We've gone ahead and updated our previous list so you can find the best waterspots in and around town no matter what you're in the mood for. Happy swimming!
In 2014, Macklemore cohort Ryan Lewis snapped up a four-bedroom , 3.75-bath home in Magnolia for $3.3 million. Turns out he doesn't have the "Same Love" for it now because he's put it back on the market, but this time he's asking $9.45 million!
There are 151 total Pokémon in the game, but what you can catch depends on your trainer level, the type of Pokéball used, and your location. Light up an incense and head on over to these locations to find some more uncommon Pokémon.
Welcome back to Curbed Comparisons, where we scour Seattle's listings to see what your budget will get you across the city. Today we decided to find out what $5,000,000 can get you all around town. You tell us which place you'd buy.
Iconic Seattle architect Ralph Anderson designed a lot of homes across the region. Here's one more, a 3-BR, 1.75-bath midcentury modern in Magnolia that's on the open market for the first time since it was built in 1957. The asking price is $1.1M.
This Zen mansion sits over the Magnolia shore looking southwest across the sound, the city, and down the lines of our mountains. It's been doing that since 1973, and looks like it was built last year.
PriceSpotter is Curbed's asking price guessing game. We provide you with some details and pictures from a real estate listing, and you take a crack at the price in the comments. Tomorrow we reveal the answer. And hey, no cheating!
We haven't been able to fact-check this claim so we're just going to have to take the real estate listings word for it. That said, the 4-BR home includes "the oldest residential pool in Seattle" and is now on the open market for $5.188 million.
When you think of Magnolia, you probably don't think of farmhouses. But the 3-BR home at 3841 35th Avenue W was built so long ago (1908), it was back when they actually had farms there. Times have changed and so has the house.
Yesterday we asked you to guess the asking price for this 4-BR, 2.5-bath home in Magnolia with views of Shilshole Bay below. We got a whole slew of guesses but the actual asking price is $1.875M.
As the weekend approaches, let's take a look around the Seattle real estate listings to find some examples of the strange, the weird and just the plain terrible.
Welcome to Renovation Week here on Curbed Seattle. This week, the whole Curbed network is deep-diving into the world of renovation in it's many forms. Right now lets kick it off with a map full of renovated homes currently on the market in Seattle.
When the plans for ST3 were unveiled, there were some very clear winners and losers in terms of who was getting service and by when. Some folks were unhappy with the lack of a dedicated line to their neighborhood and they've got ideas about it.
Yesterday we asked you to guess the asking price for this midcentury modern in Magnolia designed by architect Paul H. Kirk. The 1957 home perched on a cliff is actually asking a whopping $3.35M.
PriceSpotter is Curbed's asking price guessing game. We provide you with some details and pictures from a real estate listing, and you take a crack at the price in the comments. Tomorrow we reveal the answer. And hey, no cheating!
Gene Balk is back with another round of interesting findings via census data. This time he's letting us know about a study on life expectancy to see where in the Seattle-area you might be able to eek out a couple more years on average.
The developer of Fort Lawton, RISE Properties has announced that all thirteen homes at Montana Circle are sold. These new homeowners are the first private residents in the history of Fort Lawton.
The weather is starting to turn for the better and that means it's the perfect time to get out there and explore the nooks and crannies of Seattle. We've mapped out twelve tiny or hidden parks that often fly under the radar
Maybe it's just the way it's framed but there's something about the garden space out back that just seems otherworldly. Perhaps it makes more sense to say it's from another time. Makes us want to grab a crossword puzzle and hang out back there.
The Remodelers Council of the Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties has picked their very best remodels from last year. Here's our favorites.