Important to know
- Website: https://www.seattle.gov/parks/parks/viretta-park
- Address: 151 E Lake Washington Blvd. - Seattle, WA - USA
- Getting here: Bus stop Madrona Dr & 38th Ave (Line 2)
Next to the last home where Kurt Cobain lived — at 171 E Lake Washington Blvd. in Seattle — sits Viretta Park. Because of its proximity, fans adopted one of its benches and turned it into an unofficial memorial to the Nirvana frontman.
Viretta Park is a small public park in the Madrona neighborhood, on the shores of Lake Washington. It is part of a quiet, tree-lined area where houses sit tucked between the trees — the kind of neighborhood Kurt Cobain chose to move to just three months before his death, in early 1994.

An ordinary wooden bench has become, over time, one of the most singular rock memorials in the world. It is covered in inscriptions left by people from different countries and generations — messages in many languages, layered over one another across the wood, with no order and no curation. Flowers, letters, photographs, records, and personal objects appear and disappear from day to day.
There are no opening hours, no ticket, no line. It is an open park in a residential Seattle neighborhood, and the bench is there every day. It is the kind of place that says a great deal about what music can mean to people.
The house where Kurt lived is private, not visible from the street, and has had no connection to the Cobain family for more than two decades.

Kurt Cobain was found dead on April 5, 1994, at the age of 27.
Rock Route in Seattle, USA ♫
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