Seattle Underground

Seattle Underground

The Seattle Underground is a network of underground passageways and basements in downtown Seattle, Washington, United States that was ground level at the city's origin in the mid-1800s. After the streets were elevated, these spaces eventually fell into disuse, but have become a tourist attraction in recent decades.

History

Seattle's first buildings were wooden. In 1889, a cabinetmaker accidentally overturned and ignited a glue pot. An attempt to extinguish it with water spread the burning grease-based glue. The fire chief was out of town, and although the volunteer fire department responded, they made the mistake of trying to use too many hoses at once. They never recovered from the subsequent drop in water pressure, and the Great Seattle Fire ended up destroying 33 city blocks.

While a destructive fire was not unusual for the time, the response of the city leaders was. Instead of rebuilding the city as it was before, they made two strategic decisions. First, they ordered that all rebuilding use stone or brick—insurance against a similar disaster in the future. They also decided to take advantage of the destruction to regrade the streets one to two stories higher than the original street grade. Pioneer Square had originally been built mostly on filled-in tidelands and as a consequence it often flooded. The new street level also assisted in ensuring that gravity-assisted flush toilets didn't back up during high tide in Elliott Bay.

To regrade, the streets were lined with concrete walls which formed narrow alleyways between the walls and the buildings on either side of the street, and a wide "alley" where the street was. The naturally steep hillsides were used, and through a series of sluices, material was washed into the wide "alleys", effectively raising the streets to the desired new level, generally twelve feet higher than before, though some places were nearly thirty feet.

At first, pedestrians climbed ladders to go between street level and the sidewalks in front of the building entrances. Brick archways were constructed next to the road surface, above the submerged sidewalks. Skylights with small panes of clear glass, (which later turned to amethyst-colored because of manganese in the glass), were installed, creating the area now called the Seattle Underground.

When they reconstructed their buildings, merchants and landlords knew that it would just be a matter of time before what was originally the ground floor would be underground, and what was originally the next floor up would be the new ground floor. As a result, there is very little decoration on the doors and windows of the original ground floor, but extensive decoration on the new ground floor.

Once the new sidewalks were complete, building owners moved their businesses to the new ground floor, although merchants carried on business in the lowest floors of buildings that survived the fire, and pedestrians continued to use the underground sidewalks lit by the glass cubes (still seen on some streets) embedded in the grade-level sidewalk above.

In 1907 the city condemned the Underground for fear of bubonic plague, two years before the 1909 World Fair in Seattle (Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition). The basements were left to deteriorate or were used as storage. In some cases, they became illegal flophouses for the homeless, gambling halls, speakeasies, and opium dens.

Only a small portion of the Seattle Underground has been restored and made safe and accessible to the general public on guided tours.

eattle Underground Tour

In 1965, local citizen Bill Speidel realized there might be interest (and profit) in the subterranean ruins. He established "Bill Speidel's Underground Tour," and took paying customers on a tour of what was left underneath Pioneer Square, paying rent to the building owners for the privilege of doing so. He also peppered his tour patter with tall tales from Seattle's history (some more factual than others), giving the tour an amusing counterculture feel that made it an "underground" tour in every sense of the word.

Over the years, the tour has become more popular, and the underground structures have been steadily refurbished to be more visually appealing. The tour remains a popular attraction for visitors and locals alike.

In 2004, the Underground Tour organizers began the adults-only "Underworld Tour", a version of the Underground Tour that incorporates discussions of prostitution, the opium trade, and other less family-friendly elements of Seattle's early history.

Gallery

ee also

* Shanghai tunnels: similar structures in Portland, Oregon

In fiction

* "The Art of Deception", Ridley Pearson
* Terry Pratchett has cited Seattle as one of the influences in his decision to give Ankh-Morpork its own Underground.
* "A Knight of the Word" and "Armaggedon's Children" Terry Brooks
* "Futurama" Where New York lies beneath New New York
* "Pike Place" (2007 novel) writes about Seattle Underground (in 1972)
* Book 3 of Kat Richardson's "Greywalker" series entitled "Underground," (2008) features supernatural murders in and around the Seattle Underground.

In Films and TV

* The Underground was featured as the setting of the 1973 TV movie "The Night Stalker", although the set designers decided to create a much more photogenic version on a Hollywood sound stage.
* An episode of the TV show "Scooby-Doo" featured the Seattle Underground.
* Issue 75 of the first volume of the comic book Green Arrow features the Seattle Underground as a setting.
* Featured on Ghost Hunters on the Sci-Fi channel, Season 3 Episode 'Lost Souls' 2007.
* The 1999 Robert Ryan novel Underdogs is set in the Seattle Underground.

In Gaming

The game has levels located in underground Seattle, which is referred to as 'Lower Seattle'.

External links

* [http://www.undergroundtour.com/ Bill Speidel's Underground Tour]

Recommended Reading

* Bill Speidels:
* Doc Maynard, The Man Who Invented Seattle. 1978, USA: Nettle Creek. ISBN 0-914890-02-6.
* Sons of the Profits. 1990, USA: Nettle Creek. ISBN 0-914890-06-9.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Seattle Underground — Als Seattle Underground werden die unterirdischen Gänge und Keller im Stadtzentrum von Seattle bezeichnet, die durch die Anhebung von Straßen und Gehwegen um 1900 entstanden sind. Sie waren lange Zeit ungenutzt, sind aber in den letzten… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Seattle (Washington) — Seattle Pour les articles homonymes, voir Seattle (homonymie). 47°37′N 122°19′W / …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Seattle — Spitzname: The Emerald City (Die Smaragdstadt) Space Needle und Downtown Seattle …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Seattle — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Seattle (homonymie). 47° 36′ 32″ N 122° 19′ 48″ W …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Seattle — This article is about the city. For other uses, see Seattle (disambiguation). Seattle   City   City of Seattle …   Wikipedia

  • Underground city — An underground city is a network of tunnels that connect buildings beneath street level. These may include office blocks, shopping malls, train and metro stations, theatres, and other attractions. An underground city can usually be accessed… …   Wikipedia

  • Seattle Preparatory School — Seattle Preparatory School, popularly known as Seattle Prep, is a Private Jesuit high school located on the north slope of Capitol Hill, Seattle, Washington, United States. It is operated independent of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle.… …   Wikipedia

  • Underground Comix — Underground Comics oder Comix sind in Klein oder Selbstverlagen entstandene Comic Books. Man kann Vorläufer der amerikanischen Comix Bewegung am Anfang der 1960er Jahre ausmachen. Ihre Magazine und Verlage entstanden in den späten 1960er Jahren.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Underground press — The phrase underground press is most often used to refer to the independently published and distributed underground papers associated with the counterculture of the late 1960s and early 1970s. It also refers to illegal publications under… …   Wikipedia

  • Seattle-Tacoma International Airport — Infobox Airport name = Seattle Tacoma International Airport nativename = Sea Tac Airport caption = Main terminal with views of the runways at SeaTac IATA = SEA ICAO = KSEA FAA = SEA type = Public owner = operator = Port of Seattle city served =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”