New Online App Guides You Through Everett’s Past
Editor’s note: Originally published October 24, 2018. Republished May 19, 2022.
It’s hard for me to choose my favorite old Everett building.
I love the “ghost town” vibe and creaky wooden 1920s track of the YMCA building, but I also like the Art Deco flourishes of the Main Library on Hoyt.

The Labor Temple was built in 1929 and was completed right before the Great Depression. // Historic Everett
If you, too, like walking downtown and ogling classy older buildings, try the city’s new walking tour app on your mobile device.
Presto! You have a knowledgeable local tour guide right in your pocket.
The digital guide will direct you on a tour through the downtown core: approximately a seven-by-four block radius hemmed in by Pacific and Everett Avenues to the north-south, and by Grand Avenue and Broadway on the east-west axis. The boundaries form a neat little walkable corridor that can be covered in a spare morning, afternoon, or evening.
Each of the 30 stops on the walking tour is accompanied by historical notes about the building’s history and architecture.
The tour includes a lot of architectural goodies that I already knew and many buildings that I didn’t know anything about, but have seen a million times.
The app organizes buildings into eras: You can sidewalk surf past edifices from the Rockefeller Boom, the Hill Revival, the Twenties Boom, or the Great Depression. These sortable time periods help the foot-traffic tourist to gain an appreciation for the stages of development in the nascent mill town.
Learn the often-surprising stories behind buildings you see every day and probably take for granted: the Monte Cristo Hotel, the Federal Building on Colby Avenue, and the Knights of Columbus Building.

This was Everett’s first library. It held 1,000 titles. It’s since been a funeral parlor and an office for county executives. It’s one of 30 stops on the walking tour. // Snohomish County
Next time you’re downtown, take a stroll through the past. You may be startled by what’s always been right there in front of your very eyes.
ACCESS THE SHORT OR LONG VERSIONS OF THE TOUR HERE.
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Richard Porter is a writer for Live in Everett.
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