A pal just lately despatched me a hyperlink to a 2007 Seattle Occasions column castigating my mayoral administration’s lofty imaginative and prescient of a Seattle waterfront with out an elevated freeway walling it off from our metropolis.
Right this moment, the Alaskan Means Viaduct now not casts its imposing shadow. And sensible funding and design have solely additional developed the waterfront right into a vigorous gathering area celebrating arts and tradition.
I forwarded the hyperlink to the writer, Kate Riley, who’s now The Occasions editorial web page editor. I needled her a bit with a “smiley face” emoji (sure, I agree, cheesy). In response, Kate conceded the failure of her predictions and invited me to pen an “I instructed you so” piece for The Occasions Opinion pages.
The Alaskan Means Viaduct was opened in three segments: the primary part in 1953, the Battery Road Tunnel in 1954 and the southern connection to East Marginal Means in 1959. When the primary part was accomplished, The Seattle Occasions gushed: “V-Day was Viaduct Day and Victory Day; a triumph in double measure!” In some unspecified time in the future, the euphoria subsided and was changed by skepticism over the impression of such an enormous construction on the waterfront.
As time glided by, oceangoing freight turned extra containerized and moved primarily south, and the central waterfront was modified from industrial use to a civic asset.
As early as 1963, metropolis planners started speaking of the central waterfront as the town’s “entrance door.” Subsequently, voters authorised the 1968 Ahead Thrust bond challenge, which supplied funding for a Waterfront Park between Piers 57 and 59, opened in 1974, and the Pier 59 Seattle Aquarium, in 1977.
All this assumed the continued presence of the hulking viaduct — that’s, till simply earlier than 11 a.m., Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2001.
The Nisqually earthquake broken the viaduct sufficient to name into query its security and long-term viability. Once I was elected mayor later that yr, I dedicated to eradicating the damaging construction, remodeling the waterfront and reconnecting the town and Elliott Bay. We might reopen our “entrance door.”
The marketing campaign to maintain my promise took practically eight years to win and one other 15 years to realize the reconnection and waterfront transformation.
In 2004 I participated with mayors from six different cities within the Mayor’s Institute on Metropolis Design in Charleston, S.C. Every mayor introduced a undertaking case research. After we offered, outstanding design professionals would supply their views. I took the chance to discover the elimination of the viaduct as my case research. The consultants’ steering helped me talk my imaginative and prescient to state and native elected officers and the general public.
State leaders initially threatened to interchange the viaduct with one other double-deck freeway. As mayor, and with unanimous Metropolis Council assist, I responded, in impact, “over our lifeless our bodies” and, perhaps not in so many phrases, state leaders indicated they might think about that.
Finally the evolution of deep-bore tunnel know-how allowed the governor, legislative leaders and me to switch our positions. We got here to an settlement and will transfer ahead, changing the viaduct with a tunnel and reclaiming our waterfront.
I appointed, with the concurrence of the Metropolis Council, a Residents’ Central Waterfront Committee headed by former Seattle Mayor Charley Royer and citizen-activist Maggie Walker. The committee supplied continuity by means of the following a number of mayoral administrations and supplied an necessary connection between the a number of generations of actors on this civic cleaning soap opera.
The waterfront that’s rising is the results of 20 years of effort to rework it from a loud, soiled, compromised area dominated by the Nineteen Fifties period double-decked Alaskan Means Viaduct to a folks place to be loved day by day by Seattleites and our company.
There are lovely new Washington State Ferry and water taxi terminals, an precise seaside and a major addition to the Seattle Aquarium. Better of all, connections between downtown and the waterfront are at practically each cross-street, together with the spectacular Overlook Stroll connecting Pike Place Market to the waterfront.
Seattle’s vibrant retail core might not return to the times when Frederick & Nelson, the Bon Marché and Nordstrom’s supplied unmatched purchasing experiences. However with 100,000 folks now residing downtown, the connection between the Conference Heart, Pike Place Market and our attractive, remodeled waterfront will present the power needed for a rebirth of a compelling and dynamic middle metropolis.
The largest criticism I heard in the course of the yearslong viaduct substitute debate was the lack of the view from the northbound viaduct lanes. Go to the Overlook Stroll and you can see that view is alive and properly; to be loved by you, your children and your out-of-town cousins!
There are items nonetheless to be accomplished (such because the substitute Waterfront Park between Piers 57 and 59), however the transformation is basically full. After your subsequent go to, you could be the choose! I’m happy with the position I performed igniting this transformation. It’s been an extended street, however because of the perseverance of so many elected leaders and citizen-activists, we’re right here.
It’s tempting in these turbulent days to consider that issues can not change, that we are able to now not accomplish large issues. I consider the story of Seattle’s waterfront transformation says, “Sure we are able to!”