Food & Drink

McMenamins Opens its First Seattle-area Hotel

The Oregon-based family business to convert Art Deco Anderson School into its signature hotel

By Seattle Mag October 13, 2015

mcmenamins1115_0

This article originally appeared in the November 2015 issue of Seattle magazine.

When the City of Bothell invited McMenamins to consider the city’s landmark 1930s-era Art Deco Anderson School as a site for its first Seattle-area hotel, the Oregon-based family business, led by brothers Mike and Brian McMenamin, was faced with an exciting, and perhaps slightly daunting, challenge. The school would be the largest historic property the hospitality group had ever converted into one of its signature hotel/breweries.

McMenamins went for it, using the former junior high school’s sprawling spaces as inspiration for fun features. The redevelopment preserves the school’s pool, adding a tiki theme to the pool building. The 72 classrooms in the main school structure have been dressed up as hotel rooms, while other buildings house the on-site brewery, movie theater, day spa, restaurants, bars and event spaces, with public gardens planted among them. The place is full of McMenamins’ signature eclectic artwork and murals, which incorporate local history as well as McMenamin family and brewpub lore.

The McMenamin brothers are known best for converting historic buildings in Oregon, such as Masonic lodges and schools, into family-friendly, cozy and quirky brewpubs, hotels and theater pubs. “This is probably the best project we’ve ever seen as far as location,” Mike McMenamin says. “The buildings are beautiful—the University of Washington [Bothell campus] has 10,000 people right there, there’s high tech everywhere, there’s Chateau Ste. Michelle and all the tasting rooms close by. It’s all about community.” Opens 10/15, Bothell, 18607 Bothell Way NE; 425.398.0122; mcmenamins.com/AndersonSchool 

 

Follow Us

Trailblazing Women: Jean Smart

Trailblazing Women: Jean Smart

'Hacks' star reflects on her career and how growing up in Seattle shaped her

It's almost noon, and Jean Smart is present as ever during a phone call. She actually asks the first question, about whether I’m a Seattle native. “Oh, you are!” she exclaims, her voice lighting up with even more warmth when she finds out I am a fellow University of Washington alum and, like her youngest,

Dark Emotions, Lighthearted Interactions

Dark Emotions, Lighthearted Interactions

Whim W’Him presents two emotion-inducing premieres to close out the season

Last weekend, choreographer Olivier Wevers stood on the stage at Cornish Playhouse, asking the audience to drop their preconceived notions and open their hearts to art...

Abrupt Write Turn

Abrupt Write Turn

Zachary Kellian’s decision to pursue a new career nets him recognition

Zachary Kellian ditched a career he loved, as he puts it, “to live out a dream.”

Finding Place in Pictures

Finding Place in Pictures

Artist Sky Hopinka’s first solo museum exhibit in the northwest showcases his creative approach to language and identity

“I had cassette tapes and workbooks, but it was hard because I was living in Washington, and my tribal language has roots in Wisconsin,” Sky Hopinka says. Learning alone, he could listen to prerecorded Hocak phrases and practice writing letters and words, but an essential component was missing — another person to speak with. Photo