I saw this article at BoingBoing, and had to look it up.

From Wikipedia:

The Aroma of Tacoma, also known as the Tacoma Aroma, is a putrid and unpleasant odor associated with Tacoma, Washington, United States.[1] The smell has been described as similar to the odor of rotten eggs.[2] The odor is not noticeable throughout the city, but is rather concentrated in the Tacoma tideflats and is frequently smelled by motorists traveling that section of Interstate 5.[2]

  • There’s a theory that the high incidence of serial killers coming from the Tacoma area has something to do with this smell

  • 4 hours

    I just watched an hour long documentary on the origins and history of Seattle. Holy macaroni! This place is for people who like to live on the edge and rebuild from the cut.

    And it’s true, half the year it is dark as fuck and it rains. Like you’d love to work on your car but it’s raining sleet that afternoon so you get one more jacket on and goggles and you work on your car. There’s no complaining. This place, as modern as it may be now, is still a bitch to live in.

    So, if you think you just watched a wolf movie and you see yourself as living here among the pack…sure, come on over! Enjoy the beat up, and don’t let that door kick you arse too hard when you’re done. I would not recommend. I love it here, but do yourself a favor and don’t try. Plus everyone is an engineer here so the competition is high.

  • 6 hours

    I grew up in this area and I can confirm this is very real and people do call it the “Tacoma aroma”. It’s a very strong scent. You can smell it driving down the road with the windows closed.

    I always heard it was from the paper mill but never investigated further.

    • 4 hours

      We had a similar city in Norway back in the day - Moss. “Det luktær pengær!” (“It smells like money”) … smelt like shit to me. Nice place w/ nice folks, tho 👌

    • 4 hours

      You’ll be happy to learn that the aroma is largely absent now! Paper mill closed :)

  • 13 hours

    HAHA!

    A Garlic Aroma that would level Tacoma.

    Hell if you want to go somewhere that smells, go to Lubbock Texas. It is from the Oil industry, holy fuck it stinks!!

    • That’s just a bastardization of Indiana’s motto: Come Smell our Gary air

  • people might also be interested to know that downtown Chicago used to smell like brownies because of the Blommer chocolate factory that was there from 1939 to 2024

  • 22 hours

    Used to drive through there regularly. Yep. It was for real. If the wind blew a certain way or there was a heatwave, it was unbearable.

    Felt the same way on a tour of a brewery where they were cooking the hops. Except that had a bit of sweetness. The Tacoma Aroma was just stultifyingly, not as sharp as sulphurous, rotten eggs. More like heavy, warm milk that had gone bad.

    All day, every day. Everywhere.

    • I’ll steer clear of Tacoma, but I could live in the smell of hops on brew day.

      • 15 hours

        It’s not a problem really anymore. There’s lots of fun things to do in Tacoma if you find yourself in the area. I’m not super familiar, just been through a few times

        As another commenter said, it’s due to paper mills which use sulphur compounds to turn wood into pulp and those are still common elsewhere in the state

  • If you’ve ever been near a paper plant, then you’d understand the horrible smell.

    Driving through that stretch is such a shock if you’re not ready for it. It smells like cooking fish and broccoli in a microwave to me. Rotton broccoli fart smell.

    • 12 hours

      Saint John, New Brunswick also used to have a terrible smell from the pulp mill. Last time I was there I didn’t notice it, so maybe they have cleaned it up.

      It’s specific to chemicals used in the Kraft process for making wood pulp. Other Mills might use at different process, with their own issues (like SO2 gas).

    • That is part of it, also the Puget Sound is kinda like pushing everything to the south with the weather and the tides.

      Thankfully it’s better these days. It was absolutely dreadful in the 70s and 80s

  • 18 hours

    Sonoma county California smells like cow shit sometimes and we call it the Sonoma Aroma.

        • 17 hours

          Volcanic sulphur isn’t that bad, you get used to out petty quickly.

          Some very still mornings it I can be quite strong…

  • I’ve never been to Seattle, but I knew about the Tacoma Aroma from playing Shadowrun for so many years (The default setting is Seattle)

    • 23 hours

      Tacoma is basically like The place where you get your catalytic converter stolen And no seattleites go there for any reason except maybe to get soul food or attend a rave at the Tacoma dome. Truly the valley the light does not reach lol.

      • 11 hours

        When I visit Tacoma it’s for the McMenamins Elk’s Temple. Shows in the basement, food in one of the restaurants.

      • 11 hours

        Seattleites don’t go to Tacoma because they’re elitists.

        We aren’t known for our soul food lol

        • 7 hours

          Yeah you are. Go to Pacific Southern or Southern kitchen sometime

          • 7 hours

            Neither place has good soul food. Southern Kitchen’s fried chicken is bland, dry, and depressing.

            Tacoma’s food scene largely revolves around pizza and burgers. We’ve got some great Vietnamese food as well.

    • I’m someone who’s lived in Washington State all my life, all over the state. Seattle and Tacoma are like brothers but only if you knew their parents first. Totally different personalities. I lived in Seattle for 20 years and going to Tacoma was always so weird. And people in Tacoma would rather be anywhere in the world than Seattle

      • In Shadowrun, they’ve merged. Not being American myself, I was surprised to discover they were actually distinct cities!

        • They are pretty much connected with the suburban areas between them. Driving on the freeway it’s like patches of purposely reserved green spaces but you could easily drive from one to the other in a couple hours by regular roads with business buildings along the way