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Welcome to Seattle's Newest Neighborhood
Where new Seattle meets old Seattle. Welcome to Seattle’s newest neighborhood. Othello Station is a true master planned community right in the heart of Seattle, just about 15 minutes from downtown. Othello Station is a totally mixed and diverse neighborhood with single-family homes, cottages, townhomes, laced with parks and trails. It is served by its own shopping area and linked to the community center, parks, Seattle Public Library, and other features of the award winning NewHolly neighborhood. Othello Station is named after the LINK light rail stop that will be at its doorstep. New homes that meet strict architectural guidelines are now available from two of the Northwest’s most respected homebuilders. And here’s the really big news: you can now have a BRAND NEW HOME in a BRAND NEW NEIGHBORHOOD …right in the city of Seattle. As you start touring the rest of this web site, we invite you to SUBSCRIBE so we can send you the latest offerings and updates available only to subscribers. Enjoy your visit and come back often. Making News![]() Design Perspectives: Take a look at how Southeast Seattle — that vast swath of under-appreciated land that stretches from Interstate 90 south to the city limits — has suffered from poverty and invisibility, but its time is coming. ![]() On Architecture: Seattle's newest Architect Daniel Solomon calls it "Seattle vernacular," which is a decent description of the simple multiplexes and rowhouses that compose the new public housing at Othello Station. ![]() Rich House, Poor House NewHolly, Southeast Seattle's experimental public-housing development, proves attractive to middle-class and low-income families alike. ![]() New buyers drawn to urban neighborhoods SEATTLE | Due to record sales and high buyer demand, the selection of homes available at Othello Station, in the heart of Seattle’s Beacon Hill neighborhood, has quickly narrowed. ![]() Reborn housing project reaches beyond the poor Frustrated in trying to find a bigger home for his family of four, Michael Aycock came across an ad for new houses on Beacon Hill, jumped in his car and drove there from West Seattle to check them out. Never mind it was 11 at night. |