SoDo, Seattle

SoDo, Seattle
Seattle SoDo seen from Rizal Park
Seattle SoDo seen from Rizal Park
SoDo Highlighted in Pink
SoDo Highlighted in Pink
Coordinates: 47°35′20″N 122°19′57″W / 47.58889°N 122.33250°W / 47.58889; -122.33250
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountyKing
CitySeattle
Named forSouth of the Dome
South of Downtown
Time zoneUTC−8 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
Zip Code
98154
Area Code206
King Street Station, T-Mobile Park, Lumen Field, and most of the rest of SoDo can be seen from Columbia Center observation deck

SoDo, alternatively SODO, is a neighborhood in Seattle, Washington, that makes up part of the city's Industrial District. It is bounded on the north by South King Street, beyond which is Pioneer Square; on the south by South Spokane Street, beyond which is more of the Industrial District; on the west by the Duwamish River, across which is West Seattle; and on the east by Metro Transit's Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel and SoDo Busway, beyond which is the International District and the rest of the Industrial District.[citation needed]

SoDo was originally named for being located "South of the Dome", but since the Kingdome's demolition in 2000 the name has been taken to mean "South of Downtown".[1][2] The moniker was adopted in the 1990s after the renaming of the Sears building to the SODO Center (later Starbucks Center, the world headquarters of Starbucks at First Avenue S. and S. Lander Street).[3] It includes Seattle's downtown stadium district of T-Mobile Park (where Major League Baseball's Seattle Mariners play their home baseball games) and Lumen Field (built on the former Kingdome site; where the NFL's Seattle Seahawks (formally) along with the XFL's Seattle Sea Dragons play their home football games and where Major League Soccer's Seattle Sounders FC along with the National Women's Soccer League's Seattle Reign FC play their home soccer matches).[4] The Mariners' popular marketing campaign in the early 2000s used the SoDo moniker in the catchphrase "SoDo Mojo".[5][6]: 71–79 

SoDo deliberately echoes SoHo in New York City, where, during the 1970s, cheap spaces vacated by departing factories were converted by artists into lofts and studios.[7][6]: 71–79 

SoDo has undergone a similar process but has not experienced much of the gentrification experienced by its putative model. Some of SoDo's warehouse buildings remain in their original use; others have been carved up for artists' lofts, art galleries, and an assortment of other businesses. As one travels farther south along First Avenue S., these conversions peter out, and light manufacturing, warehouses, and warehouse-style retail stores predominate.

  1. ^ Moriwaki, Lee (June 21, 1997). "Starbucks, developer help boost SoDo area". The Seattle Times. p. C1. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference SeattleTimes2010 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ "Yo, SODO". The Seattle Times. March 13, 1995. p. C1.
  4. ^ Baker, Geoff (March 30, 2016). "Stadium officials ask for event-scheduling deal before upcoming Sodo arena vote". The Seattle Times. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  5. ^ Reader, Bill (October 3, 2000). "M's try to get their SoDo Mojo working". The Seattle Times. p. C8. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  6. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Tideflats2010 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  7. ^ "Tacoma wants its own SoDo district". Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce. Associated Press. December 10, 1999. Retrieved January 16, 2017.

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