Browse Public Art

Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel

Multiple Artists

Seattle

A transit project becomes a model for collaboration and a touchstone for local history.

Bill Bell. The Northern Lights, 1990. Light sticks. Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel, University Street Station, Seattle, WA. King County Public Art Collection/Sound Transit STart Collection. Photo: Mark Woods

The Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel marked a significant moment in the history of public art. Artists worked closely with tunnel engineers and station designers to develop the five underground stations and street-level plazas, setting an early and comprehensive example for what has come to be known as “design team collaboration.” The project also become a model for integrating art into transportation infrastructure, committing to early and meaningful involvement by artists and devising innovative working methodologies, supportive contracting and construction procedures. These efforts created a foundation for art integration in later projects, particularly King County Metro Park & Ride developmet.

Since the tunnel was built and its artworks installed, much has changed in the city, its downtown streetscape, and the stations themselves. But as this transformation continues, care is being paid to preserve the artworks as part of the region’s history, protecting them as markers of who we are and what we value in our community. The works are more than mere decoration; they are anchors of the transit system, telling the story of this place today and for many generations to come.
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Roger Shimomura. Untitled, 1990. Porcelain enamel on steel. Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel, Westlake Station, Seattle, WA. King County Public Art Collection/Sound Transit STart Collection. Photo: Mark Woods
Sonya Ishii with Dave Layton. Paper Chase, 1990. Stainless steel and paint. Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel, International District/Chinatown Station, Seattle, WA. King County Public Art Collection/Sound Transit STart Collection. Photo: Mark Woods
Heather Ramsay. Hickory Dickory Dock Clock (detail), 1990. Steel and polished copper. Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel, University Street Station, Seattle, WA. King County Public Art Collection/Sound Transit STart Collection. Photo: Mark Woods