The essential guide to visiting Seattle
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Travelers visiting Seattle for the first time often think it will be all coffee and rain. Both are bountiful in this Pacific Northwest city tucked between Puget Sound and Lake Washington, but the Emerald City dazzles year-round with world-class museums and attractions, festivals galore, and countless ways to experience nature on water and on land.
Best time to visit Seattle
Spring: Laugh off the rain at Moisture Festival, a four week-long showcase of aerialists, acrobats, and odd surprises starting mid-March. In May, preview independent films during the two-week Seattle International Film Festival. Over Memorial Day weekend, the Northwest Folklife Festival convenes at Seattle Center for a free celebration of arts, culture, and heritage.
Summer: In June, Seafair begins a 10 week-long city-wide party with fireworks, parades, hydroplane races, an air show, and other events. In July, the Seattle Art Fair fills Lumen Field with modern and contemporary art. Over Labor Day weekend, Seattle Center hosts Bumbershoot, a joyous end-of-summer music and arts festival.
Fall: In September and October, harvests are in, summer crowds are out and it’s the ideal time to visit the farmers, crafters and other vendors at the historic Pike Place Market. Seattle celebrates the glass arts in October during Refract: The Seattle Glass Experience.
Winter: Head to Seattle’s Chinatown-International District for Lunar New Year celebrations. February’s Northwest Flower & Garden Show offers previews of spring. February is also Museum Month, when downtown hotel bookings include passes for half-off admission at many museums. In mid-March, join the ‘bloom watch’ for peak viewing of Yoshino cherry trees on the University of Washington quad.
(10 must-do experiences for your next trip to Seattle)
Key areas to explore in Seattle
Downtown waterfront: Seattle’s revitalized waterfront is a 20-acre walkable experience with art, parks, and viewing spots out to Elliot Bay and the surrounding mountain ranges. The Seattle Aquarium, Ye Olde Curiosity Shop, and the Great Wheel are among of the attractions here, but visitor can also go sightseeing on a ferry or an Argosy Cruise or head up to Pike Place Market on the terraced Overlook Walk.
Seattle’s waterfront features a Ferris wheel and Miners Landing, a building that houses restaurants, shops, and attractions, such as Wings Over Washington and The Crab Pot.
Photograph by Wolfgang Kaehler / Alamy Stock Photo
Seattleites head to the Saturday market on Western Avenue near Pike Place.
Photograph by Ian Dagnall / Alamy Stock Photo
Seattle Center: The 1962 World’s Fair site is now a 74-acre urban park that’s home to the 605-foot Space Needle, Chihuly Garden and Glass, the Museum of Pop Culture (MOPOP), a dancing fountain with its own DJ, and Seattle Center Festál, a rolling series of 25 free festivals celebrating the city’s many cultural communities.
The parks: Seattle has hundreds of parks in the city limits, including Volunteer Park in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, which is home to Volunteer Park Conservatory and the Seattle Asian Art Museum, and 300-acre Seward Park, which has both beaches and 120-acres of old growth forest.
At Lake Union Park you’ll find the Center for Wooden Boats, the Museum of History and Industry, and the NW Seaport’s floating fleet of historic vessels.
The water: On Lake Union, kayaks and paddleboards, electric boats, donut boats, and hot tub boats are available to rent. The Center for Wooden Boats rents sailboats and offers free one-hour rowboat rentals and free monthly public sails with volunteer skippers.
Where to stay in Seattle
The Edgewater Hotel: Seattle’s only over-the water hotel is not only right on the downtown waterfront, it’s also where The Beatles stayed during their 1964 U.S. tour, famously fishing from their hotel window. Poles and bait are no longer sold in the giftshop, but the views remain notable and the hotel is steps from the free Olympic Sculpture Park and a short walk to the Seattle Aquarium and other waterfront activities.
Hotel Sorrento: Built in 1909, this hotel in Seattle’s First Hill neighborhood take inspiration from the storied Hotel Excelsior Vittoria in Sorrento, Italy, and is rumored to be haunted by Alice B. Toklas, of hash brownie-recipe fame. The hotel’s Fireside Room hosts Silent Reading Parties during which patrons read silently, but together, while listening to live music.
Inn at the Market: A boutique charmer tucked inside historic Pike Place Market, this hideaway hotel is well-loved for its restaurants, including Café Campagne, its proximity to the waterfront and to the market’s offerings and for its rooftop deck offering panoramic views of Elliott Bay.
(The 9 best hotels in Seattle for every kind of traveler)
Fishmongers at Pike Place Market sell fresh seafood, including salmon, halibut, tuna, clams, crab, cod, and rockfish.
Photograph by Gabbro / Alamy Stock Photo
Taste of Seattle
Seafood reigns supreme in Seattle, with fresh salmon, oysters, crab, and halibut among the options to look for on local menus. Reliable places to indulge include Walrus and Carpenter in Ballard, Taylor Shellfish Oyster Bar(Pioneer Square, Capitol Hill, Queen Anne), Oyster Cellar (Pioneer Square), Half Shell (north end of Pike Place Market) and Local Tide in the Fremont neighborhood.
(7 of the best coffee shops in Seattle)
Getting around Seattle
By public transportation: It’s easy to get around bus, light rail, and streetcar. Plan your trip using King County Metro’s Trip Planner tool and pay for single rides or day passes with the Transit Go app.
By car: Traffic can be challenging in the urban core. But if you’ve got a rental, the city’s map of street parking locations and parking facilities will be useful. Rideshare services and taxis are plentiful.
Here’s what you should know about visiting Seattle
Weather: Don’t let Seattle’s bad weather rep scare you. Late fall and winter can be gray and rainy, but you’re more likely to encounter a day of misty rain than one filled with downpours. Pack waterproof shoes and a light raincoat and you’ll blend in with the locals.
Summer may start late, but stretches from mid-June through October, with average temperatures ranging from the mid-60s to the mid-70s Fahrenheit in July and August.
How to visit Seattle sustainably
Seattle is serious about sustainability. You’ll spot recycling and composting bins in restaurants and attractions. Compostable take-out containers and utensils are standard. The city banned plastic bags back in 2012, so tuck a tote into your suitcase.
Transportation: Downtown is hilly, but very walkable. Sound Transit’s Link light rail is electric powered. King Couty Metro’s fleet is almost entirely hybrid or zero-emission vehicles. And there are plenty of e-scooters and e-bikes available for rent.
Shopping: Explore neighborhoods via vintage and secondhand stores by shopping at Barn Owl Vintage Goods in Georgetown, Lucky Vintage outlets in Fremont, Ballard and the University District, and Two Big Blondes, the country’s largest plus size consignment store, in the Central District.
网址:The essential guide to visiting Seattle https://klqsh.com/news/view/200053
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