
A profile view of the home at dusk, with downtown Seattle and the Space Needle glowing in the background.

Aerial twilight shot placing the home in the context of the downtown Seattle skyline and the lights ringing Lake Union.

The spacious great room: seating and fireplace by the windows, a built-in two-person office tucked into the corner with full views of all waterfront activities from every angle.

A credenza grounds the elevated dining room, with skylights above and the Gas Works Park view cut into the far wall like a living painting.

The rooftop deck umbrella open, chairs lined up along a partial glass windscreen framing the lake.

Corner windows wrap the living room in water and sky; a built-in window seat with storage runs beneath the glass.

A closer read on the window seat, with Space Needle and Queen Anne Hill views.

The living room's gas fireplace, built-in window seat, and drop-down movie screen make for a remarkable winter evening; the view of yachts parked just past the glass make for a remarkable summer day.

From the dining table, the view runs uninterrupted past the credenza and living room to Lake Union — boats in the foreground, water and sky everywhere.

The dining room opens through sliding glass to a small "bistro" deck framed by custom glass fish artwork that serves as a privacy panel — the kind of detail you only get in an architect-designed home.

Built-in oven and microwave, glass cooktop, and skylights flooding the extensive counterspace: the kitchen is laid out for someone who genuinely uses it.

Cherry cabinetry, granite counters, and a stainless French-door fridge anchor a U-shaped kitchen that makes cooking feel effortless.

The long serving bar connects the kitchen to the dining and living rooms, with the lake and a passing fleet of boats filling the windows beyond.

A quieter rooftop moment — comfortable chairs, a passing cruiser, and the iron silhouette of Gas Works Park.

The rooftop deck: colorful Adirondack chairs, room for a large dining table, irrigated planters, and Gas Works Park directly across the water.

Looking south from the roof: the Space Needle, the Queen Anne skyline, and the south end of Lake Union in one frame.

The Space Needle from the rooftop with the adjacent downtown skyline — the view that makes the top floor an event.

The primary suite with its built-in king captain's bed, two sets of sliders to private boat decks, and a Gas Works view from the pillow.

From another angle: the primary suite looks directly over open water, sliders wide enough to let the lake into the room.

In the primary suite, sliding doors frame a neighboring yacht, and a reading chair catches the late-afternoon light.

The primary bath: double sinks on a green-veined vanity, a soaking tub and glass shower, and a wrap of stone-look tile.

The guest suite with its wall of cherry cabinetry concealing custom twin XL Murphy beds — a true second bedroom that doubles as a study, studio, or workout room when guests aren't in town.

The guest en-suite bath: a glass shower and a band of iridescent mosaic tile that catches the light.

The downstairs utility room is more workshop than laundry room, with a butcher-block workbench, deep sink, pegboard wall, full laundry, and a tankless water heater tucked behind a wall of cherry cabinetry.

The entry: tile floors, a beautiful solid wood front door, and the staircase pulling you up to the view from the living room.

The side and water elevation show the home's three levels — entry, main living, rooftop — and the slip that runs its full length.

The front façade from the dock: modern, gray-on-teal, with mustard-trimmed window reveals and a glimpse of the rooftop deck overhead.

A drone's-eye sweep shows the rooftop deck in use and the home's enviable position near the head of the dock.

There are two secure garage spaces in the underground garage, both with individual EV chargers, plus a private storage unit and extra storage cabinets.

Roanoke Reef with downtown Seattle and the Space Needle behind — the home lives inside one of the most iconic urban waterscapes in the country.

A wider aerial takes in the entire south end of Lake Union and the downtown skyline.

The community in context: a tight row of architect-designed floating homes between Eastlake's tree-lined hillside and the open lake.

Looking toward the I-5 bridge, with the home anchored on the front row — a reminder that this is an end-of-dock, water-on-three-sides address.

From the window seat, the Space Needle and Queen Anne lights come up under a streaky pink sky — a nightly, free show.

The home glowing from the water at dusk: warm interiors visible through every pane, rooftop deck lit above, and a purple sky folding over the city.

Golden hour giving way to blue: the Seattle skyline glows across Lake Union, with the home's rooftop deck in the glitter below.

A twilight view west across Lake Union, with Gas Works Park and the distant ridge of the Olympic Mountains catching the last color of the day.

Roanoke Reef from above: a tightly-knit community of floating homes at the northeast edge of Lake Union, with the home positioned on the highly sought-after front row.

A high-up aerial shows the I-5 bridge, the University District, and the dense glow of surrounding neighborhoods — a reminder of just how central this address is.