Tall & Urban News

Seattle’s Second Avenue Hosts New Crop of Residential Towers

From Second Avenue, West Edge’s extensive glazing reflects the Pacific Northwest’s clouds and ever-changing skies.
From Second Avenue, West Edge’s extensive glazing reflects the Pacific Northwest’s clouds and ever-changing skies.
12 September 2019 | Seattle, United States

Seattle’s Second Avenue has quickly morphed into a corridor of new towers rising around Pike Place Market. West Edge, a 39-story, 440-foot-tall skyscraper, was the first to open in 2018, with 340 apartments geared toward empty-nesters as well as tech professionals.

The architects behind West Edge, local firm Olson Kundig, seem unlikely catalysts for this shift. Known for its lakeside getaways and tectonics of burnished steel, Olson Kundig saw an opportunity to set the architectural tone for the downtown boom.

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“Under the right conditions, the West Edge residential tower seems to meld with the sky.”

“As much as is reasonable in an urban core, we sought to diminish the line between inside and outside in order to engage our Northwest environment and landscape,” says co-owner and design principal Tom Kundig. Under the right conditions, on certain days, the West Edge residential tower seems to meld with the sky (or, just as likely, fog).

The building capitalized on Seattle’s picturesque surroundings with floor-to-ceiling operable windows and small balconies, defying recent trends that have cut off high-rise dwellers from outside air. Its privileged location just a few blocks from Seattle’s waterfront affords expansive vistas of Elliott Bay to the west; in the coming years, it will look out on a green promenade designed by the New York landscape firm James Corner Field Operations.

Perhaps the most majestic panorama, that of Mount Rainier, can be taken in from a residents-only top-floor terrace. An eighth-floor public sky bar offers less encompassing views.

The one- and two-bedroom units feature exposed concrete elements and stylings by Ankrom Moisan Interiors.

From Second Avenue, the tower’s extensive glazing reflects the Pacific Northwest’s clouds and ever-changing skies. To Kundig’s point, the building envelope often threatens to disappear entirely. This effect was carefully calibrated: the lower podium floors are clad in a darker, grittier palette to reflect the intensely urban, mid-rise context, while the glazing on the upper floors adopts increasingly lighter shades.

Inside, the lobby is anchored by a glass volume open to the sky and encasing a single Tsuma Gaki tree, giving the room something of a terrarium effect.

West Edge is just one property in developer Greg Smith’s push for inner-city density, which he says is the only guarantor against sprawl, while suburban development continues to chip away at the Cascadian forests, the region’s lungs. He points to Vancouver, whose recent condo boom begat an architectural style of tall, skinny glass towers on podiums, and is bullish that Seattle will follow suit.

“Seattle is going to have its own style,” Smith says. “I always think of Seattle as the creative city—music, arts, businesses, we have a very creative culture—and yet our city has really handcuffed the architectural and design community. It’s very prescriptive about what building shapes and sizes you can build, and that’s when you run the risk of creating something that lacks creativity.”

For more on this story go to Metropolis.