East Kong Yick Building

East Kong Yick Building
East Kong Yick Building shortly after re-opening as the Wing Luke Asian Museum, 2008. At right, the West Kong Yick Building is undergoing renovation, hence the scaffolding
Map
General information
Town or citySeattle, Washington
East Kong Yick Building
East Kong Yick Building shortly after re-opening as the Wing Luke Asian Museum, 2008. At right, the West Kong Yick Building is undergoing renovation, hence the scaffolding.
Traditional Chinese東公益大廈
Simplified Chinese东公益大厦
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDōng Gōng Yì Dàshà
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingDung1 Gung1 Jik1 Daai6haa6

The East Kong Yick Building (Chinese: 東公益大廈)[1] is one of two buildings erected in Seattle, Washington's Chinatown-International District (ID) by the Kong Yick Investment Company (the other being the West Kong Yick Building). A four-story hotel in the core of the ID, with retail stores at ground level, the East Kong Yick was created by the pooled resources of 170 Chinese American pioneers. In, 2008, the building reopened as the home of the expanded Wing Luke Asian Museum.[2]

  1. ^ Tseng, Jenny (March 12, 2009). 西雅圖華埠的百年建築懷舊之旅 [A nostalgic tour of a century-old building in Seattle's Chinatown]. 珍妮曾在西雅圖的網誌 (Jenny Tseng in Seattle) (in Chinese). Retrieved November 20, 2010.
  2. ^ Broom, Jack (May 19, 2008). "Visitors to walk through time at new Wing Luke Asian Museum". The Seattle Times.