Skip to content

Seattle Culture

Two New Apartment Buildings Anchor Bellevue’s Historic Neighborhood

Spotlight on Old Bellevue: The Meyden and Park 88

By Jake Laycock July 6, 2016

essentialsrealestate

This article originally appeared in the August 2016 issue of Seattle magazine.

Bellevue, the hub of the Eastside, has a downtown filled with high-tech corporate headquarters, luxury shopping centers and an ever increasing residential density. But tucked into this city’s growing skyline is a small neighborhood that reminds Bellevue of its small-town suburban beginnings. Old Bellevue—essentially the four blocks along Main Street between Bellevue Way and 100th Avenue NE—although not untouched by Bellevue’s residential real estate boom, still boasts small shops and independent restaurants. And now, two developments, Pillar Properties’ The Meyden and Murray Franklyn’s Park 88—both offering apartment rentals—have chosen to locate at the Bellevue Way end of this neighborhood.

“That section of Bellevue is really special,” says Diana Norbury of Pillar Properties. “It’s a small neighborhood…steeped in history.” That history is nodded to in The Meyden: a 254-unit luxury apartment building completed in February and named for William Meydenbauer, who settled in Bellevue in the mid-1800s. The property’s amenities include units with floor-to-ceiling windows, private courtyards and even a pet spa.


Murray Franklyn’s Park88 overlooks Bellevue’s Downtown Park. Photo by Jessica Blair.

Across the street from The Meyden is Park 88, a 158-unit residential development that opened last month. The building features units designed by local architecture firm Weber Thompson and a second location of Il Terrazzo Carmine, Pioneer Square’s celebrated Italian restaurant, housed on the ground floor of the building. “What makes Old Bellevue great are the businesses owned by locals and families,” says Trey Woodruff, Murray Franklyn’s director of marketing. “There is a great sense of community in this area.”

The Meyden

DATE OPENED: February 2016
DEVELOPER: Pillar Properties
ARCHITECT: Benson & Bohl Architects Inc.
NUMBER OF UNITS: 254; five residential stories
AVERAGE UNIT SIZE: 725 square feet; apartments range from studios to one- and two-bedroom units
PRICE RANGE PER MONTH: $1,395–$3,500
AMENITIES: Offers two private courtyards with large water features, state-of-the-art theater room and pet spas (taking “pet friendly” to a new level). Each unit features quartz countertops and stainless steel kitchen appliances, a washer and dryer, and central air conditioning. The building includes controlled-access parking.
GROUND-FLOOR RETAIL: The Meyden also houses CVS Pharmacy, Green Lake Jewelry Works, Whisk culinary school and tableware shop, Belle Pastry and Bellevue Barber Shop

Park 88

DATE OPENED: July 2016
DEVELOPER: Murray Franklyn
ARCHITECT: Weber Thompson
NUMBER OF UNITS: 158; eight residential stories
AVERAGE UNIT SIZE: 738 square feet; apartments range from one- to two-bedroom units
PRICE RANGE PER MONTH: $1,495-$3,895
AMENITIES: Offers full-building air conditioning, European-inspired Juliet balconies and full-vision, oversize windows to enhance spectacular views. Each kitchen features slab quartz countertops, and each unit offers central air conditioning as well as a washer and dryer.
GROUND-FLOOR business: The second location of celebrated Italian restaurant Il Terrazzo Carmine

 

Follow Us

Zillow Searches: Strange, Odd, Weird

Zillow Searches: Strange, Odd, Weird

Haunted house? Roller coaster? Zillow reveals most popular and unusual home searches.

In Washington state, it’s vegetable gardens. In Nevada, it’s huge mansions, and in Michigan it’s laser tag. Seattle online home marketplace Zillow is having fun this holiday season by identifying popular and unusual home searches on its platform the past year. Many residents across Washington state are apparently interested in backyard vegetable ventures. The company…

Where Are The Most Affordable Houses in Washington State?

Where Are The Most Affordable Houses in Washington State?

Even then, the cost is surprising

You’d have to live without urban amenities. The population is dropping, only 486 people. The entire town was evacuated in the summer of 2022 because of an approaching wildfire that destroyed 10 houses. But in Lind — 216 miles southeast of Seattle — you can buy a house for an average of just $183,774, making…

Interior Motives

Interior Motives

Seattle’s LeeAnn Baker brings a touch of Northwest elegance to her designs

LeeAnn Baker couldn’t wait for new home magazines to arrive. When they did, she immediately flipped to the back. She wanted to look at floor plans. That passion for interior design really blossomed more than 30 years ago while attending The New York School of Interior Design, where she worked alongside interior designers and architects…

Among the Trees

Among the Trees

Creative San Juan project seeks harmony with nature

Harriett “Hatty” Hatch began her career as a confident art teacher, but uncertain artist. In time, she would voluntarily check herself into the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. “I just wanted to be able to design a stable for a horse,” she recalls, “but I didn’t have a horse.” She eventually crossed trails with…