June the Coach Rider
OBS Chief
That is going to be a beautiful station when finished. I will enjoy seeing it in July when I am there.
Hate the confusing queue-up but love the seat assignment. No worries about fighting your way on board, no getting yelled at by a conductor that you're boarding the wrong car, no sweat. Love. it.You will often be directed to a specific car depending on your destination. But yeah, once you get to that car, it'sVAC, too. The others are train shows up, you get on.
find your own seat.
The seat assignment thing is among the best reasons to purchase BC when departing from PDX or SEA. And--to get back to the
topic of this thread--that's even more true right now in SEA.
The main waiting room is almost ready for re-opening. I took some quick pictures this morning. The rumor is that there will be a press event on April 21, and that the main waiting room will be open to the public by the end of the month.
Yes, and how's the usefulness of the new station? (I don't know having never been there.) I hope it's very useful as a train station and transportation hub, since that's it main purpose. I love these old train stations, and I'm happy they're being restored, but what I love more is being able to use transportation efficiently. If a new station can be built for less money (or even more money) that also works better for the intended purpose, I think we should think long and hard about whether an old station is truly worth saving.It's beautiful.
I have to say I have mixed feelings about this project. The result is truly lovely and will last for many decades.
However, they practically reconstructed the station from scratch. It cost an enormous amount. Usually, reuse and restoration of grand old buildings is the efficient, money-saving thing to do in the long run. In this case, it really wasn't; it was an extremely costly project, thanks mostly to the earthquake retrofitting. It's less a restoration than a reconstruction.
i'm still hoping they might have saved it. for a museum if not the stationI do miss the "Electric Stairs to Jackson Street" sign though.
There a number of important reasons why King Street Station was important to restore.It's beautiful.
I have to say I have mixed feelings about this project. The result is truly lovely and will last for many decades.
However, they practically reconstructed the station from scratch. It cost an enormous amount. Usually, reuse and restoration of grand old buildings is the efficient, money-saving thing to do in the long run. In this case, it really wasn't; it was an extremely costly project, thanks mostly to the earthquake retrofitting. It's less a restoration than a reconstruction.
All right. Justified on its own merits as a historic restoration project, so why not keep using it as the train station. Makes sense.There a number of important reasons why King Street Station was important to restore.It's beautiful.
I have to say I have mixed feelings about this project. The result is truly lovely and will last for many decades.
However, they practically reconstructed the station from scratch. It cost an enormous amount. Usually, reuse and restoration of grand old buildings is the efficient, money-saving thing to do in the long run. In this case, it really wasn't; it was an extremely costly project, thanks mostly to the earthquake retrofitting. It's less a restoration than a reconstruction.
1. It's a registered landmark in the midst of a historic district - therefore it couldn't legitimately be bulldozed.
2. It is one of a very few significant historic public buildings left in Seattle from this era: St. James Cathedral, the Smith Tower, the New Washington Hotel
Yeah - let's put it in the basement of a new basketball arena so maybe the NBA will come back to Seattle too.......Nahhhh, let's tear it down and build something modern, we want something that is as attractive and functional for passengers as Penn Station [/sarcasm]
Well-deserved, IMHO.Engineering News Record has named King St Station the best restoration project in the Northwest for 2013. KSS also received an Award of Merit in the Safety category.
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