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Click areas of the map to learn about the neighborhood and quick search homes and condos for sale.
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Neighborhoods
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Madison Park:
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The Madison Park neighborhood has attracted Seattle's wealthiest families for generations. The underlying wealth is reflected in the quality of homes, restaurants and specialty shops located under broad-limbed trees at the east end of Madison Street. The commercial hub is at the foot of Madison, near the west end of the Evergreen Point Bridge.
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Washington Park:
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Southest of East Madison Street along the shores of Lake Washington, the homes are predominately single family residences.
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Broadmoor:
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Private, gated community surrounding the Broadmoor Golf Club. Substantial older homes, brick construction on ivy and tree-lined streets.
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Montlake:
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The nearness to the city and to nature have long made Montlake one of Seattle's most enviable neighborhoods. Its tree-lined streets and well-tended homes exude a tweedy prosperity, and almost every spot in Montlake is only moments away from parkland or a bike trail or the lakeshore. The few blocks of most desirable homes sandwiched between the Montlake Cut and 520 is known simply as "The Cut."
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Arboretum:
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The neighborhood surrounding the Washington Park Arboretum, 230 acres owned and managed by the University of Washington with collections of oaks, conifers, camellias, Japanese maples and hollies that are known internationally as our country's largest.
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Denny Blaine:
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The Denny-Blaine neighborhood of Seattle is located on Lake Washington between Madison Park and Madrona. It was developed just after the turn of the century by Elbert F. Blaine, an attorney and former Seattle Parks Commissioner, and by Charles L. Denny, son of Seattle founders Arthur Denny and Mary Boren Denny. They designed the neighborhood to follow the contours of the land, and included a series of hillside parks. The lots intermingle with streets, lanes, parks, fountains, and cul-de-sacs, virtually all of which have views of Lake Washington.
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Capitol Hill:
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Capitol Hill is one of Seattle's early prestigious neighborhoods, with its big houses and Volunteer Park. The housing styles are quite mixed, from the many view condos to the older neighborhood mansions on the north of Capitol Hill. On the west slope of Capitol Hill is Seattle's most bohemian neighborhood, catering to a younger demographic and embracing an array of people and cultures.
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Madison Valley:
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Often overlooked as an intersection between better-known neighborhoods, Madison Valley is nestled between the funky, body-pierced Capitol Hill, the affluent lakeview homes of Madison Park, and the more modest Central Area.
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Madrona:
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The neighborhood is divided by 34th Avenue, with the more pricey houses found to the east (by the shores of Lake Washington), and the lower/middle priced property to the west, towards Seattle's Central District.
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Leschi:
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Leschi began as a neighborhood served by a cable car that went from Pioneer Square to Lake Washington along Yesler Way. It is a place of steep hillsides and ravines, one of the scenic neighborhoods along the Lake Washington Boulevard.
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First Hill:
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Also known as Pill Hill, this neighborhood is the site of five major Seattle hospitals. Many older apartments, condos and homes.
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