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October 14, 2016

Here are the other winners

Photo courtesy of Olson Kundig [enlarge]
Charles Smith won an award for renovating Paul Hayden Kirk’s Dowell Residence in Seattle.

A number of projects and architect Les Tonkin won awards at Historic Seattle's eighth annual Preservation Awards celebration yesterday at Washington Hall in Seattle.

Historic Seattle said Tonkin won the Legacy Award posthumously for his work rehabilitating historic buildings in the state and providing affordable housing for low-income people.

Phinney Neighborhood Association won the Beth Chave Historic Preservation Award for Exemplary Stewardship for stewardship of the historic John B. Allen school complex.

Allegra Properties and contractor Lease Crutcher Lewis won the Best Rehabilitation Award for Union Stables, which turned a former horse stable into offices and restaurant/retail space in Belltown.

Pioneer Houses/San Fermo won the Best Adaptive Reuse Award for re-envisioning the historic Pioneer Houses in the Ballard Avenue Landmark District.

Tonkin

Stephen Bennett, longtime owner of Gaslight Inn, won the Preserving Neighborhood Character Award for his stewardship of the landmarked structure on Capitol Hill.

Cascadia Art Museum won the Art + Architecture Award for turning a former 1960s-era Safeway supermarket into Cascadia Art Museum, a regional arts museum along the Edmonds waterfront.

Charles Smith won the Outstanding Modern Masterpiece Award for renovation of Paul Hayden Kirk's Dowell Residence in Seattle's Seward Park neighborhood.

Washington Hall's three anchor partners — 206 Zulu, Hidmo and Voices Rising — won the Preserving Community Award for their long-term vision to preserve community, heritage, history and place at the “hall for all,” Historic Seattle said.




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