![]() Located at the back of the Switchboard Room, you’ll see what looks like a broom closet. Each flip of a button calls up another staged telephone exchange you can move the wires around the switchboard - a nice distraction for tiny fingers. Featuring one of the most hands-on part of the tour, this room offers switchboards where you listen in on the pre-recorded conversations between Tenants of the Tower Past. ![]() But before catching a lift to the top - more on that soon - duck into the Switchboard Room. Moving on, you’ll take a flight of stairs to a bank of elevators. Also, keep an ear out the walls supposedly “whisper” with stories from the past though I couldn’t hear much with my noisy crew. Mainly, you’ll read, but the informative text is on the shorter, punchier side, making it fun and easy to read aloud. It’ll feel interactive it’s really not (though it is fairly kid-proof most of the props are fastened to their respective spots). Archival footage plays and vintage newspaper clippings line the walls. The Radio Room is one of several located on the ground floor in the Smith Tower’s new tour | Photo credit: Elisabeth KramerĪ series of rooms decked out with classic 1920s props set the mood. Behind the curtain, located at the store’s rear, is where the fun really starts. As easy as it is to get lost in Provisions, push through. Located on the ground floor, Smith Tower Provisions has all the customary tourist trappings (postcards, magnets, totes) as well more local-friendly fare (growlers, Fran’s Chocolates, Full Tilt Ice Cream soda fountain). In a surprising reversal of the amusement-park-ride-ends-in-a-gift-store trope, you start this tour in a gift store. No need to listen to a guide drone on about historic Seattle instead, you can explore the tower at your leisure. That’s perfect if you’ve got kids in tow. The new tour - called “The Legends of Smith Tower” and opening to the public today (August 25) - is self-guided. Pioneer Square’s Smith Tower, aka “Seattle’s original skyscraper,” offers a new take on a classic tour, taking visitors back to when our beloved city was a writhing mass of rum-running cops, basement speakeasies and ne're-do-well industrialists (think Boardwalk Empire set on Elliott Bay). ![]() Time travel just got a lot more affordable. When it opened in 1914, Smith Tower was the tallest building west of the Mississippi | Photo credit: Smith Tower ![]()
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