By Don C. Brunell, Guest Columnist
On April 21, 1962, the Seattle World’s Fair opened. The “Century 21 Exhibition” ran for six months, drew 11 million visitors, turned a profit and left the Northwest with a wonderful Seattle Center.
Well over a half century later, many of the fair’s landmarks remain and the Seattle Center’s 73 acres is a gathering place for people from all walks of life. It is Seattle’s Central Park.
The Space Needle has become Seattle’s landmark. Conceived in an architect’s notebook, it was constructed in eight months at a cost of $4.5 million, which is the equivalent of $38.5 million in 2019. The Space Needle was privately funded.
You have to wonder if a project of this scope and magnitude could happen today with endless hoops to jump through, mounds of government red tape and construction costs that were unimaginable in 1960.
For example, construction workers building the Space Needle earned approximately $8,100 a year ($3.92 per hour). In May 2018, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that structural iron and steel workers working on skyscrapers in downtown Seattle took home more than $75,000 annually.