MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Seattle settles lawsuit with Showbox owner, leaves door open to save venue

Oct 8, 2019, 6:40 PM | Updated: Oct 9, 2019, 6:43 am

showbox...

(KIRO 7)

(KIRO 7)

One battle over The Showbox in Seattle is officially over. But more struggles are ahead, as the property owner wishes to the sell the building, and Seattleites wish to preserve an iconic piece of local history.

The owner of the building (that is home to The Showbox) and the city of Seattle reached an agreement Tuesday. According to that agreement, the city will give $915,000 to the owner of 1426 First Avenue LLC to cover its attorney fees and other costs from a recent lawsuit.

“Our settlement with the City of Seattle allows for a return to a consistent and fair application of the city’s regulations governing 1426 First Avenue,” said Aaron Pickus with 1426 First Avenue LLC. “We are also pleased that our settlement with the City of Seattle includes a contingent option for a third-party allied with the City to potentially purchase the property for $41.4 million – the owner has always been open to consider any serious purchaser that offers fair market-value.”

Why Seattle Councilmember Abel Pacheco voted against Showbox protections

Concern was raised in August 2018, when the building went up for sale. Tentative plans were for a company based in Vancouver, B.C. to purchase the property and develop it into a 44-story apartment tower.

The city previously attempted to “spot zone” The Showbox, expanding the Pike Place district around the property. The owner sued for lost revenue from the sale. That led to a judge knocking the city’s plan down in June, stating that the temporary historical district designation approved by the City Council — twice — was illegal and violated property owner Roger Forbes’ federal due process and equal protection rights.

With the issue of legal costs behind them, city officials are now hopeful that a buyer will step forward to buy the building — one that will cherish The Showbox and its place in history.

“The focus of this situation is now appropriately with the Landmarks Preservation Board,” City Attorney Pete Holmes said. “I weighed the likelihood of success appealing a case that is now largely superfluous against a potential judgment costing the City tens of millions of dollars. When presented with a resolution that costs us only a fraction of that potential judgment and that retains an option for a third-party organization like Historic Seattle to lead an effort to purchase the building in the event no landmark controls are imposed, this wasn’t a difficult decision to make.”

MyNorthwest News

Photo: In this Dec. 27, 2012, file photo, a variety of military-style semi-automatic rifles obtaine...

James Lynch

State commissioner to decide on high-capacity magazine ban

The Washington State Commissioner held a hearing on whether the ban on high-capacity magazines should be lifted while the full court considers the matter.

3 hours ago

An SPD vehicle....

Julia Dallas

Seattle police shoot, kill man suspected of committing crimes against children

A man suspected of committing crimes against children was killed by Seattle police inside a hotel in Tukwila Wednesday afternoon.

4 hours ago

Image: A man got beaten and robbed in broad daylight in Seattle at Cal Anderson Park on Sunday, Apr...

Bill Kaczaraba

Video of man getting knocked out, robbed in Seattle goes viral; Gee and Ursula respond

A disturbing video has gone viral of a man getting knocked out and robbed by a small group of people on Capitol Hill Sunday.

7 hours ago

The logo for Boeing appears on a screen above a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exc...

Heather Bosch

Whistleblower: Boeing involved in ‘criminal cover-up’

A Boeing whistleblower testified before a U.S. Senate subcommittee claiming the company is involved in a "criminal cover-up."

7 hours ago

Photo: Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas is sworn-in before the House Committee on Hom...

the MyNorthwest Staff with wire reports

Senate dismisses two articles of impeachment against Homeland Security secretary, ends trial

The Senate dismissed impeachment charges against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, as Republicans pushed to remove him.

8 hours ago

antisemitic...

Frank Sumrall

Antisemitic instances up 800% nationally, 300% in Washington

ADL reported there has been more than an 800% increase in antisemitic incidents across the country over the last decade.

10 hours ago

Seattle settles lawsuit with Showbox owner, leaves door open to save venue