Skip to content

A Tropical Reef in the Pacific Northwest

The Seattle Aquarium’s new Ocean Pavilion is now open

By Seattle Aquarium October 1, 2024

A child touches the glass at the Seattle Aquarium, marveling at a large fish. Text reads "AQUAMAZING!" with images of a ray, a moray eel, and another fish below.
Courtesy of the Seattle Aquarium

Dreading the return of “the Big Dark”? Great news: The Seattle Aquarium has you covered with the opening of its Ocean Pavilion expansion. It’s dedicated to the tropical reef ecosystems of the Coral Triangle, an area in the western Pacific so rich in marine biodiversity that it’s been called “the Amazon of the ocean.”

This abundance of vibrant life is on full display at the new Ocean Pavilion. It features multiple habitat and activity areas, including a showstopper called The Reef — a multi-level habitat with several viewpoints to watch sharks, rays, schools of colorful fish and more.

Visitors explore a vibrant marine exhibit at the Seattle Aquarium, featuring large curved tanks with various coral and fish displays.
Courtesy of the Seattle Aquarium

The other habitats offer plenty to enjoy, too. The Archipelago allows you to see mangroves — amazing trees that thrive in saltwater — and their intricate root systems, which provide homes and protection for all kinds of animals. Another habitat, At Home in the Ocean, puts a spotlight on clownfish and anemones; the epaulette shark; garden eels; corals; and more.

At the center of it all is One Ocean Hall, where you’ll find gorgeous, large-scale videos of ocean habitats around the world projected on the surrounding walls, and even the floor, for a truly immersive experience. With plenty of bench seating, it’s a great spot to sit and take in the sights and sounds around you.

Entering the new Ocean Pavilion, you may notice a sign describing the theme that’s evident throughout its habitats and installations: that all waters are connected, Earth has just one ocean — and each of us has a role to play in protecting it.

A group of people stands in front of a large aquarium at the Seattle Aquarium, watching a diver swim among various fish and coral underwater.
Courtesy of the Seattle Aquarium

Speaking of connected waters, your admission ticket is valid for the entire Aquarium campus, so be sure to visit Piers 59 and 60 to get to know the many amazing marine animals that make their homes here in the Pacific Northwest.

Your ticket purchase helps support marine conservation efforts locally and around the world, making this is an excursion that you can feel great about. Step out of “the Big Dark” and into the warmth and light of the tropics — plan a visit today!

Follow Us

Learning to Pivot

Learning to Pivot

Liz Galloway, the founder of Brand Sanity Media, spent the past 15 years learning to grow and adapt within her industry’s changing landscape.

In public relations, you have to stay on your toes. This is a lesson that Liz Galloway, founder of Brand Sanity Media, has encountered many times over the years. “I have a lot of admiration for anyone who is consistent and resilient,” says Galloway, who in addition to launching her own PR firm six years…

Innovative Energy

Innovative Energy

Pioneer Square’s neglected metropole building gets a second life—and a sustainable upgrade—as a nonprofit hub.

After more than a decade lying vacant and in ruins, the Metropole, as its name implies, is once again a vibrant center of culture, industry, and influence. Located in the historic Pioneer Square neighborhood, the Metropole building was constructed in 1892 as the first major commercial project of Henry Yesler, the city’s wealthiest resident during…

Fresh Catch

Fresh Catch

With more than 30 years of marine-protection advocacy under her belt, Seattle Aquarium’s new CEO wants to spark a greater interest in conservation.

Peggy Sloan has long felt a draw to the Pacific Northwest. In the early ’90s, while working as a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration fisheries observer (a specialist who spends time on commercial fishing vessels to collect data), Sloan counted Seattle as her home base. So, when the opportunity arose more than 30 years later…

Resistance Turned to Resilience

Resistance Turned to Resilience

The Seattle Chinatown International District Preservation and Development Authority is celebrating 50 years of lifting up a neighborhood besieged by challenges from all sides.

On November 2, 1972—after a steady overnight rain cleared to leave a construction site near the King Street Station thick with mud—about 200 people gathered for the official groundbreaking of the Kingdome. A project that had seen its funding rejected several times by voters, the Kingdome was finally on its way, with the hopes that…