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Summary for 4th AVE / Parcel ID 3124049028 / Inv # SPU024

Historic Name: SW Trenton Street South Standpipe Common Name:
Style: Other - Industrial Neighborhood: South Park
Built By: Year Built: 1932
 
Significance
The Seattle Water Department completed this 1,1930,000-gallon standpipe along with its twin to the north and a shared gate house in 1932 in conjunction with the construction of the 68,000,000-gallon West Seattle Reservoir located up the hillside to the west. A hydraulic pump station was also constructed on the site in 1934. As early as 1916, the Water Department had recognized the need for two reservoirs in West Seattle and had acquired a large tract of land in the vicinity of SW Cloverdale Street and 8th Avenue SW for the purpose of constructing one of them. At the time, six wooden tanks at 40th Avenue SW and SW Charleston Street served the entire West Seattle area with a combined capacity of 300,000 gallons. Within a few years, the construction of three more wooden tanks at SW Charleston Street and a new steel tank at 36th Avenue SW and SW Myrtle Street increased West Seattle’s capacity to almost a 1,000,000 gallons. By the early 1920s, it was apparent that West Seattle had the poorest and most unreliable water supply of any portion of the city more than ten years after its 1907 annexation. The Water Department began a program of improvement in order to give West Seattle an adequate and reliable supply of Cedar River water. This included a tunnel under the West Waterway near Michigan Street, new steel water mains, two new standpipes for low and intermediate service, and a new pump station at 6th Avenue SW and SW Kenyon Street. After the completion of the above improvements, the Water Department decided to proceed with the construction of its long-planned West Seattle reservoir. In 1929, plans were prepared for an 80,000,000-gallon reservoir at 8th Avenue SW and SW Trenton Street and a large pipeline to connect it to the city’s main supply pipelines in the vicinity of 51st Avenue South and South Leo Street. With the new reservoir, most of West Seattle would be supplied by gravity service as opposed to the previous system, which relied on the pumping of water to the few tanks and standpipes scattered through the large area. By the time of construction, the Water Department had decided to reduce the size of the planned reservoir and construct two standpipes on an adjoining parcel down the hill to the east, each with more than a million gallons of capacity. The reservoir was largely completed by 1931 and put into service the following year. As proposed, the standpipes were to have a capacity of 1,400,000 gallons each in order to increase the storage capacity for the low service system. Completed in 1932 with slightly less capacity than originally planned, the twin standpipes are unique in the Seattle water system for their design and for their location immediately adjacent to one another. The standpipes are shorter and wider than any other standpipe, and no other pairs of standpipes were constructed at the same time with the same design and with a shared gate house. Queen Anne Hill has two adjacent standpipes, however they were completed three years apart from each other and with entirely different designs and capacities. After 1934, water used to power the hydraulic equipment at the newly constructed SW Trenton Street Pump Station emptied into the standpipes for subsequent distribution to the low service gravity fed district. The SW Trenton Street South Standpipe is significant for its association with the growth and development of the Seattle water system.
 
Appearance
Completed in 1932, this 1,1930,000-gallon steel standpipe is located south of its twin standpipe and their shared gate house. This complex is situated at the western end of a large grassy terrace on the hillside below an upper terrace occupied by a 1934 pump station and a later chlorine station. A long set of stairs provides access to the lower level. The entire site is surrounded by a chain link fence and served by a restricted access road off of 3rd Avenue SW, which make it impossible to view the structures from the public right of way. Set on a circular concrete foundation, the squat standpipe has a 92-foot wide diameter and is comprised of six horizontal bands of riveted steel plates for a total height of 36 feet. The lower three bands have more riveted reinforcements than the upper three bands. A ladder on the eastern side extends to the standpipe’s conical metal roof, which features a slight overhang and a small ball finial at its peak. Encircled by a narrow concrete platform, the standpipe has various locked hatches at the ground level.

Detail for 4th AVE / Parcel ID 3124049028 / Inv # SPU024

Status: Yes - Inventory
Classication: Structure District Status:
Cladding(s): Metal Foundation(s): Concrete - Poured
Roof Type(s): Other Roof Material(s): Metal
Building Type: Industry/Processing/Extraction - Waterworks Plan: Other
Structural System: Steel No. of Stories:
Unit Theme(s): Architecture/Landscape Architecture, Science & Engineering
Integrity
Changes to Plan: Intact
Changes to Original Cladding: Intact
Major Bibliographic References
King County Property Record Card (c. 1938-1972), Washington State Archives.
McWilliams, Mary. Seattle Water Department History, 1854-1954: Operational Data and Memoranda. Seattle, WA: Water Department, City of Seattle, c1955.
Seattle Water Department. Annual report / City of Seattle, Water Department. Seattle, WA: 1908-1965.

Photo collection for 4th AVE / Parcel ID 3124049028 / Inv # SPU024


Photo taken Nov 17, 2000
App v2.0.1.0