors open and is one of 13 libraries with air conditioning available for people to cool off from upcoming hot weather. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Cool Seattle Public Library
  • Washington State Police motorcycle troopers led the opening procession for vehicles across the new I-90 span, followed by a caravan of covered wagons, Metro buses and other automobiles. The westbound span opened for the general public shortly after. (The Seattle Times, 1989)
    Get your motors running
  • Seattle City Councilman Wing Luke, acting mayor for a week, signed his first official document in both Chinese – as Luke Wing Chung – and English. The document was a bond for a heating-equipment dealer’s license.  Luke is the first person of color on the Seattle City Council and the first Asian American elected to public office in the Pacific Northwest. (Times staff photo by Larry Dion, 1964)
    Councilman Wing Luke
  • A man jumps off the high dive at the Colman Pool in West Seattle. Swimmers of all ages lined up for their turn to jump and dive off the 3-meter diving board during the public swim. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
    Taking a dive
  • On the surface level, the city maintains a calm demeanor. But often, the cacophony of political noise floods public opinion in this liberal, opinionated Northwest region of the country. This forward thinking city pioneers by example in its choices, political views and future undertakings.<br />
Marcus Yam / The Seattle Times
    Cacophony
  • 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
  • Golfers make their way along the 10th fairway at Chambers Bay public golf course in University Place. (Mike Siegel / The Seattle Times)
    Chambers Bay
  • The Olympic Mountains loom in the distance as seen from Ebey Road, between Coupeville and Ebey’s Landing. Ebey’s Landing National Historical Reserve takes in public and private lands stretching across a narrow neck of Whidbey Island between Admiralty Inlet and Penn Cove. (Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times)
    Worth the Trip: Ebey’s Landing
  • 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
  • Amazon Go, the world’s first ever cashier-free store, opened to the public in Seattle. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Amazon Go: Get out fast
  • Bandar, a 5-year-old Sumatran tiger, made his media debut and was presented to the public in a special appearance at the Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    New cat in Tacoma
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