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Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle)

1900s architecture in the United States1908 establishments in Washington (state)Buildings and structures in SeattleCentral District, SeattleDefunct fire stations in Washington (state)
Fire stations completed in 1908Fire stations on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington (state)National Register of Historic Places in SeattleSeattle Fire DepartmentWashington (state) building and structure stubs
CAMP Firehouse 03
CAMP Firehouse 03

Fire Station No. 23 is a former fire station located in the Central District of Seattle, Washington listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was remodelled as the Cherry Hill Community Center in 1970, and served as the headquarters of Centerstone (formerly the Central Area Motivational Program, or CAMP).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle)
19th Avenue, Seattle Central District

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Wikipedia: Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.608888888889 ° E -122.30722222222 °
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Address

19th Avenue 724
98122 Seattle, Central District
Washington, United States
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CAMP Firehouse 03
CAMP Firehouse 03
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Nearby Places

KSTW

KSTW (channel 11) is a television station licensed to Tacoma, Washington, United States, serving the Seattle area with programming from The CW. Owned and operated by the CBS News and Stations group, the station maintains studios on East Madison Street in Seattle's Cherry Hill neighborhood, and its transmitter is located on Capitol Hill east of downtown. As the first station to sign on in Tacoma (and second in the Seattle metropolitan area overall), KSTW initially signed on in March 1953 as KTNT-TV, the area's CBS affiliate under the ownership of the Tacoma News Tribune. The station lost the affiliation when Seattle-licensed KIRO-TV signed on in 1958; both stations shared the affiliation for two years after their owners agreed to settle an antitrust lawsuit over the switch. The station became KSTW in 1974 when it was acquired by a forerunner of Gaylord Broadcasting; it subsequently became one of the strongest independent stations in the country over two decades, reaching regional superstation status with widespread carriage on cable television systems in Washington and neighboring states/provinces. KSTW rejoined CBS in 1995 during a nationwide affiliation shuffle; two years later, the station became a UPN owned-and-operated station via a three-way deal involving it and KIRO-TV, which led it to become that of The CW when UPN shut down in 2006. KSTW is available on cable television to Canadian customers in southwestern British Columbia on numerous cable providers such as Shaw Cable and TELUS Optik TV in Vancouver, Victoria, Penticton and Kelowna.