The Center for Wooden Boats

  • Arts & Culture
  • Schools & Education
  • Youth Development

Who We Are

To provide a gathering place where maritime history comes alive through direct experience and our small craft heritage is enjoyed, preserved, and passed along to future generations. A 501©(3) non-profit since 1978, The Center for Wooden Boats has its origins in architect Dick Wagner?s fascination with wooden boats. Dick, and his wife Colleen, began a traditional boat rental out of their own houseboat in 1968. By 1976 the idea of a small craft museum was born and 1977 saw the first Lake Union Wooden Boat Festival. In 1981 the Center was formally established. Boat livery (rentals) began in 1983, and the SailNOW! sailing instruction program began in 1989. CWB now has approximately 65,000 visitors per year, 2,500 members, 450 active volunteers who collectively log over 25,000 hours a year, around twenty paid staff and a fleet of over 120 historic small craft which are displayed along a maze of floating docks and houseboats on the south shore of Lake Union, in the heart of Seattle. Admission has always been free. Our educational programs are a major part of CWB?s mission to ?to provide a gathering place where maritime history comes alive through direct experience and our small craft heritage is enjoyed, preserved, and passed along to future generations.? We now have 175 SailNOW! students and more than 200 people taking part in other workshops and classes annually. Over 2000 kids got on the water through our field trip programs and dinghy sailing classes between April 2006 and April 2007. Community members participate in our Family Boatbuilding program, our volunteer program, our free public sails on Sunday afternoons, and other events. Over 15,000 people join us for the Lake Union Wooden Boat Festival over 4th of July weekend. As South Lake Union neighborhood expands and develops around us, CWB expects to continue to grow, and is planning expanded infrastructure, and construction of a new education center. We are collaborating with both the City of Seattle as they develop Lake Union Park next door to us, and with the State of Washington to provide maritime programming in Cama Beach State Park on Camano Island, where we are enduring partner. For more information on our programs, visit www.cwb.org

What We Do

CWB provides hands-on educational and recreational opportunities for people of all ages and abilities via a fleet of traditional small wooden boats and related facilities. We offer a small craft rental, maritime skills workshops, sailing lessons, free rides, school tours and an annual wooden boat festival on July 4. We have more than 1000 volunteers who teach sailing, work in the boatshop, help with special events, run the livery (boat rentals), man the front desk, and provide docent interpretation to the public, do office work and just about everything else. Please refer to our website for more detail at wwww.cwb.org

Details

Get Connected Icon (206) 382-2628
Get Connected Icon (206) 382-2699
Get Connected Icon Cassandra Sandkam
Get Connected Icon Volunteer Coordinator
http://www.cwb.org