Why book?
Buzz has been building for years around this carbon-positive boutique hotel in the 1907 Westland Building—equal parts art-driven gallery and rooftop-ready guesthouse. Perfectly situated between the city's two main stadiums and Pioneer Square’s creative trove, Populus Seattle has finally opened to full applause.
Set the scene
Opened in May 2025, Populus Seattle is poised to become a popular merging spot for artists, art dealers, and patrons in the Pioneer Square gallery scene. So far, the crowd skews young and fabulous. Outside, brick façades root guests in Seattle history; inside, exposed beams, Douglas fir, and commissioned works fill the foyer and stairwells. By day, the lobby doubles as a gallery; by night, rooftop bar Firn pours cocktails for sunset chasers and art lovers alike.
The backstory
After an impromptu name change from the more locally-tethered Hotel Westland, Populus Seattle opened in the RailSpur complex as the second hotel from Urban Villages, a developer in Denver. The brand has created organic goodwill within the art community for years through various rooftop one-offs and the Forest for the Trees art space. With the One Night, One Tree program and a landmark art initiative, it checks all the boxes for a newcomer to the Seattle scene. It also represents a massive, confident bet on Pioneer Square’s revival.
That energy carries through to the art initiative, where a rotating collection of more than 300 works by both established and emerging artists sets the tone. Sold works are regularly replaced by new pieces from Pacific Northwest creators—artists receive both a commission and a percentage of the sale—giving the hotel a unique role in Seattle’s art ecosystem.
The rooms
Rooms are cocoon-like, as if the world’s warmest, most inviting tree wrapped you in a big hug: plush and soft with koa wood offsetting brick walls and exposed beams. Velvet seating, brass fixtures, and local art framed in reclaimed timber reflect the neighborhood’s creative dynamic. Add city views, soaking tubs, and cozy window nooks with wool Pendleton blankets, and the picture paints itself. Amenities include Aesop toiletries, Monorail Espresso pour-overs, and Matouk bathrobes. Street noise seeps in occasionally, but it gives you the legit Pioneer Square experience.
Food and drink
Salt Harvest, the signature restaurant, centers on live-fire hearth cooking that brings out the depth in PNW seafood and farmland produce. Expect Neah Bay salmon kissed by the coals, charred but juicy pork chops, and a foraged mushroom spätzle melting under Beecher’s cheddar.
Head upstairs to Firn for Pioneer Square’s one-and-only rooftop bar. Nobody appreciates an obscure outdoor reference like a Seattleite: Firn is the name for partially compacted glacier snow, so naturally, the cocktails are all about ice—clear, shaved, and crushed—with inventive drinks like Green Acres (apple-shiso soju) and Diamond Sea (smoky, floral milk punch). The open-air bar draws both guests and locals looking for sunset views and seasonal spritzes. Try the Sea-Tini—a briny riff on the Vesper—for a seafaring Seattle-in-a-glass elixir.
The neighborhood/area
Pioneer Square is the only neighborhood in Seattle that gives off Greenwich Village–like energy: artsy, walkable, and always surprising. Nineteenth-century alleys connect the hotel to indie shops, buzzy patios, and the city’s top galleries—Foster/White, Greg Kucera, and more. While the area has seen ups and downs, it’s currently on the upswing. New openings are stacking up: Renee Erickson’s Sea Creatures group is set to debut three restaurants in the RailSpur complex, and the famed Death & Co bar will open its long-awaited Seattle outpost soon. First Thursdays—Seattle’s oldest art walk—feels like one big street festival and celebration of art.
The service
On my recent visit, the staff struck a balance between polished and personal: a helpful front desk, thoughtful room touches (like art catalogues and local coffee packs), and easy rooftop bar reservations. Ask about the latest art commissions and for a calendar of artist talks and RailSpur evening events.
For families
Still a work in progress for kid-specific offerings, but young guests will love the French toast and apple pie oats at Salt Harvest. The real perk is proximity—Seattle’s two major stadiums are literally across the street. For concert- or sports-bound teens, this is hands-down the best hotel within walking distance. If Populus had been open for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour at Lumen Field, rates might have hit five figures.
Eco effort
This is truly regenerative hospitality. Populus is a carbon-positive hotel—adaptive reuse cuts building emissions, offsite solar and wind farms power the site, food waste is composted on-site, and the property plants a tree for every night booked. Even art and door numbers carry botanical themes, and each masterpiece in the 300-piece curated art collection is available for purchase.
Accessibility
Public areas and guest suites remain ADA-compliant, with elevators and clear circulation around historic beams. Despite the warehouse bones and open staircases, access is straightforward.
Anything left to mention?
Reserve your Firn rooftop slot just before sunset—views stretch from Puget Sound to the Olympic Mountains. Rooms facing the stadium side do pick up some crowd noise, but that’s part of the urban energy. Valet parking is $80 nightly, but you don’t need a car here thanks to light rail access a few blocks away.
100 S King St, Seattle, WA 98104
United States
https://www.fftt.space/
(206) 309-1100















































