Map of Washington

Sitemap to all pages covering the state of Washington. Photographic contributions by Alex Nitzman, Andy Field, Chris Kalina and Matt Strieby.

Photo Guides

Seattle's Skyline and Mount Ranier

The Downtown Seattle Skyline, the Space Needle and Mount Rainier. Photo by Jeff Royston (07/28/07).

About the Washington State Highway System

Primary state routes are designated by single or double-digit numbers, with north-south routes being odd and east-west routes being even. For its secondary highways, Washington departs from more traditional numbering schemes. Numbering for these uses an associated primary highway number as a prefix followed by a one or two-digit suffix. For example, State Route 500 originates at Interstate 5 (5 + 00). Heading north on I-5, the numbers increase, from SR 501 in Vancouver to SR 548 near Blaine. If the associated primary route is a two-digit number, the secondary suffix will have one digit, as in State Route 123 connecting U.S. 12 with Mt. Rainier National Park.

Population Statistics

State Population
7,705,281
Metropolitan Populations
Seattle-Tacoma-
Bellevue
4,018,762 Portland-Vancouver-
Hillsboro
2,512,859 Spokane-
Spokane Valley
585,784
Kennewick-Richland 303,622 Olympia-Lacey-
Tumwater
294,793 Bremerton-Silverdale-
Port Orchard
275,611
Yakima 256,728 Bellingham 226,847 Mount Vernon-
Anacortes
129,523
Top County Populations
King 2,269,675 Pierce 921,130 Snohomish 827,957
Spokane 539,339 Clark 503,311 Thurston 294,793
Top City Populations
Seattle 769,714 Spokane 222,050 Tacoma 219,945
Vancouver 186,192 Bellevue 148,073 Kent 130,676
Everett 112,482 Spokane Valley 102,893 Renton 101,494
Sources: 2020 U.S. Census Data (metro populations and counties), 2020 U.S. Census Estimate (cities)

About Washington

  • Capital: Olympia
  • Nickname: Evergreen State
  • Area: 71,303 square miles (including water) or 184,824 square kilometers, 18th largest
  • Statehood: November 11th, 1889- 42nd state
  • Total Interstate Mileage: 763.67 miles
  • Highest Point: Mt. Rainier, 14,410 feet (4,395 meters) above sea level
  • Scenic and natural areas: Mt. Rainier National Park, Olympic National Park, North Cascades National Park, Mt. Saint Helens National Volcanic Monument, Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, San Juan Islands, Puget Sound region
  • Geography and climate: The climate of western Washington is heavily dominated by maritime air from the Pacific Ocean which brings abundant moisture in the winter and moderates temperatures during the summer. The Puget Sound acts as a conduit for this marine air, and consequently cities bordering or near the sound have a distinctly maritime feel. As in Oregon, the north-south running Cascade Range forms an east-west divide. East of the Cascades, rain-shadow effects contribute to a dry to very dry climate in the Columbia River Basin in the southeastern quadrant of the state. Cold winters and hot summers typify the region. Alternating mountainous zones and small valleys comprise much of the northern third of the state from Okanogan and Chelan counties eastward to the Idaho state line.
    In addition to the Cascade Range, the Olympic Mountains on the Olympic Peninsula create their own rain-shadow effects, although on a smaller geographical scale. Differences in rainfall amounts on the windward side and the leeward side of the range are extreme: over 200 inches may fall annually on the western slopes, watering the lush temperate “rain forests” that make the area famous. Locations immediately in the lee of the Olympics may receive fewer than 20 inches annually, or less than 10% of the wet side.
  • Other interesting tidbits: The largest building in the world by volume, sprawling over 98 acres, is the Boeing assembly plant in Everett. Washington state is also home to the world’s richest man: Bill Gates. His company, Microsoft, which also happens to be the world’s largest software company, is headquartered in Redmond. Coffee giant Starbuck’s calls Seattle home, while Boeing maintains a manufacturing presence in the region despite moving company headquarters to Chicago in 2001. Kurt Cobain, whose band Nirvana turned the music industry on its head during the early 1990s, hailed from Aberdeen, a small coastal town at Gray’s Harbor.

Updated December 30, 2021.