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Interbay, Seattle
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{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}} {{Use American English|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox settlement | name = Interbay | area_total_sq_mi = 1.382 | area_footnotes = <ref name="citydata"/> | population_total = 4,546 | population_density_sq_mi = 3,289 | population_footnotes = <ref name="citydata">{{cite web |title=Interbay neighborhood in Seattle, Washington (WA), 98119, 98199 detailed profile |work=City-data.com |publisher=Urban Mapping, Inc. |url=http://www.city-data.com/neighborhood/Interbay-Seattle-WA.html |access-date=2014-10-28}}</ref> | settlement_type = [[Neighborhoods in Seattle|Seattle Neighborhood]] | image_skyline = Seattle Fishermen's Terminal at sunset 07.jpg | image_caption = The [[Fishermen's Terminal]] marina on [[Salmon Bay]], at the north end of Interbay | image_map = Seattle Map - Interbay.png | map_caption = Map of Interbay's location in Seattle | mapsize = 250x250px | coordinates = {{coord|47|38|47|N|122|22|48|W|display=inline,title|type:landmark_region:US-WA}} }} '''Interbay''' is a [[List of neighborhoods in Seattle|neighborhood]] in northwestern [[Seattle]], [[Washington (state)|Washington]]. It consists of the valley between [[Queen Anne, Seattle|Queen Anne Hill]] on the east and [[Magnolia, Seattle|Magnolia]] on the west, plus filled-in areas of [[Smith Cove (Seattle)|Smith Cove]] and [[Salmon Bay]].<ref name=BOLA-6>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 6. Page numbers in citations from this document follow the document itself: the PDF page numbers are greater than this by 2; e.g. page 6 is PDF page 8.</ref> The neighborhood is bounded on the north by Salmon Bay, part of the [[Lake Washington Ship Canal]], across which is [[Ballard, Seattle|Ballard]]; on the south by what remains of Smith Cove, an inlet of [[Elliott Bay]]; on the east by 15th Avenue W. and Elliott Avenue W.; and on the west by the BNSF Railway. The [[Ballard Bridge]] crosses the ship canal from Interbay to Ballard. Much of Interbay is taken up by [[BNSF Railway]]'s [[Balmer Yard]]. Interbay is also home to [[Fishermen's Terminal]] on Salmon Bay and the [[Port of Seattle]]'s Piers 86, 90, and 91 on Smith Cove. Its main thoroughfares are Elliott Avenue W. (northwest- and southeast-bound) and 15th Avenue W. (north- and southbound). ==History== [[Image:GLO map of Interbay and Magnolia claims - 1863.jpg|thumb|This 1863 [[Government Land Office]] map of Interbay (and much of Magnolia) shows the claim by H. A. Smith extending south from Salmon Bay; immediately south of that, extending to Smith Cove, is the claim of [[Erasmus M. Smithers]]. The map also shows the natural shape of the land before the dredging of a canal to the northeast and the filling of much of the cove to the south.]] It appears that the valley between Magnolia and Queen Anne was carved out during the [[Vashon Stade]] of the [[Fraser glaciation]] (roughly 14,000–17,000 years ago),<ref name="BOLA-6"/> A thin layer of [[sand]] throughout the area may date from a [[tsunami]] following an [[earthquake]] along the [[Seattle Fault Zone]] about 1,000 years ago.<ref name=BOLA-7>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 7.</ref> Although Interbay fell within the traditional geographic range of the [[Duwamish people|Duwamish]],<ref name=BOLA-9>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 9.</ref> early ethnographers did not record contact-era or earlier Native American villages in the area. Nonetheless, [[University of Washington]] ethnologist T. T. Waterman lists several native place names at or near Smith Cove and Salmon Bay.<ref name=Bola-10>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 10.</ref> The [[Denny Party]] saw Interbay's development potential when they explored the area in 1852, but chose to settle farther south. Their settlement became the core of Seattle. Meanwhile, most of Interbay came to be owned by [[Erasmus M. Smithers]] (1830–1905), later the founder of [[Renton, Washington|Renton]], and [[Ohio]]-born physician and poet [[Henry A. Smith]] (1830–1915), after whom Smith's Cove is now named. Smith and his wife, mother, and sister began with a [[Donation Land Claim Act|claim]] on [[Salmon Bay]] near the present-day [[Ballard, Seattle|Ballard]], and steadily acquired more land, extending their holdings south through Interbay to Smith Cove. In particular, the Smiths bought when so many other were selling during the 1855–56 Indian War (''see [[Battle of Seattle (1856)|Battle of Seattle]]'').<ref name=BOLA-11>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 11.</ref> Smith established a settlement known as Boulevard roughly halfway between Smith Cove and Salmon Bay, along a street he called Grand Boulevard (present-day West Dravus Street). He farmed, practiced medicine, and wrote. His most famous piece of writing, published in the 1880s, purported to be an English-language rendering of [[Chief Seattle]]'s [[Chief Seattle#The Speech controversy|speech]] on the occasion of an 1854 treaty conference; there is question about the authenticity of the translation.<ref name=BOLA-11 /> In 1884 the [[Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway]] (SLSER) purchased all but {{convert|50|acre|ha}} of Smith's {{convert|9600|acre|ha}} in Interbay and built a north–south rail line through the area. The train stopped on Grand Boulevard near Gilman and Thorndyke Avenues, spurring further commercial development and the rise of a blue-collar village. In 1891, Seattle annexed Magnolia and Interbay, including Boulevard. By 1894, the post office name had been changed from "Boulevard" to "Interbay", the name that has continued to this day.<ref name=BOLA-11 /> The railway route through Interbay eventually came under the control of [[James J. Hill]] and the [[Great Northern Railway (U.S.)|Great Northern Railway]], as did much of at Smith Cove. Hill established a major depot and port at the cove, including Piers 38 and 39 (later renumbered 88 and 89)(now demolished), which were located east of present-day Piers 90 and 91. In 1896 [[Nippon Yusen Kaisha]] established the first regular steamship service between [[Asia]] and the Pacific Coast of North America, with Smith Cove as its American port.<ref name=BOLA-11 /> During the 1911–1916 construction of the [[Lake Washington Ship Canal]] along Salmon Bay, about {{convert|150|acre|ha}} of Smith Cove tidelands were filled with material from the dredging.<ref name=BOLA-12>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 12.</ref> The then (1911) new [[Port of Seattle]] built [[Fishermen's Terminal]] on Salmon Bay at the north end of Interbay and bought the Great Northern docks and approximately {{convert|20|acre|ha}} at Smith's Cove, where they developed two new coal and lumber piers, today's Piers 90 and 91. These developments at either end of Interbay led to the increasing industrialization of the area.<ref name=BOLA-12 /><ref name=BOLA-14>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 14.</ref> This maritime trade spurred the rise of companies in Interbay including rope factory Portland Cordage, Rudd Paint Manufacturing, Berquist's Vinegar Works, and the Chicago Junk Company (later Tsubota Steel and Pipe Company).<ref name=BOLA-12 /> [[Finns]], [[Polish people|Poles]], [[Russians]], [[Germans]], [[Austrians]], and [[Scottish people|Scots]] figured prominently among those who settled and worked in the neighborhood.<ref name=BOLA-13>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 13.</ref> The Asian trade out of Smith Cove continued until 1934, when [[Smith Cove (Washington)#The Maritime Strike of 1934|the violence there]] accompanying the [[1934 West Coast waterfront strike|Maritime Strike of 1934]] led to a diversion of this trade to the [[Port of Los Angeles]].<ref name=BOLA-12 /> During the [[Great Depression]], Interbay was the site of one of Seattle's [[Hooverville]]s.<ref>[http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/doclibrary/Hoover/Hoovlist.shtml Hoovervilles in Seattle — Document List] {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20070810091245/http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/doclibrary/Hoover/Hoovlist.shtml |date=2007-08-10 }}, Digital Document Library, Seattle Municipal Archives (Seattle City Clerk's office), especially the "Request for removal of Interbay shacks" (April 24, 1937) and "Protest against Hooverville evictions" (October 10, 1938). Accessed online 28 July 2008.</ref> From 1941 into the early 1970s, Smith Cove served as a supply depot for the [[United States Navy]], before returning to use as a civilian port. A few buildings and warehouses can still be found on the site that trace back to that time, including Quarters A, also known as "The Admiral's House", perched on the SW corner of Magnolia and overlooking piers 90 and 91. The large white painted home is now in private ownership and used as an event space.<ref>BOLA Architecture et al., p. 14–15.</ref> A [[Seattle Monorail Project|proposed modern monorail]] would have run along 15th Ave NW, but the initiative collapsed in 2005 after eight years of contention. The [[RapidRide D Line|D Line]] runs along 15th Ave W, from 2012 to present. A transit center<ref>{{cite web |title=INTERBAY TRANSIT HUB |url=https://www.activeconstruction.com/19-013 |access-date=27 January 2021}}</ref> for the new Expedia office complex was completed in 2019. The route of the [[Link light rail#Future expansion|Link expansion to Ballard]] will pass along the Interbay corridor.<ref>{{cite web |title=West Seattle and Ballard Link Extensions |url=https://www.soundtransit.org/system-expansion/west-seattle-ballard-link-extensions |website=SoundTransit |access-date=27 January 2021}}</ref> ==Bridging Interbay== [[Image:Seattle - Smith Cove from Soundview Terrace 01.jpg|thumb|The [[Magnolia Bridge]] crosses former [[Smith Cove (Seattle)|Smith Cove]] tideflats near the south end of Interbay. Seen here from Soundview Terrace on Queen Anne Hill.]] The southern part of Interbay was originally the Smith Cove tideflats. All of Interbay was divided from the 1880s onward by an increasing number of north–south railway lines. This motivated numerous bridges and trestles running east–west across the neighborhood. The first of these was at Grand Boulevard (now West Dravus Street). Around 1900 there was both a roadway and a trestle at Grand Boulevard for the Seattle-[[Fort Lawton]] street [[Tram|trolley]] line. The first of several bridges across Smith Cove at Garfield Street Bridge (site of the current [[Magnolia Bridge]]) was built some time between 1910 and 1912. The 23rd Avenue West trestle and the South Shore trestle were both western extensions of the West Garfield Street Bridge, leading to different points in Magnolia to the West. The Wheeler Street Bridge was a complex of four trestles. The Wheeler Street West trestle ran from 15th Avenue West to Thorndyke Avenue West. The Lawton Way trestle intersected that at a diagonal and trestle extensions ran to both 20th Avenue West and Halliday Street on the Magnolia Bluffs.<ref name=BOLA-13 /> As of 2008, besides the Magnolia Bridge over the former tideflats and the West Dravus trestle, Interbay is also spanned by a flyover from Nickerson Street at West Emerson Place, just south of Salmon Bay and the Fishermen's Terminal, near the south end of the [[Ballard Bridge]]. There is no longer a crossing at Wheeler Street (just south of the Interbay Golf Course). ==Interbay today== [[File:Fishing trawlers Seattle waterfront 2010.JPG|thumb|right|[[Fishing trawlers]] moored in Smith Cove at Interbay]] Interbay today remains home to [[BNSF Railway]]'s [[Balmer Yard]] and related locomotive maintenance shops, the Port of Seattle's Fishermen's Terminal on Salmon Bay and Piers 86, 90, and 91 on Smith Cove, and related facilities. It is also home to a Washington [[Army National Guard]] armory, Interbay Stadium, the [[Interbay P-Patch]] (a large community garden), and the Interbay Golf Course. Five late 19th century houses near Smith Cove, known as [[Smith Cove (Washington)#The Fourteenth Avenue West Group|the Fourteenth Avenue West Group]], have official status as a [[List of Seattle landmarks|city landmark]].<ref>David Wilma, [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=3202 Seattle Landmarks: 14th Avenue W Residences (1890–1910)], HistoryLink, April 15, 2001. Accessed online 11 July 2008.</ref> There is a miscellany of light industrial, warehouse, wholesale, and retail businesses along 15th Avenue West, as well as a few professional offices and some housing. There continues to be a small shopping and dining neighborhood at West Dravus Street, the former Grand Boulevard. Near the Magnolia Bridge on 15th is the [[Center for Sex Positive Culture]].<ref>[http://www.sexpositiveculture.org/pages/location Directions] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080704184620/http://www.sexpositiveculture.org/pages/location |date=2008-07-04 }}, Center for Sex Positive Culture official site. Accessed 27 July 2008.</ref> A bicycle and foot trail comes north from the Central Waterfront by [[Belltown, Seattle|Belltown]] through [[Myrtle Edwards Park]] continues through the pier facilities around Smith Cove and parallels the railway tracks on their west through Interbay, ending on the west (Magnolia) side of the tracks on 20th Avenue West about three blocks south of Dravus. On April 2, 2015 [[Expedia|Expedia, Inc.]] announced their purchase of the [[Amgen]] "Helix" facility along Elliot Ave. for $228.9m and their plans to move their corporate headquarters there from [[Bellevue, Washington]] by 2018.<ref>[http://www.seattletimes.com/business/real-estate/expedia-expected-to-announce-seattle-move/ Expedia Will Make Seattle Waterfront its New Home]</ref> ==References== {{reflist}} ==Further reading == {{commons category|Interbay, Seattle, Washington}} * BOLA Architecture + Planning & Northwest Archaeological Associates, Inc., [https://web.archive.org/web/20110723025013/http://www.portseattle.org/downloads/business/realestate/development/northbay/Appendix_I_Historic_Cultural.pdf Port of Seattle North Bay Project DEIS: Historic and Cultural Resources], Port of Seattle, April 5, 2005. Accessed online 25 July 2008. {{Seattle neighborhoods}}
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