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Fuel, Seattle |
Sometimes this project is serendipitously thematic, and such was the case tonight, as I departed the
bad art auction at Tether Design and the company of intrepid subculture explorers and
bad art connoisseurs Jo and Marlowe to grab a nightcap at Fuel, a sports bar that is utterly generic with the exception of a series of impossibly bad portraits of the characters in "Caddyshack."
However, it subsequent visits, Fuel has grown on me a bit. It has hosted some outlandish events (e.g.
"Hot For Teacher Night" with Mary K. Letourneau and her DJ husband (and erstwhile student Vili Fualaau).
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Mary K. Letourneau, "Hot For Teacher Night", Fuel, Seattle |
Also, if you want a rollicking place to watch Seahawks games and other Seattle sporting events, Fuel is one of the best bar scenes in the area.
Historical notes: I have not yet found any bars in this location after prohibition until Fuel opened here in 2006 (before Fuel it hosted a tile shop and an Italian restaurant). However, going further back it is associated with a rich part of Seattle bar
history. The building was constructed for Captain James Nugent and
John Considine in 1890 (
seattle.gov), right after the Great Seattle Fire of 1889. Nugent leased the Fuel portion from 1890 to 1904, and for at least a portion of that ran the Coocoo Saloon there. A saloon of unknown name was there in 1905 run by Rees Heycock. For a description of the more notorious eastern portion of the building, see my entry on the
Double Header.
164 S Washington, Seattle, WA 98104-2532 - (206) 405-3835
Est. 2006 - Building constructed 1890
Previous bars in this location: Coocoo Saloon
web site:
fuelseattle.com