Skip to content

Pike Place Music Venue Seeks Buyer 

After three years as a hub for live music and performance, The Rabbit Box Theatre is looking for a new owner

By Yeshe Lhamo August 18, 2025

A dimly lit cabaret-style music venue near Pike Place, featuring round tables, black chairs, decorative lamps, and a stage with a blue curtain in the background.
Photo courtesy of The Rabbit Box Theatre

After opening at the tail end of the pandemic and operating for three years, The Rabbit Box Theatre in Pike Place Market is up for sale. A popular music venue and hub for community and artists, the nightclub has offered a rotating schedule of live music, burlesque, comedy, cultural and literary events. 

“The Rabbit Box has struggled from day one, for many reasons beyond our control,” says co-founder Tia Matthies. Launching during the pandemic meant the company couldn’t qualify for Covid-era grant relief programs which could offset the high costs of starting a new business. The club has explored several options for continuing as a business, including establishing a nonprofit and creating a membership program.

The Rabbit Box was conceived of by co-founder Robynne Hawthorne as a creative living room—an intimate venue for music that could also serve as a literary-forward “house of stories.”

Located in the former Can Can club, the space was reimagined with new sightlines, added archways, and antique touches, like decorative wallpaper, chandeliers, ornate vintage couches, and reclaimed wood flooring from an old horse stable in Tennessee—a nod to the space’s history as a one-time horse stable in the early 1900s. Combining with these vintage elements is a professional-level sound system that was designed by Seattle music producer and sound engineer Gary Mula, who played a significant role in building out the space and became a partner in the business. 

Hawthorne books live music at The Rabbit Box most nights of the week, alongside family-friendly programs like magic shows and film screenings for all-ages audiences. Before owning The Rabbit Box, Hawthorne produced shows at The Pearl Coffeehouse, Horses Cut Shop, Underwood Stables, and Hotel Albatross. Matthies is widely known for co-founding legendary venues like OK Hotel, The Rendezvous, and The Royal Room. After 38 years of running nightclubs, Matthies wants to step down from the business to join her husband Steve Freeborn in retirement and focus more of her time on making visual art. In December 2024, Freeborn and Matthies, along with co-owner Wayne Horvitz, transitioned their shares of The Royal Room to buyer Reese Tanimura.

“It’s hard to find stages for new artists—we’re a small intimate place,” says Hawthorne. “We can host young unknowns unlike a lot of other spaces.” Matthies adds that creative minds need creative spaces to experiment, hone their craft, and perform for friends and family. “Every artist, no matter how successful, always needs to try out new things in front of a small audience. The Rabbit Box was intentionally designed to be such a place that could attract well-known artists as well as fledgling performers.” 

Since 2022, the club has featured artists ranging from No Wave spoken-word artist Lydia Lunch and Seattle songwriter Damien Jurado to Grammy-nominated artist Tracy Bonham. In its early days, The Rabbit Box hosted resident musical artists like Leeni, Caitlin Sherman, Brittany Davis, and Lo-Liner. The club has also presented shows in collaboration with The Triple Door. 

“I’m hoping that someone, in the spirit of old school Seattle music—the same spirit that helped nurture Nirvana—might be interested in keeping this little gem alive,” says Matthies. “Seattle has some serious cultural roots that are disappearing. People don’t always know the history of how the music scene started here, and the clubs and spaces that are needed to make that scene flourish. I hope whoever buys it is interested in keeping that going.” 

The business is listed for $500,000 with Vantage Seattle. For more information, contact Carrie Topacio at carrie@vantageseattle.com.

Follow Us

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

A daily ornament drop turns December into a neighborhood-wide scavenger hunt.

The holidays tend to bring out the kid in all of us. And if opening presents and eating too many treats weren’t enough, there’s also a scavenger hunt in Seattle’s oldest neighborhood. Pioneer Square’s Holiday Ornament Scavenger Hunt has returned for its third year. Twenty-five handblown glass ornaments—all made at Glasshouse Studio—are hidden across 25…

Chit-Chat Kids

Chit-Chat Kids

Phone a friend.

Twenty years ago, before everyone walked around with a device in their pocket, kids used to call each other on a landline—often tethered to the kitchen in their home. It was a simpler time, when parents didn’t have to worry (nearly as much) about a potential predator contacting their child. Nowadays, things are different, which…

A Plate for Pickleball

A Plate for Pickleball

The design celebrates the state’s official sport. Additional plates are on the way.

Washington served up a new license plate last week, honoring the state sport of pickleball. In the works for three years, it’s the second of seven specialty plates to hit the market since getting approved by lawmakers earlier this year. “We’re thrilled to see our efforts become reality,” says Kate Van Gent, vice president of…

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

DNA&STONE built the project around candid conversations to understand what audiences want from reporting.

“I turned off news altogether. I want to be able to form my own opinions. Just tell the truth.” These lines open NBC News’ new national campaign, a 60-second ad that drifts over forests, farms, neighborhoods, and cityscapes while Americans talk about how worn out they feel by the news. The landscape carries the conversation…