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Downtown -  6 bedrooms, 5 baths Keeping Room Finished Basement Extra large bonus room upstairs Level Backyard, Premium lot Brick front, HardiplankMore Info -->


 
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Overview

 

Home Foreclosure

How to Find Foreclosure Listings


 

The process of Foreclosures is usually a lender, obtains a court ordered termination of a mortgagor's equitable right of redemption. The lender cannot secure that they can successfully repossess the property  when this equitable rights exists, so the lender seeks to foreclose the equitable right of redemption. It begins when a borrower/owner fails on loan payments usually mortgage payments and the lender files a public default notice.


This year Foreclosures in the Seattle area are increasing but were still below foreclosure figures in other cities, according the one of the leading foreclosure property marketer. By hiring and training thousands of new employees, loan servicer's are trying to catch up to the overwhelming customer's request. Through customer financial hardships banks are also trying to sort it.

 

 


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About Queen Anne Foreclosure



Queen Anne Hill is a neighborhood and hill in Seattle, Washington. The name of the hill is the highest hill in Seattle, Washington, with a maximum increase of 456 ft (139 m), although the city's highest point is appropriately named High Point West Seattle, is 520 feet (158 m). Queen Anne is situated just north of Seattle Center just south of Fremont and the entire Lake Washington Ship Canal. Hill early became a popular town in the economic and cultural elite to build their own apartment (the name derives architectural style, typical of so many of the early homes).


As a neighborhood toponym, Queen Anne Hill may refer to either the whole or a central residential and business district at the top of the hill. It is possible to distinguish between the Lower Queen Anne, also known as an upscale area that refers to the southern base of the hill, just north of Seattle Center.

Queen Anne bounded north by the Fremont Cut of the ship channel, beyond which is Fremont; on the west side of 15th Avenue W. and Elliott Avenue W., beyond which is Interbay, and Elliott Bay on the east by Aurora Avenue N. (Washington State Route 99), after which the lake is Westlake and Denny Way and in the south, beyond which is Belltown. Seattle Pacific University is located in the north from the slope of the Fremont.

Lower Queen Anne is a neighborhood in Seattle, Washington, at base of Queen Anne Hill. Although its boundaries are not precise, the toponym usually refers to the shopping, office and residential districts to the north and west of Seattle Center. Urban areas to the west of the Center is also known as uptown. Nearby is connected to Upper Queen Anne - the shopping district at the top of the hill - a very steep part of Queen Anne Avenue N. to balance the well-known that the memory is the cable cars that once ran up and down it.


Although the "Lower Queen Anne" and "uptown" is rarely used to refer to themselves from the Seattle Center, Seattle Center, many leading attractions abut the neighborhood, including the KeyArena (home of Seattle Supersonic, Seattle Storm and the Seattle Storm sports teams), exhibition Hall, McCaw Hall (home of Seattle Opera and Pacific Northwest Ballet), is intimae Playhouse (home theater is intimae company) and the Bagley Wright Theater (home of Seattle repertory), as well as the Mercer Arena.

Lower Queen Anne is also a three-screen movie theater, uptown, and that the councils of the Center for avant-garde theater and music.

Largely due to its proximity to Seattle Center, Lower Queen Anne is home to about 100 restaurants, bars, and fast-food places. It is also home to many small-and medium-sized high-tech companies, several of them made a lot of investment from Paul Allen. It was the home Quicksoft, the first commercial success of the company's score shareware.


Its main thoroughfares are Gilman Drive W., 15, Elliott, 10, 6, and 3 Avenues W. and Queen Anne, 5th, Taylor, and Aurora Avenues N. (North and South), and Denny Way, Mercer, Boston, W. McGraw, and W. Nickerson Streets and Queen Anne Drive (East and West). Portions of several of these streets reflect a comprehensive boulevard design by Frederick Law Olmstead, whose objective is the 3-mile loop around the Crown of the Hill, even though the project was never fully completed. Queen Anne can take Interstate 5 Mercer Street Exit (Exit 167).

History

Queen Anne of white settlement resulted from the arrival of the Denny Party West Seattle's Alki Point in November 1851. The following year, David Denny staked a claim to 320 acres (1.3 km) Lower Queen Anne land today bounded by Elliott Bay to the west, east of Lake Union, Mercer Street to the north and the south by Denny. Development of the Hill, which are called at different times North Seattle, Galer Hill and Eden Hill, was slow, but the arrival of Northern Pacific Railway (1883) and Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railroad (1887), the Great Seattle Fire and 1889, and the three cable car lines up the hill (1902), better questions. The hill was called "Queen Anne" by 1885, after the Queen Anne-style houses, which dominate the region.

The first television broadcast originating from the Pacific Northwest KRSC installations 3rd Avenue N. at Galer Street in 1948. In 1949, KING-TV bought the KRSC, it was the first such transaction in the history. Three years later, KOMO and KIRO installed in its tower followed in 1958.

In 1962, Lower Queen Anne became a site of the Century 21 Exposition, the world fair. The fairgrounds is now a campus of Seattle Center, home to the Pacific Science Center, Experience Music Project, Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame, the North terminal of the Seattle monorail, and KeyArena, home of Seattle Supersonic, Seattle Storm and the Seattle Storm of sports teams.

 



 

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