Originally an outdoor market on a recently board-walked side street, the Pike Place Market remained outdoors until 1907. The first building was a simple covered structure built in November 1907 that snaked along the bluff west of Pike Place. TAs automobiles became popular, the Market expanded to allow more traffic by bringing stalls out of the streets and putting them under cover. Pike Place Market bustled in the years leading up to World War I and boomed in the post-war 1920s. The neighborhood’s vernacular architecture remained approachable, making the Market an unstuffy place to shop for people from all ends of the economic spectrum. Growth slowed by the 1930s, but the Market’s importance as a gathering place remained paramount to Seattle’s citizens. A rare example of urban renewal combining new construction and historic preservation, the Market was designated a National Historic District in 1971. Our tour explores the nine acres that comprise the Pike Place Market with an eye on its architecture. As you wind through the Market’s organically grown labyrinths, note the "humble and anonymous" buildings and human sense of scale that incubated a diverse and robust Market community. We begin at the nexus of Pike Street and Pike Place, just west of the Market Information booth.
To take this walking tour, visit HistoryLink.Tours.