13% of Seattle’s registered hobby drones call Capitol Hill, CD homeport

Seattle Police still haven’t tracked down the pilot of the drone that crashed into a Capitol Hill earlier this month but newly released records from the Federal Aviation Administration show that there are plenty more quadcopters ready to take flight in the neighborhood.

According to the records, 171 of the 1,355 hobby class drones registered with the FAA in Seattle are listed at address in ZIP codes covering Capitol Hill and the Central District. That’s around 13% of the Seattle fleet.

In all, the feds report more than 460,000 hobby registrations in the United States and its territories. Seattle ranks 18th in the nation for the number of hobby drones — right between New York and Tucson. Houston’s more than 3,000 registrations take the top slot. On the non-hobby end of things, Seattle only ranks 28th with a paltry 27 registered industrial drones. Menlo Park is the working drone capital with 176 just outpacing the 138 industrial drones registered at Alabama’s Maxwell Air Force Base.

The laws and regulations around the use of quadcopters and drones are continuing to take shape. Late last year, a FAA Small Unmanned Aircraft Registration system began that requires even recreational drones to be registered. Police did not say if the drone involved in the Capitol Hill house crash displayed the required registration information. The FAA has mandated a five-mile no-fly zone around airports — drone pilots should stay north of Madison if they want to avoid that entanglement. There are not currently any City of Seattle laws the prohibit the devices from being used but regulations prohibit their use on parks lands.

We’ve mapped the FAA hobby registrations, below.
Continue reading

#ExposeRape at V2 with artists behind Capitol Hill anti-rape poster campaign

https://twitter.com/lilyilyy/status/726848895083409408?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Activists and artists behind an anti-rape poster campaign are following up on their efforts with a community gathering and art project on Capitol Hill.

The ExposeRape group is inviting the public to help create a giant display of public art while deconstructing rape culture at the V2 art space Thursday night. Creators of the #ExposeRape PSA posters seen around Capitol Hill will be at the 11th Ave space. A march through Pike/Pine is also planned.

With direct messaging like “know means know” and “don’t rape,” organizers of the campaign say they are seeking to expand the discussion of sexual assault in the city.

Our mission is to expose and broaden the way that rape is viewed and defined, bust rape myths and create consent culture through public art. We are not compromising in our message and we don’t have to divide rape by the communities it affects. By highlighting a diverse group of artists in this project we aim to represent a wide range of experiences, all with powerful messages in combating rape culture.

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(Image: ExposeRape)

CHS recently wrote about Capitol Hill artist Eliza Gauger and her use of public art as form of psychic weaponry with her Hex of Obsolescence to protect trans kids. She is now fundraising to gather her Problem Glyphs into book form. The projects also harken back to the anti-gaybashing work of John Criscitello on the streets of Capitol Hill and the #CapHillPSA poster campaign.

Located in the former home of Value Village, V2 was established as a temporary art space while developers Legacy Commercial work out a way to develop the landmarks-protected building.

Thursday’s event will feature work from 13 artists, including regular CHS photographer Alex Garland.

PUSPUS, Eric Jolson Rhea Vega, Kaya Axelsson, Shogo Ota, Alex Garland, Oscar Arreguin Mendez, Ken McCarty, Crybaby Studios, CamCreature & Ms. 3, Amy Huber, Jazz Brown, Yoona Lee, I Want You Studio (Christian Petersen)

The #ExposeRape event starts June 2nd at 7 PM at V2, 1525 11th Ave. Visit ExposeRape’s website for more information. 

21+ things CHS heard at Capitol Hill Housing’s annual community forum

Capitol Hill Housing served up a buffet of neighborhood discussion during its 9th annual community forum Thursday night. Five Capitol Hill speakers touched on a range of forward-looking topics, ranging from lidding I-5 to expanding the Broadway Business Improvement Area to retaining arts spaces in the neighborhood.

This year’s theme was Gearshift, “all about how we respond to the rapid changes facing Capitol Hill.” The presentations and follow up discussions could have been pulled straight from the headlines of CHS:

Expanding the Broadway BIA — Sierra Hansen of the Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce
Lidding I-5 to create developable land and open space — Scott Bonjukian of Lid I-5
Creating a Capitol Hill parking benefits district — Alex Brennan from Capitol Hill EcoDistrict
Building leadership and power for renters on Capitol Hill — Zachary Pullin of the Capitol Hill Community Council
Incentivizing developers to build or maintain arts space — Tonya Lockyer of Velocity Dance Center

Participants, who gathered for the event at The Summit on E Pike, took a dive into each topic and city leaders presented the results.

During the group discussion about how to build renter power, City Council District 3 rep Kshama Sawant said many people echoed Zachary Pullin’s concerns that renters are given far too little consideration in the city’s development planning.

“Our democracy should not be dependent on property ownership” said Pullin during his presentation.

There was considerable support for a parking benefits district — wherein a portion of metered parking fees are spent within the neighborhood — as long as it did not result in cuts to underserved neighborhoods. Participants proposed extending paid parking hours past 8 PM on Capitol Hill and using those extra funds for neighborhood projects. Continue reading

Producers of The Real World have staked out a set on Capitol Hill

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The Ballou Wright building on 12th Ave. (Image: Hunters Capital via Facebook)

It has been 18 years since Stephen slapped Irene outside their downtown apartment during a now infamous episode of The Real World: Seattle. The MTV reality show that follows a group of strangers living together for several months may now be planning a Seattle comeback, this time on Capitol Hill.

R.W. Productions, a California-based company linked with the production outfit behind The Real World franchise, filed paperwork last week to create a “movie studio” and temporary residence on Capitol Hill.

The company is proposing $50,000 in alterations to create a residence for 18 months at the 12th Ave Ballou Wright office building between Pike and Pine, according to a permit application filed with the City of Seattle.

MTV has not yet returned requests for comment. UPDATE (5/31): A MTV spokesperson confirmed the next season of The Real World will be filmed in Seattle this year. We have also reached out to building owners Hunters Capital about the temporary makeover. The season finale of The Real World: Go Big or Go Home aired on Thursday.

In addition to its tech and creative tenants like the Creature agency, the Ballou Wright building is also home to new-era juice bar and cafe Juicebox. CHS wrote about the building’s overhaul and tech-savvy tenants here in 2011. For years, the building was home to Klineburger Brothers, one of the largest custom taxidermists in the country.

The 32nd season of the reality show, known for the drunken antics of its subjects, could see an interesting plot line develop between the housemates and their potential neighbors at the Seattle Police Department’s East Precinct.

Bunim/Murray Productions have revisited several cities during its 31 seasons of making The Real World, including San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego.

Meanwhile, the neighborhood’s homegrown series, Capitol Hill, recently released the 14th episode of its second season on Huffington Post.

Capitol Hill Pets | Calming Trixie in Cal Anderson

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Trixie is a five-year-old Maltese/Yorkie that lives with Helaina on Denny Way. Trixie is a rescue and a registered therapy dog that spends time at retirement homes to help people with anxiety. Cal Anderson is kind of their backyard, so you may see the five-pound, silky-haired Trixie bringing peace to the masses as she is led around by Helaina’s small child.

We ask photographer Alex Garland to follow marchers in the rain and do crazy things like trying to make yet another picture of yet another huge apartment building look interesting. We thought we’d ask him to do something a little more fun. Capitol Hill Pets is a semi-regular look at our furry, fuzzy, feathered, and finned friends found out and about on Capitol Hill. Are you a Capitol Hill Pet we should know about? Drop us a line.

The *5* final projects that could make Central Seattle streets and sidewalks safer

Olive at the I-5 onramp *AFTER* a previous round of pedestrian improvements. Probably some more work to do, no? (Image: WSDOT)

Olive at the I-5 onramp *AFTER* a previous round of pedestrian improvements. Probably some more work to do, no? (Image: WSDOT)

Earlier in May, CHS shared details of 15 projects that could make Central Seattle streets and sidewalks safer. Each of the 15 probably could. But only five of them will — or will have a chance to thanks to the East District Neighborhood Council and the Neighborhood Street Fund. Below are the five proposals that were recommended by the council and will now be passed through SDOT’s “high level design & cost estimate” vetting process. Once that feasibility analysis is complete in September, the council can rank the five finalists and pass them back to SDOT for possible implementation. There are apparently no guarantees in the world of NSF projects. “There is NO guarantee they will pick any of our ranked projects – they have their own process separate from our own,” an email announcing the East District finalists reads. Continue reading

Rockland Residency gives artists worldwide a free place to create in the CD

IMG_7490Seeing Seattle for the first time, imagining its possibilities and places to explore, is an experience that can evoke some serious inspiration. To help artists tap into that creative energy, a Central District couple have transformed a house they own into a free artist residency that has already attracted interest from around the globe.

The Rockland Residency was founded by local artists Shawn Landis and Jodi Rockwell in 2015. The 27th and Marion home, known as the Butterfly House, turns over to artists from February and April and is rented out as a regular residence the rest of the year. The “unmarried husband and wife team” developed the free residency program to offer space and time for artists to create and connect with the city.

“It’s a great way to share and gather artists together to give them space and time to create their work without the stress and strain of everyday life,” Landis said. “It is very critical for creative thought, to have that structure of support around you, and I wanted to give that back.”

Landis and Rockwell do not charge residents for the time they spend at the house. Residents can stay for two to four weeks, depending on their projects.

One of the most recent residents was Carla Bertone, a muralist from Buenos Aires, who stayed for two weeks in the architecturally distinct 1963 home, designed by renowned Seattle architect Victor Steinbrueck. During her time at Rockland, Bertone completed and presented a mural she installed, titled “Psychedelic UFO”.

“Their creative energy feeds me, knowing they are here producing work, it generates more of that energy,” Rockwell said. “That part surprised me, when it began, knowing someone was here really focused on their work, it inspires me.”

Along with a small group of artists, Landis and Rockwell choose residents from a wide gamut of applications. In its inaugural year, Rockland received 38 applications from 12 different countries. Selected to participate are writers and visual artists from New York, Finland, Buenos Aires, Mexico, and Texas. To commemorate their time, each artist is asked to design a flag to represent them, which Landis then sews and hangs from a flag pole outside.

As stated in their Mission: “The residency is open to anyone engaged in a creative process involving and not limited to: visual art, writing, music, performance and new media. Our goal is to share what we have established for ourselves in property and networking to link dedicated artists outside of the Seattle area to those within.”

“It pulls us out because we get to show off what our city has to offer, the connections we have from our fifteen years here,” Rockwell said.

To learn more about the residency, visit www.rocklandresidency.com.

This week in CHS history | First Hill shooting, Dr. Jen’s closes, new owner for Capitol Hill Block Party

8445311667_20b85d318aHere are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

Capitol Pill | Mirror image

I don’t particularly like going to the bank. I suppose there aren’t many of us who do, being that it’s a place where one’s monetary shortcomings are in full view and relative strangers make compulsory – and sometimes shockingly invasive – small talk while you perform mathematical magical thinking right in front of their eyes. Exiting a financial institution recently, and mired in my own apocalyptic calculations of my personal – and by stress-induced extrapolation, intrinsic – worth, I had a fleeting conversation with the most gorgeous woman who reached for the door at the very same moment, and from her I unexpectedly received one of the best pieces of advice anyone has ever given me.

Secondhand Hat Display, Pike/Pine, Seattle

It happened that she was dressed entirely in layers of plain but startlingly beautiful fabrics that flowed over her as though she was an animated marble sculpture from some wholly other era. She was, indeed, quite a number of decades older than me, and yet walking as quickly as I was. I wondered if perhaps she was just as eager to be getting out of that place.  I held the door open for her, and as she passed by I was struck by how perfectly her gigantic woven hat was situated upon her head, and how regally she carried it above the rest of her ethereal ensemble.

She was so stunning; I’m pretty sure I sounded like a star struck teenager as I complimented her on the hat, saying that I wished I was a person who could pull off wearing something like that.  I have never been able to manage hats. They make me self-conscious, they make my head itch, and even in the coldest of winters I am the idiot who has nothing on her head. And probably also has no socks on. Or gloves, or even long sleeves.  I’ve joked forever to friends that I must have been a starfish in another life because I seem to hate having my points covered.

Anyway, she laughed and responded by saying “Of course you could wear a hat! Anyone can wear one. The key is that you have to just set it up top of your head and then don’t mess with it. Just leave it. Don’t fuss. And then don’t look in the mirror – just go about your day.” Continue reading

Oasis Capitol Hill opens, sets new record for CHS being early on a story

The Oasis Tea Zone has — finally — expanded to Capitol Hill.

“I’ve been trying to get in to Capitol Hill for over 10 years,” I-Miun Liu tells CHS. “I guess prematurely I said yes.”

The E Pine Oasis bubble tea shop opened this week — two years and two days after CHS first wrote about the project taking shape.

Liu said a regular Oasis customer offered him the space in 2014 and he couldn’t pass it up — even if he wasn’t ready to build.

“To me this was my one chance at Capitol Hill,” he said. “I rode it out for so long.”

At the time, Liu was working to open Eastern Cafe in Chinatown. A cascade of delays put the project far over budget and repeatedly pushed back the Capitol Hill opening.

Though he was concerned about the early proposals, Seattle’s march to a $15 minimum wage wasn’t part of the delay. In 2014, during the infancy of the $15 minimum wage law debate, Liu said an immediate jump to $15 wage would cripple his businesses. “The phase-in helped a lot,” he said. “The time frame has been critical.”

In the end, Liu said the two year pause was worth it, giving him time to come back to Capitol Hill with a stronger footing and more resources to put into designing the space that has transformed what was once a video rental store. The new shop neighbors Fogon, Rudy’s, Stumptown, and Capitol Loans. Across the street is R Place and Suika.

Hours for now are 11 AM to midnight every day — no plans for late night hours here, yet.

The space might be the most elegant and fully designed of the now four Oasis locations. A rocket man art installation, created by Electric Coffin, fills the back wall.

Liu said the shop will expand to Asian-inspired desserts and loose teas in a collaboration with his sister’s Ballard tea shop, Miro Tea.

Liu said his opening day went off without a hitch and the nighttime crowd, including many regulars from the International District location, nearly filled the shop.

“A lot of people who knew that we were about to open were excited to see us,” he said.

Oasis Capitol Hill is located at 606 E Pine. You can lear more at facebook.com/oasiscapitolhill.

Images: Kirkland Rocket Fizz

Images: Kirkland Rocket Fizz

BONUS UPDATE!
Rocket Fizz Broadway is now open across the street from Capitol Hill Station.

We told you about the soda pop and candy shop earlier this year:

Rocket Fizz Soda Pop and Shops offers one of the largest and craziest selections of glass-bottled soda pops and retro candies for sale in America