Former residents of Nickelsville have started a new group that aims to have a more democratic approach to tent cities and, perhaps more controversially, want to offer an open door to drug addicts.
The Amazon Spheres are the latest local manifestation of a fascinating new design approach—biophilic and biomemetic architecture. Its adherents want to make Seattle’s cityscape function like a forest.
The Weekly missed the point of our fight against City Light CEO Larry Weis.
Anne Hirsch, Seattle midwife and a member of the Uhuru Solidarity Movement, talks to Seattle Weekly about why white people need to get vocal about reparations.
The charter school bill is in the hands of the Governor. Some fear the bill will put us right back where we started.
Has the homeless crisis inspired more civic action from Seattle’s housed? Our intrepid reporter finds out.
A local mad scientist wants to bring capsule hotels to Seattle’s homeless.
Christiana Childers provides amateur photographers with a safe place to get comfortable with their cameras.
I pull in around noon. There is ample parking beneath the new building, several charging stations for electric cars, and no security on the elevator up to the cafeteria.
Seattle’s homeless crisis took a dramatic turn Friday morning as police cleared the former Nickelsville encampment site on Dearborn.
Esperanza Spalding, Susan Orlean, The Flavr Blue, David Crosby and more.
In its thoroughly satisfying and powerful production of Mary Stuart, Donizetti’s 1835 tale of the battle between Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots, this production shows everyone how to do it.
The fifth annual APRIL festival will demonstrate a few signs of maturity. For one thing, the early-evening happy-hour readings that used to be an integral part of the festival experience have disappeared.
Back in the early ’70s during the birth of alt-comix in San Francisco, cartoonist Trina Robbins found herself locked out of a supposedly “countercultural” movement that amounted to nothing more than another stupid boys’ club. So she started her own club.
Thoughts on ‘American Beauty’, Washington state’s marijuana policy, and the bright future of cannabis research from Sunil Kumar Aggarwal.
Tech workers represent something of a white whale: Laden with disposable income, they’re inclined to spend it on drinks in a way that previous generations of Americans largely have not been.
Seattleites, hungry for Southern food, are often quick to laud places that really aren’t as good as we want them to be. But this place is the real deal.
Constructed from poems, chunks of prose, sheet music, photographs, collage, and even the script for an opera, Hardly War is unlike anything you’ve ever seen.
Wielding comics’ unique power to tell stories via space and sequencing, the latest from the 54-year-old artist bursts with brilliantly timed “Oh, snap” moments.
The climate movement’s salvos against the nominee for CEO of Seattle City Light, while promising very little by way of carbon reductions, have risked alienating a policy leader who could be an important movement ally in years to come.
