Seattle’s Office Space Retrenches While Zombies Watch

Seattle’s Office Space Retrenches While Zombies Watch

The Seattle office space market has absorbed 797,000 square feet so far in 2011, reports Colliers International in their third quarter survey. Colliers tracks Class A, B and C office buildings that are 10,000 square feet and larger (medical buildings excepted). Seattle’s current vacancy rate is 16.53 percent, down from 18.13 percent a year ago. (The Eastside is “stagnant” at 14 percent–there are “16 properties with contiguous vacant spaces above 50,000 SF available.”) Continue reading Seattle’s Office Space Retrenches While Zombies Watch

What Makes Tesla’s Model S Like the iPad?

What Makes Tesla’s Model S Like the iPad?

Two Tesla Motors stories surfaced this morning: GeekWire reports that Tesla will be opening a “store” at the Bellevue Square Mall, “on the second level, just north of Center Court.” That will double Tesla’s Seattle-area tireprint–they opened their South Lake Union show room in late 2009.

In contrast, Fortune’s Alex Taylor III wonders whether Tesla isn’t simply running on fumes at this point. Continue reading What Makes Tesla’s Model S Like the iPad?

<em>Pearl Jam Twenty</em>: Totally Awesome and Oddly Incomplete

Pearl Jam Twenty: Totally Awesome and Oddly Incomplete

If I had filmmaking talent and had befriended Pearl Jam’s members when they called themselves “Mookie Blaylock,” the movie I’d make about their career today would be a lot like Cameron Crowe’s Pearl Jam Twenty. It’s sweet. It’s funny. It’s moving. And it rocks.

But I would tack another hour on the running time—maybe move some scenes around, too—and dig deeper into some of the career-shaping decisions and events that director Cameron Crowe holds up for us to admire, and then, like an enviably proud kid at show-and-tell, excitedly replaces with something else. Continue reading Pearl Jam Twenty: Totally Awesome and Oddly Incomplete

Moving Planet Seattle Joined Over 2,000 Events in 175 Countries

Moving Planet Seattle Joined Over 2,000 Events in 175 Countries

Moving Planet wants to reduce the CO2 in the atmosphere to 350 parts per million (it’s now almost 400). To raise awareness of this target, they sometimes talk people into standing in long lines.

This year, Moving Planet’s Seattle event was held at Lake Union Park. In addition to hundreds of well-meaning green Seattleites, lots of non-profits, including the serious (Cascade Bicycle Club) and the smiling (Undrivers’ License) turned up. Continue reading Moving Planet Seattle Joined Over 2,000 Events in 175 Countries

Council’s Bagshaw Pledges to Make Neighborhood Greenways a Reality

Council’s Bagshaw Pledges to Make Neighborhood Greenways a Reality

Portland Greenway boosters Greg Raisman and Mark Lear were in Seattle recently to introduce the curious to this less-contentious form of transportation infrastructure. Seattle City Council’s Sally Bagshaw told the 70 people packed into the event that the time for greenways is now: “What I want to do–and as a member of your city council, what I am pledging to do–is to make sure that these neighborhood greenways become as real as what Portland has done.” Continue reading Council’s Bagshaw Pledges to Make Neighborhood Greenways a Reality

Discover Seattle’s UW-to-SLU Mosquito Ferry

Discover Seattle’s UW-to-SLU Mosquito Ferry

Run by the same people who bring you the Sunday Ice Cream Cruise ($11 adults) out of Lake Union Park, the new ferry is a great addition to our city’s transit options.

Currently Seattle Mini-Ferry runs passengers back and forth from their UW dock at the foot of Brooklyn St. (near the Agua Verde kayak launch), on the hour, and the pier at South Lake Union Park, on the half hour. Continue reading Discover Seattle’s UW-to-SLU Mosquito Ferry