The Southwest Seattle Historical Society is urging that the Seattle landmark, the Alki Homestead, be restored after it was damaged in a Jan. 16 fire.
The Southwest Seattle Historical Society, which runs the Log House Museum in Alki, is urging the preservation of the land-marked 100-year-old Alki Homestead Restaurant, previously Fir Lodge, since the January fire that damaged the building has made its future uncertain, according to a press release from the society.
"The Southwest Seattle Historical Society advocates protection and preservation of significant historic structures on the Duwamish Peninsula," read the release. "We nominated the Alki Homestead Restaurant building for city landmark status and the Seattle Landmarks Preservation Board designated it a Seattle landmark on Oct. 18, 1995. Then and today, the building needs preservation."
An early morning fire Jan. 16 damaged several parts of the structure including the dinging area and roof.
The Executive Board of the Southwest Seattle Historical Society states the following:
"The Alki Homestead, known 100 years ago as Fir Lodge, is a Seattle icon. It was the anchor of a beachfront estate created by the Bernard family. The carriage house that became the historical society’s Log House Museum is the only remaining structure of five outbuildings on that estate. Both the Homestead and The Log House Museum are–and should remain--vital and intertwined sites in our Seattle history for generations to come.
We support the building’s preservation. We urge:
-That the building be protected immediately in its damaged state: that the roof be covered, broken windows boarded up, and the entire structure protected from the elements and from intrusion;
- The yard and landscape be maintained, perhaps with help from neighborhood volunteers; and
- That all landmarked features be preserved in the restoration of the building.
We are confident that there are many ways in which the building can be used to insure that it has an economically viable future. We urge community support of a vision that restores the landmarked building and sustains the site as a valuable element of the Alki community, the Duwamish Peninsula, and the city of Seattle."
For more information, contact Judy Bentley, Board President, at 938-7687; Andrea Mercado, Log House Museum Director, 938-5293; or Ron Richardson, board member, at 935-8981.