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Sky View Observatory
The Sky View Observatory is located on the 73rd floor of Columbia Center. At nearly 1,000 feet it offers the tallest public viewing area in the Pacific Northwest. The 360 degree panoramic view includes Mt. Rainier, Bellevue, the Cascade Mountains, Mt. Baker, Elliott Bay, the Olympic Mountains, the Space Needle and the city of Seattle.
http://skyviewobservatory.com
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Columbia Center's Sky View Observatory Might Be Seattle's Best View - Curbed Seattle
Didja ever think, looking west into the sunset, that the highest peak on the horizon was Mt. Olympus? Logical, right, since the mountains are called The Olympics after all. But you'd be wrong. It's Mt. Constance. Because you can't even see Mt. Olympus from this side of the moutains. You could win a bar bet with this one.
https://seattle.curbed.com/2013/7/23/10217282/higher-better-view-from-the-top
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Sky View Observatory in Seattle, Washington | Expedia
Explore the Sky View Observatory when you travel to Seattle - Expedia's Sky View Observatory information guide keeps you in the know!
https://www.expedia.com/Sky-View-Observatory-Seattle.d553248621532651364.Vacation-Attraction
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Columbia Center Sky View Observatory , Seattle - WA | Roadtrippers
Taller than the Seattle Space Needle! Overview of the whole City and looking down on the space needle. A locals secret!
The Sky View Observatory is located on the 73rd floor of Columbia Center. At nearly 1,000 feet it offers the tallest public viewing area west of the Mississippi. The 360 degree panoramic view includes Mt. Baker, Bellevue, the Cascade Mountains, Mt. Rainier, Elliott Bay, the Olympic Mountains, the Space Needle and the city of Seattle.
https://roadtrippers.com/us/seattle-wa/attractions/columbia-center-sky-view-observatory
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Sky View Observatory | Seattle | WhereTraveler
Information on Sky View Observatory in Seattle, including description and review, hours, address, phone number and map of Sky View Observatory.
https://www.wheretraveler.com/seattle/sky-view-observatory
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Sky View Observatory (@ColumbiaSkyView) | Twitter
The latest Tweets from Sky View Observatory (@ColumbiaSkyView). #SeeSeattle from the 73rd floor of The Columbia Center with your one-day pass. Hours: 10a-8p. 360° degree views, at a height of 902'! @SkyViewObservatory on IG. Seattle, WA
https://twitter.com/columbiaskyview?lang=en
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Sky View Observatory (Seattle, WA): Top Tips Before You Go - TripAdvisor
Sky View Observatory, Seattle: See 1,888 reviews, articles, and 1,069 photos of Sky View Observatory, ranked No.7 on TripAdvisor among 440 attractions in Seattle.
https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60878-d143564-Reviews-Sky_View_Observatory-Seattle_Washington.html
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$14 for Sky View Observatory Visit for Two ($25 Value) | Groupon
To succeed in today’s high-paced skylines, skyscrapers must have strong foundations and plenty of antennae to tickle tolls out of passing clouds. Take to the sky with this Groupon.
https://www.groupon.com/deals/sky-view-observatory
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Columbia Center - Wikipedia
Columbia Center (formerly Bank of America Tower and Columbia Seafirst Center) is the tallest skyscraper in the downtown Seattle skyline and the tallest building in the State of Washington. At 937 ft (286 m), it is currently the fourth tallest structure on the West Coast after San Francisco's 1,070-foot Salesforce Tower, Los Angeles' 73-story 1,018-foot U.S. Bank Tower, and the 1,099-foot Wilshire Grand Center.[7] The tower has the tallest public viewing area on the West Coast and west of the Mississippi. It occupies most of the block bounded by Fourth and Fifth Avenues and Cherry and Columbia Streets.[8] It contains 76 stories of class-A office space above ground and seven stories of various use below ground, making it the building with the most stories west of the Mississippi.[2] Construction of this building began in 1982 and finished in 1985. It was designed by Chester L. Lindsey Architects who also designed the Fourth and Blanchard Building in the Belltown neighborhood, and was built by Howard S. Wright Construction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_Center