Location
Lake Washington Blvd, NW Corner
In the fall of 1929, Puget Sound Power and Light Company began operating the first 40,000 kilowatt generator, the Shuffleton Plant.
The plant's turbo-generators ran on "hog fuel" (waste wood fiber from sawmills) with its oil burning boilers to be used only during emergencies. Within a month of firing the boilers up for the first time, the Great Depression engulfed the nation and the plant was never completed as designed. Despite the Great Depression, Shuffleton was still needed as people continued to buy electrical appliances, read under electric lights, and enjoy electric streetlights.
In the early 1950s, the plant was placed on stand-by, and by the 1970s, the crew thought every emergency run would be the plant's last. In 1989 Shuffleton was fired up for the last time during the severe winter storm called the "Arctic Express". The plant was demolished in 2001 to make way for a development at the south end of Lake Washington.