City Eyeworks

Optometry

Eye care is an important part of each stage of life. Children should have eye exams every year they are in school as poor vision can decrease reading comprehension and interfere with learning. Most adults over the age of 40 are in need of reading vision correction due to a common eye condition called presbyopia. Adults over the age of 60 are at an increased risk for sight-threatening eye diseases such as cataracts, glaucoma and macular degeneration.

City Eyeworks provides unparalleled service when it comes to Eye Care and Eye Wear in Seattle. We are located just outside the University Village area on 25th Ave NE near the University of Washington with free (3 hours) parking! We provide an incredibly high level of service in our eye clinic for your eye care needs. Read more

3 recommendations

  •  
    Robert B.

    Shared on yelp.com

    I had been a patient at another nearby optical business, which I like very much. Because of my Medicare Advantage plan, I needed to find someone in my network. I saw Stacy Takeda at City Eyeworks, and I could not have been more pleased. She was very knowledgeable, very professional, very informative and thorough, and had a wonderful disposition. She did a very thorough examination and explained everything very extensively. I didn't need new glasses, so I can not rate the opitician services.

    Original recommendation
  •  
    Tracey A.

    Shared on yelp.com

    I absolutely love this place! I found them based on my insurance and location and have been going to them now for years. Unbelievably beautiful collection of frames and I am very picky having picked frames only from a place in New York City prior to this place. They carry one of my favorite lines SALT, but more importantly the exam, the physician and the staff are so friendly and so helpful and so knowledgeable. I will gratefully be returning back for years to come

    Original recommendation
  •  
    David R.

    Shared on yelp.com

    ... Pam Chin, very personable, very efficient and precise, told me something that I did not know.
    "I'm going with Cerulean Cataracts," was her diagnosis.
    Instead of saying "Your cataracts have grown to the point at which no responsible person would drive," she showed me, with varying lighting and lens magnifications what I could see and what a person with average eyesight sees. …
    I asked Pam about treatment options. She provided an informative website URL for me, offered to write a letter to my primary caregiver for a surgical referral, and explained how noninvasive the procedure has now become. I expect to have at least one of these 10-minute procedures by the end of this month. Pam's social skills greatly compliment her skills as an optometrist; she did a great job of telling me something that many would find difficult to hear.

    Original recommendation