Thompson Seattle


Thompson Seattle sits at the intersection of Pike Place Market's foot traffic and Puget Sound's waterline, occupying an Olson Kundig-designed glass tower at 110 Stewart Street. With 30 distinct floor plans across 12 stories, floor-to-ceiling water views from the seventh floor up, and a location walkable to the waterfront, First Hill, and Belltown, it positions itself in Seattle's design-forward hotel tier without the full-service spa amenities of its larger rivals.
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- Address
- 110 Stewart St, Seattle, WA 98101
- Phone
- +1 206-623-4600
- Website
- hyatt.com

Where the City Grid Meets the Sound
Stand on the corner of First Avenue and Stewart Street on a clear morning and you get two Seattles at once: the compressed urban density of the Pike Place corridor behind you, and Puget Sound opening up in front, Elliott Bay catching whatever light the Pacific Northwest is willing to offer. Thompson Seattle is built precisely on that threshold, and its Olson Kundig-designed glass tower doesn't try to soften the contrast. It amplifies it. Floor-to-ceiling windows run through the restaurant, the meeting spaces, the corridors, and most importantly the rooms, so that the city's particular quality of light, cool, directional, often theatrical, becomes a feature of the stay rather than something happening outside it.
That positioning at 110 Stewart Street puts the property within walking distance of Pike Place Market, the waterfront museums, and the concentrated restaurant and bar blocks of Belltown and Capitol Hill. For guests who prefer to explore a city on foot rather than from a car window, this part of downtown Seattle rewards the approach. The hotel operates valet parking only. Guests can request 24-hour room service.
The Architecture of Light and View
Design-led hotels in American cities tend to resolve the tension between architectural ambition and room practicality in one of two ways: they prioritize the lobby and public spaces as the statement, with functional rooms behind, or they invert that hierarchy and put the experience in the private spaces. Thompson Seattle sits firmly in the second camp. The 12-story glass structure generated 30 different room floor plans, a consequence of the building's geometry rather than a marketing conceit, which means repeat visits can feel materially different depending on assignment.
Rooms carry hardwood floors, a white and gray palette, and modern artwork. Beds are dressed in custom 400-thread-count Sferra linens. The bathroom products are supplied by D.S. & Durga, the Brooklyn-based perfume house with a recognizable olfactory identity that sits well above standard hotel amenity tier. Smart TVs allow iPad streaming. These are the details that separate a competently designed room from one that holds attention past the first twenty minutes. The honor bar extends beyond the usual spirits and snacks to include local craft beer and spa masks, a pairing that tells you something about the hotel's read of its guest.
The absence of an on-site spa is a real gap when compared with properties like the Four Seasons Hotel Seattle or the Fairmont Olympic Hotel, both of which carry full wellness facilities. Thompson Seattle's answer is a referral network of local providers for in-room treatments. Whether that substitution works depends entirely on how central spa access is to your stay. For guests whose priority is location and design rather than wellness programming, it's a reasonable trade. For those accustomed to properties like Canyon Ranch Tucson or Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort, where the wellness infrastructure is the point, the gap will register.
The Room Categories Worth Knowing
Not all rooms here perform equally. The hotel's inspector notes a clear preference for the Water Corner Studio and the Water View Studio Suite, both of which provide double water exposures rather than a single sightline. Rooms on the seventh floor and above deliver unobstructed views of Puget Sound and the nearby islands, which is where the floor-to-ceiling window architecture earns its purpose. Below the seventh floor, city-view rooms look onto First Avenue or Stewart Street, still engaging, particularly at street-level hours, but a different proposition than the Sound-facing upper rooms.
The differential between a city-view room and a Water Corner Studio isn't just aesthetic. On a clear day, and Seattle's shoulder seasons in May and September can deliver genuinely clear days, the view from the upper floors reads as a geographic argument for the Pacific Northwest. The Sound, the islands, the line of the Olympic Peninsula in the distance. This is the kind of view that shifts from pleasant to purposeful, and it justifies the premium over lower-floor allocations.
Guests considering the Seattle design-hotel tier more broadly will find instructive comparisons in properties like Hotel 1000, Lotte Hotel Seattle, and Ace Hotel Seattle, each of which occupies a different register of the city's hotel market. Hotel Ballard and Hotel Five serve different neighbourhoods entirely. 11th Avenue Inn Bed and Breakfast operates at a completely different scale. Thompson Seattle positions itself above the boutique mid-range and below the full-service luxury tier, which in practice means it carries more design credibility than the former and more intimacy than the latter.
Eating and Drinking in the Building and Beyond
The hotel's restaurant shares the building's commitment to natural light, with large windows running through the dining space. For guests who want to move beyond the property, the immediate neighbourhood is among the most walkable dining corridors in the city. Pike Place Market is a few blocks away, along with the concentrated restaurant blocks along Pike and Pine Streets toward Capitol Hill. For a fuller picture of Seattle's restaurant scene, the EP Club Seattle guide maps the city's dining across neighbourhoods and categories.
The 24-hour room service covers late arrivals and early departures without requiring a separate meal plan.
How Thompson Seattle Sits in a Broader American Design Hotel Context
Olson Kundig is a Seattle practice with a distinctive material vocabulary, raw steel, glass, concrete, objects that feel engineered rather than decorated. Having that firm's DNA in the building places Thompson Seattle in a specific architectural conversation, one that extends beyond the Pacific Northwest. Properties like Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur and Troutbeck in Amenia occupy a similar register of design-led American hospitality, where the physical environment is the primary editorial statement. SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg pursues a related logic in wine country. At the international end of the same spectrum, properties like Aman Venice and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz demonstrate how far the design-as-identity argument can extend when budget and setting allow. Thompson Seattle doesn't compete at that altitude, but it argues its case clearly within the American urban boutique tier.
The property is well located and well designed, with views that improve when the weather cooperates.
Planning Your Stay
The hotel is valet-only, so driving guests should factor that into arrival timing, particularly during Pike Place Market peak hours when Stewart Street traffic can compress. Rooms on the seventh floor and above are worth requesting directly at booking, and the floor plan variation across 30 configurations means there's no guarantee of view without explicit communication. Thompson Seattle's appeal lies in its location density and architectural coherence.
A Pricing-First Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Awards |
|---|---|
| Thompson SeattleThis venue — the venue you are viewing | |
| Four Seasons Hotel Seattle | |
| Hotel 1000 | Michelin 1 Key |
| Lotte Hotel Seattle | Michelin 2024 Key |
| Tulalip Resort Casino | |
| Fairmont Olympic Hotel - Seattle |
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Sleek mid-century modern interiors with warm hardwood floors, crisp whites, and floor-to-ceiling windows creating a sophisticated urban retreat.



















