9/16/18 Fire Station No. 2 and other Belltown landmarks |
It was déjà vu all over again.
Just like Friday, I woke to pouring
rain, wondering if I would be alone at the meetup location. An overhang and
some large trees would offer some shelter to sketchers who wanted to face Fire Station No. 2 in Belltown, but if
we got the thunderstorms and heavy rain forecast by weather.com, it wouldn’t be
much fun. In addition, the Storm’s WNBA championship parade at Seattle Center was expected to make traffic and
parking difficult in the area.
The hardcore who showed up at the start time! |
But again, just like Friday, the showers
turned into sunshine, and the handful of sketchers who met me at the start time
turned into a strong showing by the time of the throwdown!
Despite the blue sky directly above,
I was leery that the rain could return at any moment and reluctant to commit to
a page-size composition that I might have to abandon. Instead, I decided to
make a series of small sketches in Michele Cooper’s montage style. My first stop was Station No. 2, the focus of our
outing. Designated
a landmark in 1985, the 1921-built
facility houses one engine company, a ladder unit, a medic unit and a reserve
medic unit (some of which we saw coming out and back into the station as we
sketched).
Next I wanted to capture the Space
Needle flying Seattle Storm’s flag. I’m not a basketball fan, but it was exciting
to see a women’s team being celebrated as an alternative to the usual Seahawks’
12 flag at this time of year. (The drops on my Needle sketch indicate that
standing under a tree while sketching isn’t necessarily a good strategy when it
has been raining all night.)
The historic bell had captured several other sketchers’ attention, and for good
reason. From the station that was near the same location in the 1800s, the
bell sounded an alarm that could be heard for “nearly 10 miles,” said the
plaque. “The horse-drawn engine then responded to the location.”
(Contrary to my speculation, the Belltown
neighborhood was not named for this bell, which had an important
emergency response role in the 1800s. It was named for William Nathaniel Bell,
a member of the Denny party that originally settled Seattle. In addition,
Virginia Street and Olive Way were named after his children. It’s a good thing
I sketch and blog about my sketches or I’d never learn such local trivia.)
By then the strong wind had chilled
me, so I went to look for coffee. Walking back, I looked up at the numerous cranes
and construction sites in Belltown. To complete my montage, I picked an apartment
complex going up on Second Avenue and Wall Street (one of many such boxy
buildings popping up all over the city).
Once again, hooray for hardy sketchers
who say bah-humbug to dire weather forecasts!
Congrats on so many of you going despite that weather report! I like these montage style pages. I see your firehouse doors were closed too. I keep driving past firehouses because I want to draw a few firetrucks but the only time the doors seem to be open are times when I'm not around. lol
ReplyDeleteGood observation -- all the doors remained closed the whole time except when the trucks came in and out, which was fairly often.
Delete- Tina