This is a tiny, triangular pub that is a vestige of the historic Triangle Hotel and Tavern. It is one of a handful of Seattle bars that pre-date Prohibition, if you allow it various name changes in between the end of prohibition and the mid 1970s.
It is casual and neighborly except before and after ballgames at the nearby stadiums when it is overflowing. For football games they will open the downstairs portion.
The "Flatiron" building was completed in 1910 at the corner of Railroad Way and 1st Avenue S. (formerly "Commercial St.") and housed the Triangle Hotel and Bar until statewide prohibition took effect in 1916. It was built for Seattle realtor and financier Victor Hugo Smith, who played an important role in the city's real estate boom in the years following the Great Seattle Fire in 1889. "... the building stands out because of its shape and eclectic detailing, which includes
rusticated brickwork with a Flemish bond pattern and pointed arches, inspired perhaps by late Medieval architecture
(or possibly by Venetian or Moorish architecture)." (National Register Nomination)
At least the basement space became a Western Union branch office, sending its messages to the Cherry Street headquarters via brass pneumatic tubes, which can still be seen today. The hotel above, which was a brothel from the 20s until the end of WWII, originally had 8 small rooms, but now holds 2 apartments. It is said to have once been featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not as the smallest hotel west of the Rockies.
After prohibition, the main floor resumed as a bar under various names. It was Jack's Bar by 1934, run by John Baldacci and Santo Santini.Santini shortened his name to Santi, and Jack's remained in the Santi family,for over two decades, later run by Ernest and later Louis Santi through 1954.
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Seattle's Triangle Bar when it was known as Lou's Tavern, c. 1956 |
Est. 1910 - Building Constructed 1910 - Closed June 2, 2020