Private Space Needle & Seattle Center Experience
Take off on a tour across the must-sees in Seattle’s Uptown neighbourhood, both from below and up above. Join your local guide in the lively Seattle Center area by the Grass Blades sculpture, the first of the many art pieces you’ll see today. The Seattle Center is home to over 30 of Seattle’s organisations, including the Opera Center, Museum of Pop Culture, Climate Pledge Arena, Cornish Playhouse, Space Needle and more.
Spend time with your guide exploring the complex. Pass by the Chihuly Glass and Garden, where a selection of American artist Dale Chihuly’s large-scale blown glass sculptures rise from the ground and hang from the air. Another eye-catching site you’ll come across is the wavy metallic walls of the Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP). Designed by Frank Gehry, this building offers exhibits devoted to beloved pop culture phenomena, everything from science fiction and fantasy to local sports and music names like Nirvana.
Keep walking through the Center and you may come across the Seattle Armory. Built in 1939, this site once housed the 146th Field Artillery and included a firing range and tanks. Today, the site is nicknamed the ‘Center of the Center’ and contains a selection of local food and drink vendors in its Food and Event Hall. Also, look out for Seattle’s premier arts centers, like the Seattle Repertory Theatre, Cornish Playhouse and the McCaw Hall, home to the Pacific Northwest Ballet and Seattle Opera.
If there’s time, music fans may get the chance to pop into a local radio station and the Light in the Attic Records store. Found in the KEXP Gathering Space, this independent record store was built as a dedication to the culture of U.S. independent record stores.
Make a stop at the International Fountain, an attraction built for the Century 21 Expo or World’s Fair. Originally built as a fountain dome of iron nozzles within a rocky circle, the water feature fit the year’s theme of the Space Age. Since then, the fountain has gone through several iterations, losing the rocks and iron and becoming a fun play area.
With your guide, walk through the Center for your pre-arranged timed entry to the Seattle Space Needle. Built in 1962 as a landmark attraction for the World’s Fair, the Needle aimed to encapsulate the theme of Space Age thinking. Nowadays, it continues to delight guests and dominate the city skyline, offering 360-degree views of Seattle and, if the weather allows, the far-off snowy peaks of Mount Rainier, the Cascades and the Olympic Mountain ranges. Your guide will share with you the attraction’s history and point out Seattle landmarks you may like to visit during your trip.
At the end of your tour, you’ll have time to continue to explore the Space Needle. If you’d like any recommendations, like how to ride the Seattle Center Monorail, ask your guide – they’re the local after all.