Monday, October 8, 2012

The Westlake Park Area During the 1960s

(photograph from the Seattle Municipal Archives)

What is currently Westlake Park didn't even exist until the late 1980s. Before then, Westlake Avenue extended south to the intersection of Pike Street. In 1961, the two southern most blocks of Westlake Avenue were turned into the monorail station for the 1962 World’s Fair. Where the Westlake Park fountain now stands, there used to be a triangular shaped building that housed a Bartell Drugs store. North of Pine Street, where the Westlake Center / Mall currently exists, there were various small retail stores right along the north side of Pine Street. There was even a small, free standing, triangular shaped building that housed a jewelry store called Westfields, at the northwest corner of Fifth Avenue and Pine Street, abutting the east side of the monorail path and station.

In the early 1980s all the buildings on the north side of Pine Street, between Fourth Avenue and Fifth Avenue were torn down to make way for the construction of Westlake Center / Mall and for the park to its south. The free standing triangle shaped jewelry store, called Westfields, at the corner of Pine Street and Fifth Avenue was also torn down, as was the building that housed the Bartell Drug store, where the Westlake Park fountain now stands. The only remaining building in that block, which existed before Westlake Center was built, is the Mayflower Hotel at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Olive Way. In addition, when Westlake Center was constructed, the monorail was shortened, and the 1960s monorail station built for the 1962 World’s Fair was torn down. The current monorail station is an integrated part of Westlake Center.

It isn’t clear if Seattle had a central social nexus like Westlake Park before 1988 when construction of Westlake Park was finished and it opened. Because it is an official park, owned by the Seattle Parks Department, it has also become a location for political and social demonstrations and protests of every imaginable description. Unfortunately, the aspects of Westlake Park that make it a tourist attraction, also attract the detrimental human elements that make it a place where pimps try to recruit homeless teens girls into the prostitution, where marijuana, cocaine and crack are sold, and where assaults, robberies, shootings, and stabbings occur. In the late 1990s, Seattle’s government passed ordinances that make it illegal for people to loiter on city streets. But since Westlake Park is owned by the Seattle Parks Department, and is therefore a legal park with its own jurisdiction, it is exempt from the anti-loitering ordinances. As a result, the people who otherwise found themselves arrested for sitting on downtown sidewalks, learned to gravitate to Westlake Park, where they could remain until park closing hours without much interference by police or park rangers.

It seems reasonable to predict that only a few of the people who currently spend their entire days, day after day, all day in Westlake Park, know its history. If not for the 1962 World’s Fair, Westlake Avenue might still extend southward to Pike Street, and there might still be a Bartell Drug store where the Westlake Park fountain stands, and is these often covered with people sitting on it, as long as the weather permits.