
1965. Stone. Glass. Still the most interesting house on the block.

Floor-to-ceiling glass over a 2-car garage. The architecture was always the point.

Twenty-seven feet of foyer. The house announces itself before you reach the living room. Original 1965 — pebbled glass sidelights, louvered closet doors, embossed tile floor.

Floor-to-ceiling stone, dramatic vaulted ceiling, original iron railing. Sixty years and it's still the best seat in the house.

Original mid-century globe chandelier lights the staircase — cleaned, relamped, reinstalled. Some things are worth saving.

Formal dining, hardwood floor, open to the kitchen. The kind of room that gets used.

East-facing picture window. Morning light, side yard greenery. The louvered door closes off the kitchen when dinner calls for it.

The window makes the kitchen. Granite counters, recessed lighting, yard view while you do the dishes. Pass-through to the breakfast nook and second dining area beyond.

Brick accent wall, recessed lighting, double sink, big window. The bones are there.

Double wall ovens, track lighting — and that's the stone fireplace through the doorway.

Second dining area with picture window to the back patio, exterior door, and a built-in desk in the corner.

Concrete aggregate patio, mature shrubs, boulders, hammock, full sun. Seward Park summer starts here.

Pass-through counter with bar seating, built-in desk, painted brick column. Casual dining, homework, morning coffee — same room.

The primary suite is — let's be honest — a master suite. Self-contained escape with two closets, patio access, en suite bath, and room for a king.

The other angle — patio access, en suite bath just through the door, radiant heat. Every base covered but the updates. A blank slate — yours to make, with brand-new carpet already in place.

Primary en suite — double sinks, walk-in shower. Ready to shine with modern upgrades and your own vision.

The full bath — granite counter, pendant lighting, mosaic tile floor, tub. Well appointed for its era and ready to serve the whole main floor.

The second bedroom has room for a queen, a west-facing window full of trees, and brand-new carpet underfoot.

Bedroom 3 — open closet, west-facing territorial view, brand-new carpet. Same story as bedroom 2, different angle.

Five bedrooms and this. The front den is exceptional — vaulted ceiling, new oversized corner window with south-facing territorial views, wood-paneled wall with built-in shelving, brand-new carpet. Call it what you need it to be.

The lower level rec room — nearly 500 square feet, 8-foot ceilings, brick fireplace wall, wet bar, recessed lighting, tile floor. The lower level's main event.

The rec room keeps going — and so do the options. Extended living, multigenerational rhythm, rental potential — the layout makes the questions feel practical. Buyer to verify all uses and permitting.

Lower bedroom 4 — west-facing window, recessed lighting, full closet with its own light, tile floor. Front of the lower level, just behind the garage.

Large laundry room with exterior door, two closets with lights, upper cabinets, washer/dryer, recessed lighting. The start of a future second kitchen conversation for this level — buyer to verify all uses and permitting.

The bonus room. Game room, flex space, music room, whatever the lower level needs it to be.

The same chimney that anchors the rec room fireplace rises through here as exposed brick. (The lower level has a spine.) Guitar optional.

Lower level 3/4 bath — vanity, shower, window. Does its job. Functional, original, yours to improve.

The lower level's private retreat — generous, quiet, and tucked at the back of the house. West-facing window with treetop view, recessed lighting, tile floor. The fifth bedroom that makes the bedroom count feel real.

Sixty years in, and it still puts on a show.

6,300 SF lot in Seward Park. The red line shows where it ends — which takes a moment.

Seward Park. Seattle skyline on the horizon. The neighborhood speaks for itself.

Martha Washington Park, Pritchard Island Bathing Beach, Seward Park, and Lake Washington shores — minutes away.