Seattle Condo Authority Network • Queen Anne
Queen Anne condominium at Data to be verified. Data to be verified residences.
Building Profile
| Building Name | Queen Anne High School |
| Address | Data to be verified |
| Year Built | Data to be verified |
| Total Units | Data to be verified |
| Stories | Data to be verified |
| Neighborhood | Queen Anne, Seattle, WA |
| HOA Fees | Data to be verified |
| Price Range | Data to be verified |
| Rental Policy | Data to be verified |
| Building Type | Historic |
About This Building
Queen Anne High School is a historic school conversion condominium on Queen Anne, Seattle. The conversion of former school buildings to residential condominiums is a well-established pattern in Seattle and other Pacific Northwest cities, and the Queen Anne neighborhood has two such buildings in the Seattle Condo Authority Network's canonical dataset: Queen Anne High School and West Queen Anne School.
Adaptive reuse of historic school buildings typically produces residences with distinctive architectural character -- large windows designed for classroom use, masonry construction, prominent exterior detailing, and interior volumes that differ substantially from purpose-built residential construction. These characteristics attract buyers who value uniqueness and historic authenticity over the standardized floor plans of newer condominium buildings.
The Queen Anne High School building is located on Queen Anne hill and occupies a prominent position in the neighborhood's built environment. The specific address, year of original construction, number of residential units created through conversion, and HOA details have not been confirmed in the Seattle Condo Authority Network's canonical dataset.
Contact Jeff Reynolds for current listing information, recent comparable sales at Queen Anne High School, and HOA financial disclosures. Jeff tracks all ownership buildings on Queen Anne as part of the Seattle Condo Authority Network's comprehensive neighborhood coverage.
Buyer Analysis
Queen Anne High School is a historic school conversion on Queen Anne Hill, one of Seattle's most sought-after residential neighborhoods. The building's unique architectural heritage, neighborhood position, and community of owners set it apart from standard condo construction. Jeff Reynolds's assessment covers its strengths, cautions, and key buyer questions.
School conversions offer ceiling heights, institutional-quality construction, and architectural character that purpose-built residential buildings cannot match. The bones of this building were designed to last 100+ years; residential construction rarely is.
Queen Anne is consistently ranked among Seattle's most desirable residential neighborhoods for its street character, tree canopy, view corridors, and proximity to Downtown without the density and noise of Belltown or Capitol Hill.
Queen Anne's elevation creates some of Seattle's best residential views—Downtown skyline, Elliott Bay, the Olympics, and Mount Rainier are all visible from upper floors and units with the right orientation.
Historic conversions tend to attract and retain long-term owner-occupants who are invested in the building's character. The community of owners is typically more stable and engaged than in newer high-rise developments.
School conversions operate under historic preservation requirements that restrict modifications to the building exterior and often to interior elements. Confirm specifically what can and cannot be changed before writing an offer.
Building-specific financial data—reserve fund, unit count, HOA fees—should be confirmed directly from HOA documents before proceeding. Request the reserve study and the most recent HOA budget and meeting minutes.
What is the percent-funded level and what capital projects are scheduled? Historic buildings have unique maintenance requirements that standard reserve studies may not fully capture.
Which interior elements can be altered and which are subject to historic preservation restrictions? If any renovation is planned, this question must be answered before writing an offer.
Advisory
Queen Anne High School is for buyers who specifically want Queen Anne Hill, historic architecture, and a distinctive residential community. These profiles describe who fits the building.
Queen Anne residents are among Seattle's most neighborhood-loyal. Buyers who have lived in Queen Anne as renters or who have family in the neighborhood often find that the conversion provides a path to ownership in the community they already know and value.
From Queen Anne's elevation, the views of Downtown Seattle, Elliott Bay, and the Olympic Mountains are among the city's best residential outlooks. Buyers who have searched Seattle's condo market specifically for a view from an elevated residential neighborhood consistently find Queen Anne's position unmatched.
The school's institutional construction quality, high ceilings, and original architectural details are a specific buyer draw. Buyers who want something genuinely different from a glass tower or a standard mid-rise consistently find historic school conversions in a category of their own.
The combination of neighborhood quality, building character, and Queen Anne's limited condo supply makes this building a credible long-term hold. Buyers who plan to own for 10+ years in one of Seattle's most stable residential neighborhoods are in the right building for that horizon.
Market Data
Queen Anne High School pricing reflects Queen Anne's premium residential market and the historic character premium of an authentic school conversion.
Entry-level Queen Anne historic conversion pricing. Lower floors or units with more limited views anchor the lower end.
Primary resale segment. Units with more significant architectural features—original windows, high ceilings, distinctive layouts—trade at premiums within this range.
Upper-level units with the strongest views of Downtown, Elliott Bay, or the Olympic Mountains. Limited supply at this end of the range.
Queen Anne's residential market is one of Seattle's most stable, driven by consistent demand from buyers who specifically want the neighborhood's character and elevation. Contact Jeff Reynolds for current listings and recent closed sale data.
Knowledge Base
Before buying any Seattle condo, these guides answer the questions every buyer should resolve about HOA finances, financing eligibility, and closing requirements.
What condo HOA fees cover, how they're calculated, and what to look for in a building's fee structure.
How reserve funds work, what percent-funded means, and why the reserve study matters before you buy.
How rental caps, owner-occupancy ratios, and HOA delinquency rates affect your loan eligibility.
What the resale certificate contains, why it matters, and the key red flags buyers should watch for.
Explore More
Other condos in Queen Anne at a similar price tier, with links to full building profiles, buyer analysis, and current market data.
See all buildings: Browse all Queen Anne condo buildings →
Frequently Asked Questions
Queen Anne High School is a historic condominium building created through the adaptive reuse of a former school building on Queen Anne, Seattle.
Unit count data for Queen Anne High School has not been confirmed in our canonical dataset. Contact Jeff Reynolds for current building information.
Year of original construction has not been confirmed in our canonical dataset. Contact Jeff Reynolds for current information.
HOA fee data is not confirmed. Contact Jeff Reynolds or request financial disclosures from the HOA.
Queen Anne has two school conversion condominiums in the Seattle Condo Authority Network's dataset: Queen Anne High School and West Queen Anne School. Both are historic buildings converted to residential ownership.
Your Queen Anne Condo Specialist
Jeff Reynolds is Seattle's leading specialist in urban condominiums, with deep expertise in Queen Anne High School and every building in the Seattle Condo Authority Network. If you're buying or selling at Queen Anne High School, Jeff has the data, the relationships, and the track record to represent you.
Jeff tracks every sale at Queen Anne High School, maintains HOA financial data, and knows which floor plans and view orientations hold value best. This depth of building-level knowledge is what separates a specialist from a generalist.
Jeff Reynolds • Seattle Condo Authority Network • jeff.reynolds@compass.com
Current listings, recent sales, HOA financials, and buyer strategy. No obligation.