Harborview Hall

Harborview Hall She saw an opportunity and worked closely with King county commissioners who built the student residence hall at the same time as Harborview Hospital.

Harborview Hall, Seattle:
Year Built: 1929-1931
Historic Name: Harborview Hospital Nurses' Residence
Architect: Harlan Thomas, Harlan Granger & Thomas
Historical Designation: Eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. Harborview Hall: Home to Medical History

For nearly 80 years, the Art Deco Harborview Hall has stood across from Harborview Hospital, playing a part in thous

ands of people’s personal histories as they lived and worked on First Hill. Harborview Hall represents a place in time when, under the leadership of Elizabeth Sterling Soule, UW established the School of Nursing in the 1930s as one of the best nursing programs in the nation, a ranking that continues today. The teaching model was a first on the West Coast and, nationally, second only to Yale University. Over a period of 30 years the building was home to thousands of nursing students, where they studied, wrote a popular weekly newsletter, staged annual plays and attended a weekly tea hosted by their house mother. In the late 1940s history was made when the first African Americans were enrolled in the nursing program, lived at Harborview Hall and worked at Harborview Hospital

Harborview Hall at a Crossroads

King County owns Harborview Medical Center, which is operated by the University of Washington under the direction of a county-appointed Board of Trustees. For many years the Medical Center has planned to demolish Harborview Hall. Years ago, that may have made economic sense, but several factors have changed:
• Increased awareness of the environmental cost if the building is demolished
• Eligibility for listing in the National Register of Historic Places allows for the use of federal tax credits.
• A rehabilitated Harborview Hall will provide well over 100,000 square feet of usable space in an area expected to experience strong growth rates for the foreseeable future.
• Rehabilitation creates more local labor jobs than new construction and produces fewer greenhouse gas emissions. King County, the UW, and the Harborview Board have put demolition plans on hold while King County Executive Dow Constantine works with a developer to further explore the costs and benefits of preservation. Working with a developer, King County is conducting financial and technical analysis to ensure the project will be self-sustaining from lease revenue. Rehabilitation of Harborview Hall would include seismic retrofits, updates for plumbing, heating, and electrical systems, preservation of the building’s architectural features and development of a plan to create open space on the site.

Harborview Hall is at a critical juncture - now is the time to contact members of the King County Council and voice your...
08/31/2012

Harborview Hall is at a critical juncture - now is the time to contact members of the King County Council and voice your support for the historic rehabilitation of Harborview Hall. Learn more about the issue and Take Action!

King County is currently working with a local developer on plans to rehabilitate Harborview Hall. An integral part of the Harborview Medical Center in Seattle’s First Hill neighborhood, the building faced possible demolition earlier this year, prompting

07/16/2012

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326 9th Avenue
Seattle, WA
98104

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