Archive for December, 2007
Posted on December 31st, 2007 in Uncategorized with 2 comments
What Essex Broadway, LLC, and Driscoll Architects have in mind for the site formerly occupied by QFC on Broadway, between Republican and Mercer. The complete design proposal is available here, project number 3004668.
So are we inspired yet? If nothing else, it’s going to make Brix, currently under construction across the street, look […]
Posted on December 31st, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
The City of Issaquah recently selected David Vandervort Architects for their net zero energy home demonstration project in Issaquah Highlands. Noland Homes plans to begin construction in Summer 2008.
The goal for these homes is that over the course of a year, their net energy use will be zero. The expectation is that energy […]
Posted on December 29th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
The forecasts above, published by the Puget Sound Regional Council for the four-county Puget Sound Region, show that by 2040 we can expect about 40% more people and 50% more jobs than we have today. Perhaps this explains our skyline of construction cranes.
Posted on December 29th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
For years folks in Seattle have been talking about how we ought to be doing tall-skinny residential towers, like the so-called “point towers” common in Vancouver, BC. Depending on your point of view — literally — we now have our first: the 5th and Madison Condos:
[ Photo: Dan Bertolet ]
The building […]
Posted on December 28th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Posted on December 27th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
SkyscraperPage Forum has the goods on Seattle’s titillating competition over on the other side of the lake:
Posted on December 27th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
This is a parking garage door that doesn’t wreck the streetscape:
And this,* below, is a parking garage door that leaves an unpleasant gaping hole in the streetscape:
But hey, cars are only about six or seven feet wide, so why are these 20-foot wide caverns the norm? In short, it’s building code for dumb people. […]
Posted on December 26th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
It’s day-after-Christmas-deadly-slow news day at the Seattle PI, and the question of whether or not cyclists should be licensed makes the front page, top of the fold. A total non-issue. The impact that bicycles have on traffic flow, safety, and street construction and maintenance in Seattle is infinitesimal. Not to mention […]
Posted on December 23rd, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Like Northgate’s Thornton Place, but twice as tall and probably about twice as expensive: Nouvelle at Natick. This is the mall I grew up with, in Natick, Massachusetts, a town of 32,000 people, located 15 miles west of Boston. When I say town, I mean town: it is still governed by representative […]
Posted on December 22nd, 2007 in Uncategorized with 5 comments
My favorite mixed-use infill building in Seattle:
[ Photo: Dan Bertolet ]
1310 East Union Street, developed by Liz Dunn, designed by Miller/Hull. What makes this building exceptional is its modest size and scale. The lot is only 40 feet wide. It’s a 65-foot tall building but is not at all imposing from […]
Posted on December 20th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 8 comments
Just took a ride on the Seattle Streetcar!, and as we started at Westlake and Stewart, and immediately stopped at Westlake and Stewart, then started, and immediately stopped at Westlake and 6th, then started, and immediately stopped at Westlake and Virginia St, then started, and immediately stopped at Westlake and 7th,… you get the picture…I started […]
Posted on December 19th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 2 comments
Take a peek. It’s wicked awesome. Like this:
Posted on December 19th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
In celebration of the Seattle City Council’s historically decisive vote to “continue considering” the annexation of the North Highline area, two images from White Center. Now don’t get me wrong — I’m not meaning to get all urban-elite-snob on White Center. Pics like these could easily have been taken in Seattle (my next door neighbor’s back […]
Posted on December 18th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 4 comments
In an effort to preserve industry in Seattle, the City just passed legislation limiting the size of non-industrial uses in industrial zones. Retail uses are limited to 25,000 square feet, which is roughly half the size of a modern Safeway, and one-seventh the size of the titanic 175,000-square-foot Costco on 4th Ave S., which is […]
Posted on December 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Found this SFPD bicycle training video while perusing the interweb at work. I’m particularly fond of how it encourages cyclist to take the lane on roads lacking bike lanes.
Posted on December 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
Speaking of commodifying dissent, thank you sprizee. (And sadly no, you didn’t see it here first…)
Posted on December 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Knowing that buildings account about half of CO2 emissions, what to do? Most buildings live a long time — 50 to 100 years or more. Thus one might assume it’s unrealistic to expect any significant short-term reduction in CO2 emissions could be achieved by making new buildings more energy efficient, simply because there […]
Posted on December 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Posted on December 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
View of South Lake Union (courtesy of Seattle Times)
Vulcan, Inc wants the City to increase height limits in South Lake Union from 65 and 85 FT to 160 FT to allow for 12-story buildings that would accommodate Amazon when they move from their Beacon Hill and Columbia Tower locations. The City is moving on this […]
Posted on December 16th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
Condos are bad, bad BAD!
*Post title courtesy of smartypants author Thomas Frank.
Posted on December 13th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
Assuming any sort of grip on reality, the debate is over: Take it out, don’t replace it. This week brings news suggesting that reality may finally be sinking in: The City, County, and State DOTs have all agreed to evaluate the Surface/Transit Option (though they’re not calling it that).
Meanwhile, a 29 member […]
Posted on December 11th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 2 comments
Modular housing in Seattle – is it the right time and place?
Inhabit is a Unico demonstration project of modular housing…pretty neat if not a little heavy on the Scandinavian interior design. This kind of modular multifamily housing would likely be cheaper than typical multi-family housing, but they did not have any cost estimates when I […]
Posted on December 10th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 13 comments
All that stuff shown above is a proposed $300 million development with 550 housing units, 650,000 square feet of retail space, and 2300 parking stalls, on a 10-acre site at Dearborn and Rainier, currently occupied by Goodwill. It’s a big one, guaranteed to be controversial, and interestingly, the two most vocal citizens groups have come […]
Posted on December 8th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 2 comments
Lots of people bash them, but at the same time, lots of people are buying them. And as with SUVs, much of the bashing is justified. But some help could be on the way: the scourge of the townhouses is on the radar of Seattle city planners who are updating multifamily zoning […]
Posted on December 6th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Each colored square on the map is a project that is permitted, under construction, or recently completed. If you have a hankering to get the lowdown on a project, visit the Seattle Downtown Association and click away.
Posted on December 6th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Just as I’m about to brilliantly blog my “new” idea of “micro retail”, prompted by the mourning over violent neighborhood change such as 500 Pine, someone has gone ahead and actually proposed it in a real project. So much for looking clever.
Here’s the idea posed as a question: Is there a way for a new […]
Posted on December 5th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 1 comment
For real. Masdar: A zero-carbon, zero-waste, car-free city on 1500 acres, 20 miles outside Abu Dhabi, the second largest city of the United Arab Emirates. The city will be home to 45,000 people and 60,000 jobs. They are applying pretty much every sustainable design strategy there is — read the links. Even the construction process […]
Posted on December 4th, 2007 in Uncategorized with 5 comments
Holding the corner, all clean and simple, somehow just the right proportions. Located at 12th and Pike on Capitol Hill, formerly a surface parking lot. Designed by Weinstein A|U, developed by Dunn + Hobbes. How nice to see a new mixed-use building without a bulky brick storefront base. And it’s apartments, not condos. Could this […]
Posted on December 4th, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
Lofty visions of the future…
Proposed mixed-use building at 14th and Union.
Posted on December 3rd, 2007 in Uncategorized with no comments
In response to this previous post noting that buildings account for roughly half of energy use in the U.S. and therefore half of CO2 emissions, the astute reader might be inclined to point out that here in Seattle we get about 89% (or is it 86%?) of our electricity from carbon-free hydro, and thus our […]