KING has announced they put their building on the market...South Lake Union properties in incredible turnover thanks to bio techs and Amazon in the area. So lots of condos and apartments to support it all. Add to that KING's building is largely empty...it once housed the corporate HQ, NW Mobile management (operations next to the Battery tunnel where a popular nightclub now sits), a cable operation management, an apartment/office for the Bullitt family, and support for several local TV shows and two radio stations. Now it houses operations for ION affiliate, KONG & KING, NWCN .. but fewer people as the industry has trimmed functions over the years thanks to pencil sharpening and technology changes.
(Let me emphasize: TWO radio stations were there......so people don't get panties in a wad that I am talking about television on here).
Of course it was a furniture warehouse when Dorothy Bullitt and crew took it over (320 Aurora). Pieces got added on and added on ... funky stairways in that building which housed Charles Herring's newscasts, KING "NewsService" television, Stan Boreson, Wunda Wunda, King's Queen...and many public affairs, etc. Around 1981, the new building was added "to the back" on Dexter...and the back door became the front door, the address became 333 Dexter...and the whole thing flipped around. Corporate, the Bullits and Cable offices on the top floor...Business Operations and KING-AM on the new fourth floor; the old KING-AM became KING-FM with a new tunnel poked through to the fourth floor lobby. Third floor had TV sales & programming...the second floor the TV operations, Cafeteria, TV studios...and the first floor mostly all the legacy stuff in the old building (formerly the studios ... one of which converted to an employee gym) and all the news operations. Years later news moved up to the fourth floor where KING-FM and business operations used to be...and almost the entire original building's first floor became used for things like band practice for the house band ... a sign that maybe they had a little "too much" space.
Get some new owners in the place last year and people probably start walking around with clipboards & spreadsheets...while noticing on their visit to Seattle that all those "For Sale" signs are in the neighborhood with lots of zeros on there.
Guess all this will depend on if anyone bites to buy. Sure is a LOT of history in those walls, though. Wonder if a new plan would involve a custom news operation & studio...and all the other studio space will be outsourced to places like Fremont. Remember, Channel 11 didn't even HAVE a studio when they moved next to the sewer plant in Renton ... and now don't even have THAT (just sales on Dexter where radio stations are for CBS). KOMO compressed all Fisher-operations into about two-1/2 floors of Fisher Plaza (including corporate space) before Sinclair stepped in. Ironically....KIRO used to lease their third floor to Ford; then took over the space; but also downsized when they had bought what was called "the Annex" and leveled it for news van parking. Their external post-production facility, Third Avenue Productions, also got razed and turned into condos.
(Let me emphasize: TWO radio stations were there......so people don't get panties in a wad that I am talking about television on here).
Of course it was a furniture warehouse when Dorothy Bullitt and crew took it over (320 Aurora). Pieces got added on and added on ... funky stairways in that building which housed Charles Herring's newscasts, KING "NewsService" television, Stan Boreson, Wunda Wunda, King's Queen...and many public affairs, etc. Around 1981, the new building was added "to the back" on Dexter...and the back door became the front door, the address became 333 Dexter...and the whole thing flipped around. Corporate, the Bullits and Cable offices on the top floor...Business Operations and KING-AM on the new fourth floor; the old KING-AM became KING-FM with a new tunnel poked through to the fourth floor lobby. Third floor had TV sales & programming...the second floor the TV operations, Cafeteria, TV studios...and the first floor mostly all the legacy stuff in the old building (formerly the studios ... one of which converted to an employee gym) and all the news operations. Years later news moved up to the fourth floor where KING-FM and business operations used to be...and almost the entire original building's first floor became used for things like band practice for the house band ... a sign that maybe they had a little "too much" space.
Get some new owners in the place last year and people probably start walking around with clipboards & spreadsheets...while noticing on their visit to Seattle that all those "For Sale" signs are in the neighborhood with lots of zeros on there.
Guess all this will depend on if anyone bites to buy. Sure is a LOT of history in those walls, though. Wonder if a new plan would involve a custom news operation & studio...and all the other studio space will be outsourced to places like Fremont. Remember, Channel 11 didn't even HAVE a studio when they moved next to the sewer plant in Renton ... and now don't even have THAT (just sales on Dexter where radio stations are for CBS). KOMO compressed all Fisher-operations into about two-1/2 floors of Fisher Plaza (including corporate space) before Sinclair stepped in. Ironically....KIRO used to lease their third floor to Ford; then took over the space; but also downsized when they had bought what was called "the Annex" and leveled it for news van parking. Their external post-production facility, Third Avenue Productions, also got razed and turned into condos.