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Three Trails from Emerald City Comic Con

25,000 fans will pack the convention center this week. Here's what's outside the doors.

Emerald City Comic Con runs March 5--8 at the Seattle Convention Center. The show floor fills both buildings -- the Summit on Pike and the Arch on Pine -- with 25,000 fans across four days, and the neighborhood around them has more going on than the program guide suggests.

Here are three walking trails through the surrounding area, each designed for a different gap in your schedule.


Pike-Pine to Waterfront

When: Lunch break, or any gap longer than 30 minutes

Start at the convention center and head west -- downhill through downtown to Pike Place Market and the waterfront. The trail covers three zones: the convention base area with comics shops, cosplay supply stops, and evening options near the center; Pike Place Market with Golden Age Collectibles and market food; and the waterfront for decompression walks along Elliott Bay, the Great Wheel, and Olympic Sculpture Park.

Walk the trail


Melrose Loop: Capitol Hill

When: Mid-afternoon break between panels

The Summit building sits right at the edge of Capitol Hill. The Melrose Loop covers the nearest stretch of the neighborhood -- food, coffee, drinks, snacks, late-night spots, and gift shops all within a tight walking radius. Highlights include Melrose Market, Sankaku Onigiri, Victrola Coffee, Still Liquor, and Voodoo Doughnut.

Walk the trail


Seattle Center & Queen Anne: Monorail to MoPOP and Beyond

When: After the show floor closes

The Seattle Monorail runs from Westlake Center to Seattle Center in 90 seconds. The trail starts with the monorail ride and fans out from there: MoPOP and its pop culture collections, Seattle Center icons like the Space Needle and KEXP, Uptown restaurants and bars including Dick's Drive-In and Blue Highway Games, and the climb up to Kerry Park for the skyline view.

Walk the trail


What you're standing next to

Comic Con fills both convention center buildings this week. The Arch alone is 435,000 square feet of convention space that activates for events like this one and goes quiet between them. No public programming. No community access. No permanent tenants besides the convention center authority.

Seattle Commons is a proposal to change that: convert the Arch into a year-round public facility operated by Seattle Center -- the same team that runs Bumbershoot, the Bite of Seattle, and the rally you might remember from the Super Bowl parade.

This week, the building is full. Most weeks, it isn't. That's the question Commons is asking.


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