Effervescent light and glorious views from every level of this newly-constructed, gorgeous home on the northernmost point of beautiful Magnolia. This quintessentially Seattle spot exudes the sophistication and charm that make this home oh so special: Seals, sea lions, seagulls, salt water, Ray boathouse, Discovery Park! It's sparkling new yet feels instantly welcoming. The main floor offers Rec room/office, stunning powder room, kitchen with eating island & pantry, living and dining rooms and French doors to view deck. Upper level offers 3 bedrooms plus a primary with another view deck, laundry and 2 full baths. Lower level serves as a spacious ADU with bedroom, full bath, laundry, kitchen, living, office space and garage access... or use as 3rd level of home.
Offered At
$2,747,000
Bedrooms
5
Bathrooms
3.5
Square Feet
3,500
Year Built
2021
MLS Number
1831132
Newly
Constructed
3 View Decks &
2 Patios
Energy Efficient AC & Heating
Cat 5 Wiring Throughout
Lower Level
ADU
We invite you to be a part of the bucolic and majestic history of Salmon Bay and the rest of the beautiful Magnolia neighborhood.
Please read the heartfelt letter from the builders of this fine home below. (Click to view)
After considering Shilsholia, which sounds similar to the native name for this waterway and means “threading the bead,” Lawtonwood got its name by vote of its residents in 1925.
(Courtesy of Museum of History and Industry)
It was not long after the photograph taken by Anders Wilse in approx. 1900 was recorded that the Army Corps started dredging the channel in preparation for the ship canal. Throughout the 1890s, smaller “lightening ships” hauled cut lumber from the many Ballard mills on Salmon Bay to the schooners anchored in deep water off of Shilshole Bay
Ambrose Kiehl, the engineer organist, who laid out Fort Lawton, and prepared it for the forces. Here - circa 1899 - he has taken to a stump to do some of his early surveying for the fort. Beyond him is the entrance the waterway that will become a blending of Shilshole and Salmon Bays
Salmon Bay Charlie and his wife lived in their cedar plank home on the south shore of Magnolia’s Salmon Bay. For half a century Charlie, also known as Siwash Charlie, sold salmon, clams and berries to the first settlers and later to the soldiers at Fort Lawton. From his home on Salmon Bay, Salmon Bay Charlie gathered clams and netted salmon for sale or barter with Ballard residents. After the death of Chief Seattle’s daughter Princess Angeline in 1896, Charlie was the community’s best known native. He was especially popular among children to whom he would tell stories of his own youth.
Charlie’s native name was HWelch’teed, and he probably was the last of the Sheel-shol-ashbsh (hence Shilshole) group that centered on this once narrow Shilshole-Salmon Bay inlet to the fresh water interior. (“Sheel-shol-ashbsh” translates to “threading the bead,” which was descriptive of the canoe trip to lakes Union and Washington.) The Shilshole Indians were one of the eight or nine principal tribes who lived in what we now call Greater Seattle.
View of the “Great Northern bridge” when it was nearly new.
Views look from the north side of the bay.
Listing Flyer
Neighborhood
History