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Seattle's historic Georgetown Steam Plant still burns for the arts

caption: Audience members watch as actors climb a ladder in the 118-year-old Georgetown Steam Plant in October 2024.
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Audience members watch as actors climb a ladder in the 118-year-old Georgetown Steam Plant in October 2024.
Nebula / Cafe Nordo

The Georgetown Steam Plant used to generate power for Seattle's trolley system.

Now, it's serving as a source of inspiration for arts organizations.

Inside the steam plant, a theater group is putting on a sort of haunted house/play called "Ghosts of Nebula."

Artistic Director Erin Brindley says the soaring industrial space is part of the experience.

caption: Actor Ray Tagavilla on a catwalk in the historic Georgetown Steam Plant.
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Actor Ray Tagavilla on a catwalk in the historic Georgetown Steam Plant.
Bruce Tom

"As you first walk into the Turbine Room, you're on the ground floor, and there are actors up about 35 feet up on a small catwalk," she says. "And then, a little bit later, you're on that small catwalk, and actors are down on the ground where you were."

caption: Actor Lola Rei in the Georgetown Steam Plant in 2024.
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Actor Lola Rei in the Georgetown Steam Plant in 2024.
Bruce Tom

The use of the steam plant is part of a larger Georgetown effort to reinvent the Seattle neighborhood as an arts hub.

Sam Farrazaino is a Georgetown artist working to make the steam plant an incubator for artistic projects like this.

“I refer to the steam plant as the industrial cathedral," Farrazaino says. "When people walk in here they are just overwhelmed with inspiration.”

caption: The Georgetown Steam Plant was constructed more than 100 years ago to provide power for Seattle, and especially for streetcars.
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The Georgetown Steam Plant was constructed more than 100 years ago to provide power for Seattle, and especially for streetcars.
KUOW photo/Joshua McNichols

The theatrical group Cafe Nordo has been casting around for a new home for months. The group originally focused on combining food and theater. It survived the pandemic by sending out date-night boxes with food and links to theatrical videos for home viewing.

caption: Erin Brindley and Terry Podgorski of Cafe Nordo hand off boxes to be delivered to customers during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2021.
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Erin Brindley and Terry Podgorski of Cafe Nordo hand off boxes to be delivered to customers during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2021.
KUOW Photo/Joshua McNichols

But the post-pandemic lull that has taken so many arts organizations out has led Nordo on a quest for a new home, and a new focus.

The Steam Plant is only a stop on the organization's journey to a permanent location. But it's helping Nordo, which is rebranding as Nebula, to rethink its future as one focused on "immersive theater," which combines architecturally rich, technologically enhanced environments with theater.

"Think of Meow Wolf," says Brindley, referring to an immersive experience company that's opened locations across several western states.

caption: Actor Ronnie Hill in "Ghosts of Nebula" at the Georgetown Steam Plant in October 2024.
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Actor Ronnie Hill in "Ghosts of Nebula" at the Georgetown Steam Plant in October 2024.
Bruce Tom

Helping arts organizations find their footing in an inspiring industrial space is the dream Sam Farrazaino has for the steam plant.

"People that want to just spend time and build that relationship with the steam plant, and with its individual parts, and see how the light is hitting it at different times," he says.

Farrazaino lists a revolving door of artists and arts organizations that have worked in the space, from photographers, painters, and dancers to a haunted house run by a math museum.

The steam plant is officially a national monument. It’s being partially preserved using money from the National Park Service.

Farrazaino wants it to become an important part of a developing arts district in Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood.

"Ghosts of Nebula" by Nordo plays at the Georgetown Steam Plant through November 2.

The Georgetown Steam Plant has an open house from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the second Saturday of every month.

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