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Trellises, Guardrail + Gazebo

Simpson and Georgiades

Steel Lake Park

Functional sculptures celebrate popular park activities—and a lesser known history.

Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades. Steel Lake Park: Trellises, 1996. Powder coated steel. Steel Lake Park, Federal Way, WA. King County Public Art Collection. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com

Steel Lake Park in Federal Way thrums with activity: fishing and boating, swimming and skateboarding, games and picnics. It also includes a series of artworks by Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades that speak to the history and recreational uses of the site.

Four steel trellises with benches feature linear designs. A gazebo fit for two has a boat-like shape, with ornamentation near its roof supports. And a decorative guardrail overlooks the lake, with different imagery highlighted in each section. Several design motifs recur across all of these pieces: fish, boats, dogs playing Frisbee, and people dancing—the latter a nod to the dance halls that thrived in the location in the 1930s and 1940s, when it was home to two popular resorts.

In 1995, King County and the City of Federal Way established an interlocal agreement to provide for stewardship and continuing care of the artwork. It was the first-ever partnership agreement regarding the long-term care and ownership of public artwork established with a suburban city.
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Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades. Steel Lake Park: Trellises, 1996. Powder coated steel. Steel Lake Park, Federal Way, WA. King County Public Art Collection. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com
Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades. Steel Lake Park: Guardrail, 1996. Powder coated steel. Steel Lake Park, Federal Way, WA. King County Public Art Collection. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com
Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades. Steel Lake Park: Gazebo, 1996. Powder coated steel. Steel Lake Park, Federal Way, WA. King County Public Art Collection. Photo: joefreemanjunior.com