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Submitted by Burr on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 8:40am.

I just received this from the OLY 2012 Newsletter...

Olympians Must Think Hard about What Makes the Best View

By Peter Stroble

Global Warming. Geo-Political Conflict. Epidemic Disease. The Rising Cost of Living. Famine. Obesity. Classism. Racism. Political Polarization. Social Entrenchment.

The root cause of virtually every problem in our world today is Suburbia - enabled by our 20th century car culture. It's easy to simply blame it all on George W., kick back, and wait for Obama to make it all better. But until we take responsibility and change how we live at the community level, we shouldn't be pointing our fingers at anyone but ourselves.

Density is the answer. It mitigates the threat of war and global warming by reducing our reliance on the oil-dependent automobile. It lowers our transportation costs, which lowers our overall cost of living. It enables us to eat more healthfully because less sprawl equals more local farmland.

Density also brings communities together and helps address social ills. Suburbia has polarized our society; density will moderate it. In our suburban culture today it's easy for the haves to ignore the have-nots: homelessness isn't a problem to a typical suburbanite – it's merely a once-in-awhile inconvenience. Density offers us the opportunity to change this by bringing us closer to one another.

But density is not as easy as simply building high rises in urban cores. In order to make a community function with density, the built environment must be designed with both humans and the outdoor environment in mind. This is what the term Smart Growth is all about. If we ignore the questions of where and how to accommodate more people living in our urban core, density could actually do more harm than good to our downtown. The activist and renowned urban critic

Jane Jacobs argued that in order for city parks to foster - not hinder – healthy urban communities they must be surrounded by the daily activities of human life – living, working and exchanging goods and services. She argued that expansive urban parks that don't play a role in these everyday activities denigrate urban cores by fragmenting the organic patterns and conventions of city dwellers, and by providing an unwatched habitat for at-risk members of society to fester uncared for by the greater community.

Heritage Park is a beautiful monument, but it is already enormous. Percival landing is a fabulous esplanade, but functions only as a destination to most – not as a part of the everyday comings and goings of most citizens. By cradling these two public spaces within beautiful structures that support the 24/7 lives of our citizens, we will sew these great parks deeper into the fabric of our downtown, nurturing a sense of safety, function, vibrancy, virtue and civic pride in and around them.

But, alas, a view is at stake - no one is arguing that it isn't. Here, citizens of Olympia must think deeply and ask themselves: what truly makes the best view for our community? Is a completely unobstructed view of the water and the mountains really what we want if the foreground of that same view is of blight, or of office space for 9-5ers who drive in from the 'burbs, or of shady places for the vulnerable members of our society to escape the checks and balances freely offered by a tightly-knit community?

As a life-long Washingtonian, I want a view that confirms that Olympia was chosen by our former state leaders as the Capitol because it is an exemplary city unto itself, not just because it offered a grand perch upon which to set our capitol campus.

As an Olympia resident, I want a view that tells me that our city can adapt to change and live up to its reputation as a progressive, environmentally conscious and globally minded community.

And as a father, I want a view that gives me a sense of hope for the uncertain future that lies ahead.

»

There's nothing in here

There's nothing in here about why we need population density on the isthmus, rather than one of the many other spots downtown that are already zoned for high density housing. We can have our views and high density housing, too.

By the way, is this environment-loving, tree-hugging Stroble related to the Strobles who have made a fortune milling cedar with the Welco Lumbar Co.?

»

His point was subtle...

...but I think he addresses your first exception here:

"By cradling these two public spaces within beautiful structures [read: on the isthmus] that support the 24/7 lives of our citizens, we will sew these great parks deeper into the fabric of our downtown, nurturing a sense of safety, function, vibrancy, virtue and civic pride in and around them."

Also, I haven't heard the argument that making products out of renewable, sustainable, carbon-sinking, life-sustaining, non-fossil resources is bad for the environment since the late 1980s.  

But why attack the messenger, anyway?  Remember, Olydowntowner: Play the ball, not the player.

»

Apparently hard work and and

Apparently hard work and and the financial rewards that come with it means every opinion you may have needs to be called into question. JEalousy!
»

Play the ball, Wilson!

Now, now, don't be a bad example. Burr reminded me how important it was to play the ball, not the player. Because if he hadn't, I might be tempted to say something like: How hard do you have to work if your father owns the business?
»

I will play the ball from

I will play the ball from now on, your right.
»

You're the player, Burr

I didn't question your integrity -- rather that of the person you chose to quote. If you had quoted Jane Jacobs, would I have been allowed to question her credentials? And regardless of your mouthing of that now well-worn phrase, "play the ball," I have to say that I continue to believe that the motivations of someone making an argument should be considered.

As for the ridiculous argument that big buildings between Heritage Park and Percival Landing will actually IMPROVE them... by "sewing them" more deeply into the fabric of the community, I beg to differ. I think, instead, monolithic buildings for rich residents and shoppers will divide and isolate those public spaces, driving away many of the people who now enjoy them, partly because these spaces offer beautiful views and cost no money to enjoy.

Stroble contends that huge condos will end up "nurturing a sense of safety, function, vibrancy, virtue and civic pride in and around them". Who can argue with virtue? But I fail to see exactly how developing these particular condos will nurture it. Please explain.  How will the construction of Larida Passage at Pearlwater nurture virtue? 

»

Technical, but fair...

Technical, but fair point about who is the player and who is the ball. (It's just that sometimes I almost feel as though I am Peter Stroble!). You're always quick to question the intent and ingenuousness of writers and bloggers - that's what I love about you, Olydowntowner!

I don't know exactly what ol'Strobes meant by virtue, but if I had to guess I would say that he was talking about public art, and specifically, the architecture that buildings on the isthmus could add to our parks for all to enjoy.  In other words, he is probably saying that a built environment that reflects (wo)man's (devine?) ability to create something beautiful is virtuous. I am not saying that the initial triway renderings necessairly fit this definition per se, but I suppose that is what design review is for.

I think he is also arguing against uses of the isthmus that are not virtuous: the current blight; a corporate office center with surface parking; and, yes, evermore parkspace for the pushers, molesters, and diseases (which are inherent in all societies) to escape the watch and care of the rest of the community.

But these are just my interpretations...

»

Great minds think alike

Great minds think alike, I guess, because I saw that Peter Stroble posted the same essay over on Everyday Olympia. You two do seem very alike at times.
»

It's uncanny, isn't it?

.
»

Yes, it is

and the rest of us deserve an explanation. I'm starting to feel like I'm being played as if I was the target of a commercial marketing campaign instead of an honest exchange of ideas-- and I don't even live in Thurston County!
»

I agree with Steven

It sure seems like an astroturf campaign to me.
»

Yeah, he couldn't possibly

Yeah, he couldn't possibly be passionate about something you may disagree with...get him...
»

My Question is Very Valid

and sincere. My query is not unreasonable. Let's give Burr a chance to answer my question, OK? He/she might say something that will change all of our opinions. The connection between Stroble and Burr has become important, and I (along with other OlyBloggers) want to know the answer. Don't you?
»

Please assume that I am him...

...and he is me, if you like. I agree with absolutely every single last thing he has ever said publicly (which isn't very much) so it's all the same to me.  But my granola-nordic pseudonym will remain a just that.  I think we've covered the rules on this before.  I would love to know who Olydowntowner and JLW are, but I can live with simply knowing that they are unnamed people in the community with different opinions than mine.  

»

People around here know who I am, Burr

But, as a female, I don't publicize my name openly for security reasons. Message me if you want to know it. It's not a secret.
»

not really

not really
»

On Virtue

Some people (like Olydowntowner!) know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. Well, I am living proof that luxury condos, even those in the million dollar range, have a value far beyond their sticker price. Luxury condos can save souls! Let me tell you my story…

I grew up in the school of hard knocks, and I learned the hard way that there’s no free lunch. (Except for that weird government surplus subsidized crap in the school lunch programs.) In the soulless suburb where I was raised, there was nothing to love, nothing to hope for, nothing to do but run through the sprinklers on hot summer days and wait for the ice cream truck to tinkle past. No one to talk to but my siblings, my parents, and our neighbors, their pets, the teachers and other kids at the local school. It was a life of unmitigated despair. Can you blame me for running away at 14 and becoming a crack whore?

Life on the streets was rough. The johns were mean, the pimps were meaner, and the other girls didn’t care about anything except their next fix. Yet when I thought back to where I’d come from, the only other life I knew, I was glad to be where I was, hiking up my hotpants, and hoping the next guy wouldn’t smell too bad. I couldn’t go back to my unsustainable life in the suburbs, I just couldn’t!

But one day my life changed. My pimp threw me and a bunch of the other girls in a van and took us down to Portland to entertain a bunch of visiting businessmen. The customers were as gross and creepy as you’d expect, but something happened there that changed my life. As we were driven through the city, I managed to catch a glimpse, through the tinted glass, of some beautiful condos. Men and women, children and servants came and went, sweeping past the doorman and climbing into waiting limousines. “That’s the life I want,” my spirit vowed. Suddenly, there was something to hope for, a reason to give up my life of dissipation and debauchery! I leaped out of the van at the next intersection, and hitchhiked back to Olympia.

And as soon as I got back home, I took an honest job, a minimum wage job, and began saving every penny I could. The new watchwords of my life are virtue and thrift. I am so excited that Triway is building luxury condos in Olympia now! Someday, my savings will be enough for me to buy a latte in the Starbucks that will most certainly open at Pearlwater. Now that’s something to look forward to, with my whole heart and soul, a pure joy, a virtuous goal. I am certain that I am not the only person who will be thus affected by these inspiring buildings. The only losers in this project are the pimps and bar-owners who will have no one left to exploit when virtue is restored to Olympia. Better go somewhere else, you devils, and take the tattoo artists with you!

»

I think wilderness makes the best view.

I find the best views exist in the wilderness setting. Will rezoning the building heights on the isthmus respect the potential for wilderness habitat restoration in the corridor between the Deschutes River and the Puget Sound?

I would like to see this monumental area preserved. I think it's possible for a majestic wilderness corridor to co-exist in close proximity with an urban center. That's the vision I want to move toward.

There seems to be wide agreement (including from some unusual corners) that urban density is necessary to combat suburban sprawl. Urban density is a promising remedy. But the promotion of urban density must be pursued with a critical eye to important open spaces that exist within urban centers. Olympia is lucky to have the isthmus.

The best use of the isthmus would be as a monument to wilderness. Wilderness juxtaposed with the dense urban core. That would be awesome. This concept is especially relevant given the current problems with pollution, depleted resources, and human caused climate disruption.

bert

»

Mmmm, sweet, sweet pablum

"As a life-long Washingtonian, I want a view that confirms that Olympia was chosen by our former state leaders as the Capitol because it is an exemplary city unto itself, not just because it offered a grand perch upon which to set our capitol campus."

This is historical revisionism. 

Actually Olympia was chosen as a Territorial and later the State Capitol because it was:

A. Relatively easy to get to in a day when water transportation was the norm.

B. Ready availability of liquor and hookers, and places to partake of such pleasures.

C. It wasn't Seattle or Tacoma.

My source? Glad you asked. Rogues, Buffoons, and Statesmen by Gordon Newell, a fun, extensively researched and definitive history of Olympia and State government up to the 70's.

»

I didn't come to Oly because of the Capitol perch...

... I came because it was so hip.
»

Excellent...

essay. Thanks, Burr, for passing it along.

I'm (still) not a member of Stroble's group, but the guy is making sense. I like that he faces the reality of moderately-impeded views when the isthmus is developed, but frames the impact in the context of the greater good. For me, this isn't about Wilder and White and Olmsted, or "Friends" of the waterfront and their ex-Governors, or even about mental-masutrbation-fearing planning commissioners. It's about what matters most in the real world of compromise and economic reality and our deteriorating downtown. 

I live here by choice, and I love Olympia for what it is but I also recognize that it could be a much more dynamic, healthy and vibrant place.  I'm not someone who's scared to eat/park/walk downtown (and I do all three virtually everyday) but I'm also not going to pull any punches--downtown is getting more worn out, more empty, and less inviting each year.  I don't think higher-end condos will solve any of our ills in one fell swoop, but I am certain that having a more diverse and economically stable residential population will.  I'd love to take the approach of several un-named opponents and say "Oh, hey, yes, please let's have some downtown housing (preferably to be constructed by someone interested in buying one of my own buildings) but just not here, or here, or here."  That "logic" is just plain old silly--developers are like any other class of investors--the first ones to take the plunge are at once the most risk tolerant (there's a reason there's been no market-rate housing construction downtown in the last 30 years) but also the ones who are looking to most set themselves up for success.  And there's the rub--if we want to get this ball rolling (and I really believe most Olympians want redevelopment of our downtown, notwithstanding the let's-turn-the-entire-waterfront-back-into-marshland noise-makers) we're going to have to make some compromises, and allowing limited, controlled, and well planned development on the isthmus is a reasonable one in my opinion as a citizen, employer and parent.

»

Reasonable Development

This is not reasonable development. Aye, therein lies the rub. The arguments against the rezone proposal are about more than impaired views and disrespect toward a community sacred space.

Yes, it is true that the impact of human societies is increasingly destructive toward the planet. We depend on healthy eco-systems for the quality, stability, and sustainability of our present day lives. It is likely that serious ecological remediation will be necessary to restore the planet to health. But that is only one argument against building in such a sacred location, a location where the important process of ecological restoration ought to figure large in any future consideration of land use.

Another massive argument against the rezone (and potential subsequent fast-tracked condo-development) is the economy. We are in a "downturn". By some accounts, the US economy hasn't seen a recession of the current measure since 1929. Is there a market for the proposed development? One person who testified at the Planning Commission Hearing recited some regional housing statistics. Just off the top of my head I remember her saying that only one condominium in the suggested price range sold in the last year.

Personally, I think that the most reasonable thing to do is to impose a city-wide / county-wide / state-wide / nation-wide MORATORIUM on suburban sprawl. No new cookie cutter developments. No new strip malls.

Impose strict regulation on development. Say it can only occur in special districts within dense urban cores. This will protect what remains of "wilderness" (in quotes because there is very little true wilderness remaining) and farmland.

It is time to come to terms with the very serious impacts that humanity is having upon this planet.



We Are Destroying the Earth


»

Where to Build

Basically the argument comes down to the fact that it is right to develop in the downtown area v. in the suburbs. But it is a disingenuous argument that the developer proposes to fulfill an interest in sustainability. The real reason for the proposal is to take advantage of a location that would afford a very prestigious vista over Capitol Lake and Budd Inlet... The argument that this proposal is somehow designed to serve the interests of sustainability is really bunk. How many of the owners of these some 141 million dollar condos will work and shop in downtown OLympia? give me a break.

The development as proposed will actually work counter to the interests and purpose of sustainable society.

Yes, promoting an increase in housing density is the right thing to do. But just because it is right to increase housing density in the downtown corridor doesn't make it right for special private interests (wealthy developers, owners, et al.) to plop down where-ever they please - especially when the proposed development goes against the public interest in so many ways.




»

Robert

It would be really great if you could join us for our meetings on Thursdays at Noon.

You have some great ideas and it would be great if you would share them with us.

We're a bunch of people, Peter Stroble included, that are trying to work this things out and are trying to create a awesome vision for Downtown.

Our vision is bigger than the isthmus alone and we certainly are trying to find common ground, rather than just fighting the trenches.

Just imagine if we could reach out and grow into a group of people that could put their money where their mouth is and not just demand of business people and politicans to do the right thing for us, but we could do this ourselves.

Isn't that what America as an Idea is all about? 

mathias

einmaleins

»

experience matters

Here is reality, as it's practiced in the United States in 2008 (rather than as imagined in a Berkeley jam-session in 1968): for a building to get built using anything other than 100% public funds, the developer needs to make money. No one--not Burr or Stroble or me or anyone else I take seriously--has claimed that this developer (or any) is proposing this for 'sustainability' or any other form of 'community good.'

The developer is doing it to make money, and is assuming risk in order to do so: he's placing a bet that if he builds condos in this spot, he will be able to leverage the views and the nearness to downtown as a means to offset the substantial risk of putting ANY amount of capital to work in Olympia, a place that hasn't seen a single meaningful investment in market-rate housing in the last 30 or so years. He's making a bet and he sure is expecting that the views will help his odds.

The point Burr and many other members of our community (especially others with significant stakes in downtown's viability, like me) is that we need to find the confluence between what nearly all reasonable people believe to be the greatest good--dense downtown development in order to offset dangerous sprawl--and what private developers are willing to do. What the City's staff recommended, and what the Planning Commission overwhelmingly supported--is exactly that kind of compromise. The recommendations give the City enormous latitude to require a high standard of design and construction and mitigate the view impacts to the extent that only a small part of the Budd Inlet view would be obstructed from an infrequently-trafficked part of our city. In exchange, the City benefits by (eventually) getting a well-designed project that will bring new people and activity into our downtown. And, just like as has happened throughout the course of human history, a successful project will spur other, less risk-tolerant developers to follow with other projects, some presumably away from the waterfront and further into the downtown core.

Reality is that we need to acknowledge the role of private property owners and developers in helping this City get from where it is to where it wants to be; I question whether the life experiences and/or knowledge of many of the most vocal opponents allow them to be acquainted with this reality.

I get it that Bob and Thad and JLW etc. want to be seen as reasonable people who are a-ok with downtown housing, but just not here on the sacred ground that is the isthmus/ex-KFC/dilipidated housing authrity hq-cum-homeless hangout. But that's just a ruse, and a silly one at that. Unless and until you all want to pony up the $20m to $40m it would take to buy, build, and maintain a park there (and don't you dare try to tax me or my business to do it), then what we're going to have is some form of development on that land (just like we do today). The question is whether we want more of the status quo on those parcels--which is, bluntly, total crap--or if we want to make a decision that is likely to lead us down the path to more extensive (and, being honest, much more important) redevelopment further into the core.

»

I think I heard angels

I think I heard angels singing while I read that...thank you
»

Quite a few former planning commissioners...

...oppose this project. I suppose you don't believe their life experiences and/or knowledge qualify them to have an opinion on zoning decisions? Too bad. I think they're doing great work. For instance, a number of them, along with other community members, have created the Olympia Capitol Park Foundation, which is seeking financial partnerships with the state, the federal government, and private donors to finance a park on the isthmus. They're gathering signatures on a city initiative, available here, calling for the City of Olympia to do a feasibility study of creating such a park, and from what I observed tabling with the Friends of the Waterfront at the Farmer's Market last Sunday, people are eager to sign. In addition, donors are eager to donate -- I talked to former Olympia Planning Commissioner Jerry Reilly this morning, and he said that even before the foundation was set up to receive private donations, people were offering money to make the dream of this park a reality.

Although you seem to believe that I am not entitled to an opinion on this matter, I am going to offer one anyway. More modest market-rate housing projects downtown, such as the one Colpitts is in the process of constructing right now, will serve as better lead-ins to further development and redevelopment in downtown Olympia -- this is according to Triway's own market analysis, courtesy of New Home Trends. This report is available here, and the applicable summary is on page 62. But just to make it easier for everyone, I'll quote a bit of it. New Home Trends marketing analysis of downtown Olympia for Triway Enterprises concludes:

"Do not lead off with the waterfront project, as waterfront projects always warrant higher prices. In order to capitalize on this, begin with a more affordable project that will sell quicker, as there will be greater market depth. Once the 'buzz' and momentum has [sic] begun, the possibility of obtaining higher prices for a waterfront project will be more feasible. If you lead with a high-end project without a baseline established, you risk leaving money on the table, or uncertain buyers and appraisers. Don't make the mistake Tacoma did, targetting all of one buyer profile, or Bremerton by only bringing high end waterfront projects to the market."

There is quite a bit of information in the report about the credentials of the market analysts for New Home Trends; I hope they meet your high standards, Sam. They were good enough for Triway to hire, although it doesn't appear that Triway is paying much attention to NHT's recommendations.

We do agree on one thing, Sam -- the developer is interested in money, not sustainability. One example of that is shown by his unwillingness to remediate the problems created at Cooper Crest by his lack of finesse in developing an environmentally sensitive area. There are a lot of angry residents there. Clearly, for Triway, it's about the money, not the environment... and the will of the community doesn't seem to count for much, either.

»

There is more at stake, and more stakeholders, than

just views and cash for Olympians. This is the State Capitol and the views we are debating belong to more than us or Tri Vo's well heeled customers. They belong to all Washingtonians. $20 million may be beyond the city's means but not the State.

As to Tri Vo being the only capitalist brave enough to build downtown housing, that is simply not true. One word. Colpitts. Seven stories of parking, storefronts, and market rate housing.

The only way Tri Vo can make this project pencil out is to appropriate public wealth, intangibles like views and tangibles like tax subsidies, for private consumption.

»

Petition drive

Here's some more reality for those pushing the petition approach: the State has been asked not once, not twice, but five times over the last fifteen years about their interest in expanding Marathon/Heritage including (four of five times) acquiring most or all of the isthmus. The most recent iteration of the request was made in part via many of the same former planning commissioners who are now rising phoenix-like from the ashes of their former seats of power. Each time, the State (most recently through some of its local House Reps) answered succinctly and clearly: NO. And let's recall that that's when the price tag was substantially lower than today.

Here's something else to chew on: let's say the "petition drive" is a rousing success. This might (but not necessarily) compel the City to perform a costly feasibility analysis. Then, the State will be asked at one point or another, and the State (via the legislature) will be forced to answer this question: when gas is $4 to $5 a gallon, the State is laying off workers and enforcing a hiring freeze, the mortgage default/delinquency rate is popping well above historical norms, and unemployment is spiking, should the citizens of the entire state of Washington be forced to pay for the acquisition, construction, and maintenance of park whose sole reason-detre is to preclude a specific commercial development? And let's not kid ourselves--if this development weren't under consideration, there would be no meaningful push for a state-funded parkland acquisition. Yes, I know, it ought to be a wilderness sanctuary/foos bank/rustic meadow/etc no matter what. But the impetus is clearly the development and how to prevent it.

jlw, you seemed SO empathetic about the challenges that everyday citizens were facing in your latest well-researched WIP piece. How do you reconcile that with your desire to layer new taxes and fees on your fellow citizens in Olympia and Spokane and Tukwila and all the other parts of our state that are under such duress? It's not that I think you or your comrades are not entitled to an opinion, it's that I find the reasoning so lacking that I'm beginning to question whether the opposition camp (including the former-planning-commissioners-of-Olympia) has sufficient real-world knowledge and experience for these opinions to be taken seriously.

»

Petition drive

Here's some more reality for those pushing the petition approach: the State has been asked not once, not twice, but five times over the last fifteen years about their interest in expanding Marathon/Heritage including (four of five times) acquiring most or all of the isthmus.  The most recent iteration of the request was made in part via many of the same former planning commissioners who are now rising phoenix-like from the ashes of their former seats of power.  Each time, the State (most recently through some of its local House Reps) answered succinctly and clearly: NO.  And let's recall that that's when the price tag was substantially lower than today.

Here's something else to chew on: let's say the "petition drive" is a rousing success.  This might (but not necessarily) compel the City to perform a costly feasibility analysis.  Then, the State will be asked at one point or another, and the State (via the legislature) will be forced to answer this question: when gas is $4 to $5 a gallon, the State is laying off workers and enforcing a hiring freeze, the mortgage default/delinquency rate is popping well above historical norms, and unemployment is spiking, should the citizens of the entire state of Washington be forced to pay for the acquisition, construction, and maintenance of park whose sole reason-detre is to preclude a specific commercial development?  And let's not kid ourselves--if this development weren't under consideration, there would be no meaningful push for a state-funded parkland acquisition.  Yes, I know, it ought to be a wilderness sanctuary/foos bank/rustic meadow/etc no matter what.  But the impetus is clearly the development and how to prevent it.

JLW, you seemed SO empathetic about the challenges that everyday citizens were facing in your latest well-researched WIP piece.  How do you reconcile that with your desire to layer new taxes and fees on your fellow citizens in Olympia and Spokane and Tukwila and all the other parts of our state that are under such duress?  It's not that I think you or your comrades are not entitled to an opinion, it's that I find the reasoning so lacking that I'm beginning to question whether the opposition camp (including the former-planning-commissioners-of-Olympia) has sufficient real-world knowledge and experience for these opinions to be taken seriously.

Edited to make a small change per request of another OlyBlogger.

»

I'm disgusted

You know about my security concerns, Sam, but you found a way to associate me with a story that carries my byline. Thanks a lot. This is becoming a little too nasty for my tastes.
»

check your PM

As you know, but as I will repeat for everyone else's benefit, I recently sent messages to the Mods to edit that out after attempting to do so myself. I also replied directly to you to explain these efforts. Let's keep it real.
»

Good one, Sam!

I do like a bit of clever sophistry, and your argument that a park on the isthmus rather than luxury condos would oppress the poor is excellent!
»

Sole Reason To Oppose is not this Specific Commercial Dev.

Personally, my opposition is not based solely on deterrence of this specific commercial development. It is nothing personal. I would oppose the development under whatever aegis, or company it would have been proposed by. I oppose any development in this area of the city that is not destined to serve the public. This area of the city is special. It deserves to be held in trust for the benefit of all - not just a few who are uniquely able to afford it. I oppose any and all development that does not open the area up in the spirit of creating a monument to present and future generations. It's a sacred space. Commercial development doesn't coincide with that. Additionally, I would like to see current commercial spaces in the area gently encouraged to gradually and gracefully relocate. The vision of an isthmus-wide open-space is the one that resonates most clearly with me. An isthmus-wide open-space would serve as an attraction, for people to live, and to visit, the rest of the downtown as it may be developed to accommodate a truly dense urban living (and most importantly) and simultaneous working environment. Living and working must go hand in hand in order to eliminate dependence on the harmful mass personal/private transportation sector. We must think about true sustainability when we think about any present and future development. (The comprehensive plan must account for true sustainability as well.)




»

sacred space

Could you elaborate on "sacred space" a little.

It sounds intriguing. What makes it sacred? History? Rituals? Dedication? 

Is there any Native American connection to be considered... 

Would you also relocate 4th Ave and the bridge in the long-run? 

mathias

einmaleins

»

Sacred Space

Essentially the space is sacred because of the geography, where the fresh water of Mount Rainier's Deschutes River meets the Salt Water of the Puget Sound and the Pacific Ocean.

It is special because it is where our community meets the world - as represented by our connection to the world Ocean. Not all communities have this (think about towns and cities without rivers [so sad]).

It is also special because of the prominence of state government buildings. The Temple of Justice and the Legislative Building tower over the area. They are Public Institutions, and they represent the best intentions of government, to protect the people and the land for the benefit of all.

To let a private commercial development supersede, especially in such a prominent (and elitist) manner, would defy that vision of public protection / public interest, and the local/global and wilderness connectivity.




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Subjective

So sacred is subjective... well it always is. But at least there is no real history.

Well, here on the West Coast 50-100 years is all we got, I suppose (snotty, European remark! Couldn't help myself!)

But hey. Let's talk about the rest of downtown.

I am not partial to the isthmus. Too much blood shed already.

Where could we build housing, what could a grand master plan for the city look like?

Should we invite corporate stores? What amenities are missing, other than parks? 

Would we want to fund a street car? (S-L-U-T in Seattle cost I think $50 mio for a one-strip track.) 

What other ideas... a school downtown? An Art Museum? 

What business as a large employer and tax payer could we attract to downtown to help us fund all the amenities we seek? 

 

On another note:

Have you counted the Cities around the world that are not on a major body of water, there aren't very many! This was mainly done out of industrial reason, rather than recreational.

 

mathias

einmaleins

»

Subjectivity

Actually, the sacredness of the isthmus is not entirely subjective. It is shared by many people. And in one recent comprehensive analysis, it was referred to literally as such by a professional analyst.

In regard to the historical aspect, I should have included the historical aspects. Of course, I am not a great historian. But the area certainly has a great history, and that influence of course, must weigh in - in any development scheme. I am not an expert on First Peoples' History. However, I know that the area was inhabited and used quite regularly by local first peoples. I think it is important to include that history in plans for future/ present development.

Sorry to be so ethnocentric in my previous analysis of the situation. The historical record of what befell "Native Americans" is, of course, critical to understanding where we are today, and where we might hope to go tomorrow.




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The isthmus is a lot of things to a lot of people

but sacred ground it ain't. It is mud dredged from the port and the garbage of immigrants put there to create a much more reliable way to get to the west side than the three previous bridges it replaced. The Native Americans you refer to, the Squaxin, Sammamish, Chehalis, Nisqually et. al. never used the isthmus for anything other than what the rest of us immigrants use it for: To get to the other side. It is an industrial artifact and a crummy place to build high rise condos but it is no more sacred than a highway.
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Sacred Area / Sacred Ground?

I didn't intend to intimate that the actual isthmus is a sacred area to any tribal groups. What I intended was the importance of recognizing First Peoples' tribal histories when making any decision about land use.

I agree with you in part Laurian, I don't think it is "sacred ground" - whatever that means with all its connotations. In my understanding, the "land" that makes up the isthmus is very new. It's less than 100 years old, and it consists of fill and mud scooped from Budd Inlet and the Estuary that formerly existed where Capitol Lake is now.

(But then maybe the isthmus is sacred, representative of the harmed estuary ecosystem that is begging for restoration.)

I do, however, think that the isthmus is a sacred area to present inhabitants - be they descendants of the "Native Americans" who discovered this continent, which came long after to be known as "America," the people who lived here long, long, long before White People arrived from Europe - or not.

It's a sacred area to me, at the very least, for the reasons I listed above (local/global and wilderness connectivity, government and public interest / public protection.)




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Gotch ya Bert

Add to the Native/white ethnicities who have populated the area Chinese. Some basic history came be found here
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Sam, your posts although sharp are sound

but I'm not sure how you claim the Legie has said no to acquiring the isthmus when members of the Capital Facilities committee have expressed reservations about the project. Admittedly they have said they will take a wait and see position while Olympia works out the zoning issues but they have made their reservations about the project public.

The economic downturn we are currently experiencing will pass. Now may not be the time for the State to shell out $20 million but in a year or two it will be in the position to make such expenditures. Acquiring the land on the isthmus may take years, just as it took Tri Vo. The land has lain fallow for decades. Waiting another few years is preferable than going ahead with a gigantic mistake we will live with for 50 to 75 years. By then rising sea levels or the forecasted 8.0+ earthquake will take care of the problem. 

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There you go...

... we were talking about this in yesterdays meeting.

That's what I call great politics and successful leadership:

LET'S JUST WAIT A FEW YEARS!

Perfect idea!

If you're in leadership/city council you will get "killed" for making a decision one way or the other. But praised and encouraged for sitting around waiting.

Wohoo, sign me up for that job! 

mathias

einmaleins

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Mathias

It is better to do nothing than do something bad. Larida Passage is a bad idea, a sentiment clearly held by a majority of Olympians.

Your implication that nothing is being done about the health and welfare of downtown is contradicted by your efforts and those of Peter, Rob et. al. who attend the Thursday at Noon meetings. From the minutes you post there I read of progress on getting a tax rebate from the State. The ODA and PBIA are moving ahead and getting results. Colpitts is going to be built. The DNA partnered with the City to have security lights installed in several alleys. Your cogent discussions about a walkable downtown have swayed me. Although the challenges facing this town we all love are daunting, good people with good ideas are moving forward.

What is really killing downtown are real estate companies, many of them out of town, keeping the commercial vacancy rate at 15% with rents the local market cannot bear. I confess to being stumped on how to get rents in line with the local market but I am pretty sure adding unafforable housing to that mix will not help.

Things are happening, abet slowly, but happening. Three Republican led recessions in 25 years have taken their toll on downtowns all across America. I can't see how another dose of Reagonomic Trickle Down economics will do anything but further Olympia's economic divide.
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Progress for progress's sake...

...is wrong, I admit it. And am certainly not in favour of it.

Let me explain a bit more, of what I was referring too:

Rhenda, http://rhenda.com/?p=14 on her blog laments the fact that if the City Council acts for or against the rezone, people tell her, it'll be the end of the city council's career...

This sounds sad to me, that on one side, we want leadership of our elected officials, but on the other hand we declare already beforehand, that no matter what they will do, they will fail. 

 The reason why things are happening right now, either on Thursdays-at-noon, First-Fridays-at-Night or other times and places, it is because they don't ask for permission, they just do it. 

 I am not in favor of the new buildings on the isthmus, they look very boring and "belltownish" to me, but I'm also not a developer and can't even remotely understand the magnitude and risk of such a development. I don't feel sorry for them. But I would love to get another developer, or someone who could put their money where their mouth is, to the table and see what their opinion is. Not just about the isthmus, but all of downtown.

I was already, several times, close to cold-calling Vulcan, Paul Allen's developing company, that single-handily bought and rebuild the South Lake Union neighborhood in Seattle.

Just to get another voice into the mix. 

If we could come to the realization, that buildings get build by developers and not my drum-circles, than it would be great to have them bid against each other, so we can have a better choice and selection.

Right now, it's all or nothing. And by nothing I mean nothing! 

mathias

einmaleins

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I firmly disagree that it's

I firmly disagree that it's all or nothing. This all-or-nothing attitude, wherever it came from, is the source of the council's discomfort, and it is destroying public dialogue around downtown redevelopment. There are always many, many options. To imply, or state outright, that there are not is to deny and suffocate the creativity, energy and potential investment of the many stakeholders in the future of downtown. My advice to the council and others involved in this community-wide conversation: breathe, exercise diplomatic recognition (that would include NOT dismissing others' ideas as "drum-circles"), and allow that there may be a widely acceptable solution that no one has fully articulated yet.
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Alright...

... that makes sense.

This "all or nothing" is too harsh.

But by saying we have solutions that aren't fully articulated yet, I would say that a solution is something that's articulated. If it's not articulated it's not a solution, it's a dream, an idea or whatever else.

It's been said, that we can't trust Triway to ever build what they propose, but how should we trust some "solution" that's not articulated yet.

What I was trying to say with the "All or nothing approach" is that we have one official plan on the table. ONE.

Just imagine, if we would have several bids, several developers, interested groups that have a working plan and can and will bankroll them.

We could actually choose the best one, or pit developers against each other and challenge them to do better. 

mathias

einmaleins

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