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When the Capitol Hill light rail station opens for business in 2016, there's a good chance the Hill's weekly farmers market will be right around the corner. Sound Transit officials are moving forward with a recommendation that a planned extension to Nagle Place be made available to the Neighborhood Farmers Market Alliance to host their Capitol Hill market. Ron Endlich, deputy project manager for the Capitol Hill station, said that talks are ongoing but that Sound Transit believes it can make the extension of Nagle between Denny and John available to the farmers market group at an affordable rate. With coordination with the city's department of transportation, it's possible the market would also utilize Denny Way, Endlich said. The Broadway Farmers Market is on the hunt for a new home as SRM Development prepares plans to construct a mixed-use project at the market's current Sunday location in the parking lot at 10th Ave E and E Thomas. SRM's effort has been on again, off again but CHS has been told that the project is in motion once more and the public process of design review will begin soon. What happens to the market in the meantime while the light rail station is constructed isn't yet clear. Here's what NFMA's Chris Curtis told CHS recently:
2016 is going to be a big year for Capitol Hill. Let's hope we can keep it together in the meantime. Sound Transit talks about the Nagle extension and, equally important, parking plans for the light rail station at the next Transit Oriented Development forum on October 27 at Century Ballroom. It's tempting to simply slap up the CHS post from the last Sound Transit construction update meeting and call it a night -- much of the content from Thursday's meeting, we had heard before. But there was some news to be had:
We'll follow up with more about the marketing and business mitigation side of things and how the whole brand thing will play out when we have a chance to ask Sound Transit more about it. As Sound Transit's Brooke Belman said during the meeting, "Capitol Hill isn't really a neighborhood that wants to be branded." CHS asked no questions Thursday night -- we get plenty of opportunities to pester government employees without cutting into your time. Design reviews begin Wednesday for the expansion of the Belroy apartment building at 711 Bellevue Ave. E. The development proposed by Point 32 and Weinstein Architects not only refurbishes the original 1931 building but replaces four existing two story houses with three modern apartments. Weinstein and Point 32 held several meetings with Capitol hill residents to present their initial plan, discussing among other things, the amount of open space remaining for residents of the existing building, and the scale of the three proposed structures; two three story apartments match the scale of the existing building, one Northern building requires a variance. Wednesday's meeting at 6:30 at the Seattle University Alumni building, 824 12th Ave is the first opportunity for public comment. For many in the neighborhood the new construction is a test for a stretch of the hill which contains some of the best -- and most dismal -- urban design the neighborhood has to...
It has been more than three months since the last public meeting to discuss the status of the Capitol Hill light rail station and tunnels construction. On October 8th, Sound Transit will hold a forum to discuss the status of construction and the application process for a noise variance the agency must receive from the City of Seattle to achieve its ambitious round-the-clock construction schedule. Back in June, representatives of the agency told a forum audience that the noise variance would be applied for 'in weeks.'For more on that and a lot of the topics on the agenda again for October, check out our CHS writeup on the June forum: Light rail construction noise meeting: Big walls, new crosswalks, 24-hour work
CHS talked briefly with Sound Transit spokesperson Bruce Gray about the forum and a few other ST items of note:
The discount on light rail tunneling continues. Sound Transit said Wednesday that the contractor that lost out on the longer and much more lucrative University of Washington-to-Capitol Hill route presented a proposal to dig the light rail tunnels from Capitol Hill to downtown that will cost 12% less than the agency expected to pay. According to the Sound Transit announcement, JCM U-Link Joint Venture sent in a bid of $153.6 million to do the job -- 12%, or $20.7 million, below the Sound Transit engineer’s estimate of $174.3 million. JCM U-Link lost out on the bidding for the UW-Cap Hill route when contractor Traylor Frontier-Kemper presented a plan to build the tunnels that will pass underneath the Montlake cut and up Capitol Hill for $309 million back in March. That bid came in 22% below ST engineer estimates. So, what's with all these, um, bargains? Seattle Transit Blog says ST may never see the savings:
Meanwhile, neither of the lowest bidding contractors worked on the troublesome Beacon Hill tunneling which ran into those pesky sandy voids. The Beacon Hill contractor was Obayashi Corporation. Maybe they can pass on some advice to the new guys. Photograph: cdine from the CHS flickr pool The Capitol Hill Design Charrette will be a one-day workshop where community members work in small teams to examine the development possiblities and realities for every block of Broadway. Unlike some community meetings, the charrette should be a creative and collaborative experience -- and, best of all, it's the kind of thing Capitol Hill needs to start working on now to be ready for what comes next with the massive changes happening on Broadway.
What we do know is that Sound Transit owns prime commercial real estate in the heart of Capitol Hill. By 2016, there will be a new burst of retail and housing activity around the station. In between now and then somewhere around 2012 or 2013, an important process will be played out when Sound Transit assembles a framework for taking bids on developing the land that will be part of the Capitol Hill station. The request for proposal (RFP) will ostensibly set the guidelines for what kind of transit oriented development happens at the site. The Capitol Hill 'community' -- you and me, that is -- will need to be ready to shape that RFP process through communication, information, ideas and good old fashioned political pressure. How do we prepare ourselves in the meantime? September's charrette is an opportunity to begin muscling up on our collective community development strength. It's a chance to work with community members and community experts like architects and developers to create a vision for how Broadway should be on the best of all possible Capitol Hills. It's also an opportunity to set some of the vision for the Capitol Hill light rail station's retail and housing development. And it should also be a creative and fun Saturday afternoon. Capitol Hill Design Charrette A Picture for dreaming over Originally uploaded by sonek321 With the pavement laid on the Capitol Hill light rail station construction site and the empty lot about to go unused for the next three months, CHS asked Brooke Belman, a community-outreach program manager for Sound Transit, how community members might work with the agency to activate the space. Belman said Sound Transit is again working to coordinate artworks for the space similar to the program they created for the empty buildings in the area on Broadway prior to demolition. She also says Sound Transit is looking to work with people in the community to put the space to use:
If you are starting to brainstorm events and uses you'd like to see in the three-acre space (roller skate party for Ref 71?), Belman has some good news. One, your idea can involve power -- electrical power. And, two, ST is looking for ideas:
Sound Transit offered the following guidelines to shape any ideas:
There's the empty lot. Here's the framework. Fill it up. If you'd rather not think out loud and want to contact Brooke Belman directly, here's her address belmanb at soundtransit.org
So, what *will* you do with three acres of open asphalt on Broadway? The Capitol Hill light rail station construction area is finally capped with this oily layer awaiting the next phase of construction in early 2010. In the meantime, we're told Sound Transit is planning some kind of groundbreaking party in mid-September and another art project involving the chain-link security fence. We're checking with Sound Transit to see if they have any other community uses planned for the newly paved space.
Got two fighter jets you've been looking to get rid of? There's a new buyer on Capitol Hill and he's got the cash to make the deal. Sound Transit's finance committee approved $440,000 Thursday for the "purchase of material and fabrication of artwork" for the Capitol Hill light rail station, according to spokesperson Bruce Gray.
The move gives artist Mike Ross's company Nonstop, Inc. the budget necessary to purchase . Ross modified his design and further abstracted the jets after an initial outcry received a great deal of attention. Ross had said that he was having difficulty finding the jet parts he needed for his design last summer. But according to the attached report the Sound Transit finance committee reviewed prior to voting on the money, Ross has found the right jets: KEY FEATURES of PROPOSED ACTION As sexy as jet fighter art is, Sound Transit's light rail project on Capitol Hill has some much bigger issues to also be thinking about.
Here are some notes and news from Wednesday night's Sound Transit meeting to update status on construction of the Capitol Hill light rail station and University Link tunnels. The entire presentation from the meeting is embedded below. Now the news:
Here is the presentation for you to peruse. More notes and some images from the slides below. Sound Transit 6/17/09 Noise And Construction Meeting
View more OpenOffice presentations from jseattle. Sound Transit shared data from a noise study a consultant prepared for the agency. Note that the 'existing' noise on Broadway is listed at 60 decibels, or somewhere between a conversation and the 'interior of a department store.' Sound Transit is expecting construction noise to raise noise on Broadway up to 8% and up to 26% on 10th Ave. A few citizens at the meeting voiced concerned about noise levels beyond Broadway and 10th Ave but Endlich said he would have to ask the noise consultant if they had more information about the concerns. He also said property owners that live above tunnel route should experience no 'noticeable noise' or vibrations. To help lower noise levels -- and help gain the variance the agency needs for round-the-clock work -- Sound Transit plans the construction walls noted above, dampening material on equipment like compressors and generators and limits on the kind of work that can happen at night. It will also have rules in place to limit truck noise including a ban on compression brakes, a 5-minute idle limit, and no 'beep beep beep' tones from the trucks when they back up at night. Seattle Department of Transportation's Ethan Melone was also on hand to answer questions about planned pedestrian improvements for the construction area. He said Sound Transit is paying for a crosswalk and a curb bulb to help make walking in the area safer as truck traffic increases to up to
This week, they want to talk with you about the noise and a few other items of import related to ongoing work on the eight-year project.
This is an excellent point in the process to have your concerns listened to and, most importantly, acted on. With the variance process looming on the horizon, Sound Transit wants happy neighbors. tell them about what will make you happy. Be a little, well, noisy. People love a boogey man. I'd been told by a few different people about Sound Transit pulling a fast one and scheduling some kind of hearing about relaxation in the city noise ordinances semi-secretly in the next week. Sound Transit says that's not the case and the city's Department of Planning calendar confirms it. No hearing on Sound Transit construction noise yet. --------------- UPDATE: Sound Transit followed up with information on a hearing that might have caused some confusion up on the Hill. There is a meeting Thursday night to discuss a variance for the work on the UW light rail station. You can see the attached notice for more information on that session. --------------- Spokesperson Bruce Gray says there is an important meeting planned to discuss Sound Transit's Capitol Hill light rail station and tunnel construction noise upcoming -- but it's a public session to gather feedback and discuss the projects, not the official hearing with the city to establish a variance to the noise ordinances. Here's the info on the June 10th session:
Recall that the city has eased the process for large projects like the University Link light rail effort to get variances in the city's noise laws to enable things like night-time work. If you live within earshot of the future station between John and Denny along Broadway, mark your calendar. The sidewalk improvements on Pine St are underway. The sidewalks around "the People's Parking Lot" at Pine/ Belmont are torn up right now, along with the North side of the Pine St. overpass. Once this is all done it should give us better pedestrian access to all the events that may or may not be happening there. And walking across Pine to downtown, you get a good look at the work they're doing on the Olive Off-Ramp, prepping the ground for the coming light rail tunnel. (I should probably point out before someone else does that the pic here of the I-5 work is actually taken from Pike, looking towards Pine) Photographer Joseph Songco has been documenting the before and after of Sound Transit's light rail demolition across Seattle. Below are his shots of Capitol Hill's new voids. Hoping his project continues and captures the after-after construction phases.
Also, don't forget the Olive Way exit from I-5 northbound shuts down Sunday night and stays closed for the next year to prepare the area for light rail tunneling. Did you miss last week's Sound Transit meeting to discuss the status of the Capitol Hill light rail construction? Yeah, me too. Fortunately, Sound Transit has made the slideshow (pdf) from the meeting available. We uploaded it so you can see without downloading but some of the maps are hard to read so grab the full file if you want all the details.
The slides cover schedule for construction of the Capitol Hill station and the University Link tunnels, the Olive Way exit closure that starts this weekend and the work below I5 to prepare for tunneling, some information about the 'transit oriented development' planning process and some new information about the project's noise need for a noise variance. Haven't talked to the agency about it yet but the slide deck says there will be a 'noise information' meeting on June 3. ST also notes that its construction sound wall "will contain most but not all noise."... As familiar facades crumble and new construction brings about light rail systems and "modern" condo developments some things will never change in Capitol Hill. In a bit of an ode Capitol Hill's last "old school" art walk I would like to share the following photo. With the Olive Way exit closure one week away, we asked Sound Transit a couple of the questions that have come up here on the site. Answers below. If you have other questions or comments about the Olive Way exit or other issues pertaining to Sound Transit's light rail construction, let us know and we'll see what we can do to get answers. You can also cut out the middle man and go straight to the source -- here's Sound Transit's 24-hour construction hotline: (888) 298-2395 Q: Madison is going to get slammed with N Cap Hill traffic, I'm wondering if they will stop allowing parking on the outbound side staring at 6pm (as is allowed now)?
Q: What is Sound Transit doing to help customers driving to businesses in the Olive Way area find their way?
For more on the closure including alternative routes, see our latest coverage. Back in February, CHS asked What would you do with 3 acres of open asphalt on Broadway? We'd like to include an addendum to that inquiry. What would you with with 3 acres of open asphalt AND an event to mark the start of Sound Transit's light rail tunneling on Capitol Hill? Sound Transit is working out details for a late summer/early fall event at the location of the light rail station construction. Working with the Chamber of Commerce's marketing committee, I'm pulling together some ideas for a community event that Sound Transit will support. I'm kind of partial to a true Capitol Hill block party with free music and something like a big wheel track to take advantage of the pavement but am curious to see what you'd like to be part of. Think an event that's simple, fun for everybody and representative of Capitol Hill. Also, should be asphalt appropriate. Unless we bring some sand in, that is. What does the appearance of holes in the ground related to the boring of the light rail tunnels through Beacon Hill mean for Capitol Hill's light rail future? Similar to the experiences related to business mitigation and 'transit oriented development,' we're lucky we didn't go first. "I would not say plans have changed," Sound Transit spokesperson Bruce Gray told CHS today. "We looked at lessons learned in Beacon Hill as we created the bid documents for the UW to Capitol Hill route." Gray said the result was hiring a contractor for the job who could provide machinery that will better deal with the conditions causing the Beacon Hill holes. "We finished our first tunnel on Beacon Hill, three years ago," Gray said. "We haven't seen any surface issues since the tunnels besides these voids. We've learned a lot on Beacon Hill. We have another 15 months before we dig on Capitol Hill." Sound Transit says that the seven 'voids' discovered on -- or in, really -- Beacon Hill are the result of the displacement... Quick reminder that tonight is Sound Transit's latest open house to discuss the latest phases of light rail construction on Capitol Hill. The forum comes as work is set to begin on shoring up portions of Interstate 5 in preparation for tunneling that will begin in the area after this summer. The work will close the Olive Way exit from northbound I5 for the next year. We're still collecting questions to pass along to Sound Transit so leave a comment if you aren't able to attend tonight but want to be heard. Also expect the recent news about sinkholes developing in the area of Beacon Hill's light rail tunneling to be on people's minds. Pulling together a CHS post on that later today. Tonight's meeting runs from 6 to 8p at Seattle Central's room 1110 in the south end of the main building. Sound Transit's Olive Way closure announcement:
We confirmed last week that the closure of the Olive Way exit from northbound I5 was scheduled to start May 18th and, btw, stay closed for an entire year as Sound Transit works with WSDOT to shore up the freeway in preparation for construction of the light rail tunnel that will pass beneath. Sound Transit has scheduled a public meeting next week to discuss the closure and the next phases of the light rail construction process on Capitol Hill. You may have seen the notices showing up in the advertising on this site. Sound Transit says the purpose of Thursday night's session is help area residents and businesses "learn about the construction schedule and to ask questions about this work or other construction activities affecting Capitol Hill." May 07, 2009 The Project Release Party for HyBrid Architecture + Assembly’s newest project, Remington Court, is on Friday, May 1st.
This 4-unit urban infill housing project was developed, designed, and built by the team of HyBrid Architecture and HyBrid Assembly. HyBrid principal Robert Humble describes the project: “The best way to execute our vision and values was through developing this project ourselves. Access to light, air, and views was a primary force in shaping this building.”
The party will begin after work on Friday, with local artists (Jamie Potter, Tim Brown, and others) exhibiting their work and live music throughout the evening. Food and drinks will be provided as well, so stop by at any time that works with you, or stay for the entire event. Come have fun with the HyBrid team, explore our newest building, and we look forward to seeing you at the party this Friday!
Sincerely,
HyBrid Architecture + Assembly 206.267.2677
Date: Friday, May 1st<... The Vivace Building (1830 Broadway) came down yesterday.
Thanks to flickr user Fecki for the great pictures. Jan Drago should read CHS. Seattle PostGlobe recounts a diatribe by the City Council transportation committee chair where she expresses her shock that Sound Transit is planning to close the Olive Way offramp from northbound I5 as part of the preparation process for boring the light rail tunnel through Capitol Hill. We first wrote about the closure plan last October. Maybe Drago was surprised by the date -- Sound Transit, which had been describing the closure as coming 'late in 2009' is now gearing up for a closure that could begin as early as May according to the PostGlobe. We've got an e-mail out to Sound Transit to confirm their planned start date and duration of closure -- in October, the plan called for a closure of nine months. This more recent document suggests a year-long closure will be necessary. And, the Olive Way offramp isn't the only I5 exit in the area that will be affected. Sound Transit will also need the Pike/Pine reversible off-ramp from the express lanes to be restricted to... 11:35 AM UPDATE: Mayor Greg Nickels said his visit to Capitol Hill this morning was a continuation of efforts he started during construction of the first phases of Seattle's light rail construction in the Rainier Valley. "I want to hear from them directly how this is impacting their businesses," Nickels said of the ten Capitol Hill business owners he planned to meet this morning. Nickels stood near the Twice Sold Tales lot and looked on as the day's clearing and removal of building materials began. "Is that where the apartment building was?" he asked. "Amazing to see so much change." A spokesperson for the mayor's office said today's tour was focused on business owners but that Nickels would return to the area in June for a community tour. While he waited for the day's itinerary to begin, Nickels talked with Sound Transit staff about progress on the project and communication with the residents of 10th Ave directly across from the construction area. He also talked about how inspiring he found this CHS post -- A...
10:31AM
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Mayor tours light rail demolition
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Mayor's staff is here and informs me that media don't usually
accompany the mayor on these types of events. But I can stay :) Am
told there will be another visit in June for community. Presumably,
reporters are invited for that one.
10:36AM
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Mayor tours light rail demolition
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10:46AM
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Mayor tours light rail demolition
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Will need to retitle this post Mayor tours several businesses near light rail demolition. Nickels is spending rest of his time talking '1 on 1,' as his staff put it, with area business owners. His first visit is to the locksmith at John and 10th. I'm peeling off coverage -- no 1:1 for me. In the picture, Nickels greets Rosebud owner and occasional City Council candidate Robert Sondheim.
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