- Fremont Drug Company in Seattle, Part Three: from Drugstore to Red Door
The Red Door restaurant was in the Fremont Drug Company building which was moved to its present site, 3401 Evanston Avenue, in the year 2001 This original Fremont Drug Company building was built in 1895 at 3401 Fremont Avenue
- Seattle’s iconic The Red Door announces it is closing after 31+ years
One of Seattle’s first bars to focus on craft beer, The Red Door, just announced that it will close at the end of its current lease Back then, we called them microbrews and The Red Door in Fremont was one of the only places in the city where you could find more than one or two of them on tap
- The Red Door in Fremont Will Close in March | Eater Seattle
The Red Door — which has been serving well-loved craft beers and bar bites since 1988 — announced that it will close in early March at the end of its current lease “We evaluated options for
- Red Door, in Seattles Fremont neighborhood, to close after more than . . .
In 2001, the building proved itself so valuable, the entire thing was moved just a block from the corner of 34th and Fremont to make room for a new mixed-use development
- Meet The ‘Fremont Tavern’ Building - Fremocentrist
In 1988, the building underwent what Tobin described as a “major remodel,” including converting the upstairs into office space and the former Fremont Tavern into the Red Door
- Fremont’s Red Door to close in March - My Ballard
After 31 years in Fremont, Red Door has announced it will close permanently in March The owners posted the announcement on their Facebook page yesterday, saying they’re closing at the end of their current lease
- Red Door Closing – Wallyhood
In 1903, perhaps concerned with the disruption and even demolition that might be caused by the construction of the canal, the owners picked the building up and moved it to the corner of 34th and Fremont Ave, where Starbucks sits today
- A moving effort to keep the Door open | The Seattle Times
In what has come to symbolize change in the so-called Center of the Universe, a transition some marketing wizard dubbed the Miracle on 34th Street, the Red Door, a Fremont fixture for 15 years,
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