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  • The wheels of the Boeing 757 are stacked on crates and saved for resale at the Moses Lake Airport. <br />
<br />
Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times
    Giant Wheels
  • A 17-year-old skater tries to negotiate the 8-frame rail at the Jefferson Park skatepark, in South Seattle. (John Lok / The Seattle Time)
    Sunny skater
  • A five-year-old skateboarding Bulldog rides his board at Strawberry Hill Skatepark. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Skateboarding bulldog
  • The Seattle Great Wheel located at the end of Pier 57. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle Great Wheel and Space Needle
  • The Seattle Great Wheel located at the end of Pier 57. <br />
Ellen Banner / The Seattle Times
    Great Wheel on Pier 57
  • A bird flies around the Seattle Great Wheel at sunset, seen from the riverside on Alaskan Way. (Bettina Hansen/The Seattle Times)
    Sunset at the Wheel
  • The Seattle Great Wheel glows in the early evening, along with CenturyLink Field. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    The Seattle Great Wheel Glows
  • At dusk, The Great Wheel on the Seattle waterfront offers glimmering, dramatic views of the city's skyline and Elliott Bay. The climate-controlled gondolas shield passengers from the elements, while offering vistas from 175-foot tall Ferris Wheel. <br />
Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times
    Great Wheel in the Rain
  • The Great Wheel on the Seattle Waterfront. <br />
<br />
Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Great Wheel on the Waterfront
  • The new Seattle Great Wheel, scheduled to  stand 175 feet high on the edge of Pier 57, overlooking Elliott Bay. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Great Wheel
  • A pedestrian along First Avenue in downtown Seattle passes the Seattle Great Wheel, which offers a little color on a rainy day, <br />
<br />
Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times
    Rainy Day near the Wheel
  • It's the calm before the storm at the Seattle Great Wheel, which saw a steady trickle of visitors under drizzly skies on Seattle's waterfront. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Drizzly Wheel
  • Seattle's Great Wheel on the Puget Sound waterfront at dusk. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle Great Wheel
  • Swirling lights on a Ferris wheel created a bright disk in a photographic time exposure as the Seattle Center Fun Forest opened another season. The freshly painted Fun Forest had at one point in time, 22 rides, 10 concessions, an amusement arcade and two miniature golf courses. The Center also had a Food Circus and International Bazaar. (Greg Gilbert  / The Seattle Times, 1972)
    Swirling lights on a Ferris wheel
  • Developer Hal Griffith, who has owned Pier 57 since the 1980s, says the $20-million plus Great Wheel is the most visible change to the waterfront in years. He said the waterfront needed "something really big" to counteract the disruption being caused by the demolition and replacement of the Alaskan Way viaduct. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Great Wheel construction
  • The Brothers, part of the Olympic Mountain range stands out against a clear blue sky with the Seattle Great Wheel at right. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Olympic Mountain Brothers
  • The Seattle Great Wheel on the downtown waterfront, frames a bleached-white Mt. Rainier. (Greg Gilbert, The Seattle Times)
    Summer solstice
  • Lights of a Ferris wheel reflected in a pool at the Seattle Center. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times, 1973)
    Reflections at Seattle Center
  • A couple enjoys a mild night on Pier 62 and 63 in Seattle as the Great Wheel and CenturyLink Field glow turquoise to raise awareness of lung disease as the American Lung Association of the Mountain Pacific kicks off National Women's Lung Health Week with a "Turquoise Takeover." <br />
<br />
Lindsey Wasson / The Seattle Times
    Turquoise Takeover
  • A sailboat and Seattle's Great Wheel seem tiny when seen from the Columbia Center's Sky View Observatory. Image taken with a tilt-shift lens. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times)
    Bird's eye view of Elliott Bay
  • The sun sets on downtown Snoqualmie on a recent evening, on this antique wheel, old railroad tracks, and an old Methodist Church.
    Sunset over downtown Snoqualmie
  • With their spinnaker sails up, taking advantage of an east wind, these sailboats, part of the Downtown Sailing Series first race, head for a turn buoy by the Great Wheel on the Seattle waterfront. <br />
<br />
Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times
    Downtown Sailing
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Sinking viaduct still part of the sc..nery
  • (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Pier 57
  • On April 19, 1962 three German high-wire aerialists of the Circus Berlin's Zugspitz ladder act thrilled World's Fair workers by trying out their act high above the fairgrounds on a steel cable they had strung between the roof of the Memorial Stadium and a point 376 feet high on the Space Needle. Siegfried Cimarro, 30, of West Berlin drove a motorcycle with specially grooved wheels on the cable, to a 300-foot height while Rudi Berg, 32, of Essen and Peter Czaya, 25, of West Berlin rode on a steel-pipe stabilizing. (Seattle Times Archive, 1962)
    World's Fair Circus Berlin's Zugspit.. act
  • Seattle's Great Wheel ride is a popular waterfront destination. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle Great Wheel
  • A ferry passes by Seattle's Great Wheel on the downtown waterfront. (Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle skyline and the Great Wheel
  • Sunset over Elliott Bay from the Alaskan Way Viaduct with the waterfront's Great Wheel. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Seattle sunset
  • Top: The permanently closed viaduct, with Smith Tower in the background, is seen from the Seattle Great Wheel on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2019, about 18 hours before the city was tested with its first morning rush hour without the highway. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)<br />
<br />
Bottom: Progress on taking down the viaduct is seen from atop the Seattle Great Wheel, looking south of University Street, with the Smith Tower in the background at center, on Sunday, May 19, 2019. <br />
<br />
(Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Waterfront transformed
  • The progress on taking down the Viaduct is seen from atop the Seattle Great Wheel, looking south of University Street, with the Smith Tower in the background at center, Sunday May 19, 2019. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Now you don't | May 19
  • The open road has long been a place where people find comfort and contemplation. (Erika Schultz/The Seattle Times)
    Solitude behind the wheel
  • A view of the permanently closed Viaduct, with Smith Tower in the background, is seen from the Seattle Great Wheel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 2019, about 18 hours before the city will be tested with its first morning rush hour without the highway. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)
    Now you see it | January 13
  • The Griffiths gave Seattle its first modern Ferris wheel. The Griffith family has built another unusual attraction to bring more people down to the waterfront. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    New Seattle waterfront attraction
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