Appendices - Growing Vine Street
Transcription
Appendices - Growing Vine Street
Appendix A – Constructed Projects The Growing Vine Street project was designed to be completed incrementally. Although current property owners may support the project with intensive landscaping, most of the project’s structures will be constructed as new development occurs. As it is completed, each new segment will connect with adjacent sections until, over time, Vine Street becomes an urban watershed supporting a runnel flowing its entire eight-block length. The runnel, in turn, will support the lush vegetation through which it flows—and the entire Vine Street garden will nurture and refresh us all. Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine The Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine Street is designed in the shape of a hand emerging from a sleeve. The hand reaches toward the downspout, which leans from the face of the 81 Vine Building to meet the hand’s index finger. The Beckoning Cistern’s designer, environmental artist Buster Simpson, compares the sculpture to the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, with Adam reaching to touch the hand of God. This project has received enthusiastic and wide-ranging support, with hundreds participating in its planning and design. Yet, even a great idea will be forgotten if it is not implemented. With that in mind, Growing Vine Street planned two projects to serve as catalysts and keep the vision alive. The first of these projects is the Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine Street. The Growing Vine Street concept calls for large cisterns in each block to collect roof runoff to feed the runnel. The Beckoning Cistern is the first of these cisterns, a whimsical example of the possibilities inherent in the concept. The second project, the Cistern Steps, is a dramatic water feature made possible by the steep slope in that section of Vine Street. Symbolic as the sculpture may be, it is also functional. Roof runoff flows from the downspout to the outstretched index finger and divides, some cascading over the thumb into the water garden and series of pools, and some flowing into the cistern to be stored for later use, such as watering the garden. The sleeve of the Beckoning Cistern is a 10-foot high, 6-foot diameter blue corrugated cylinder constructed of galvanized aluminum with a green metal hand emerging from its top. The entire structure is placed on a tilted concrete slab set in the water garden. The water garden with its three cascading planters is, in turn, set in lush native plantings of ferns, shrubs, and woodland plants. A smaller, companion garden nestles against the building; the sidewalk passes between the two. The Planting Party for the Beckoning Cistern Buster Simpson and the Completed Beckoning Cistern 39 Cistern Steps The Growing Vine Street plan calls for a runnel flowing along a heavily vegetated watercourse for the entire length of Vine Street. Along the eastern portion of the street, its passage will be a slow, stately meander. That changes, however, at First Avenue, where Vine Street takes a sudden, two-block dive towards Elliott Bay. The Cistern Steps is designed to take dramatic advantage of this slope. Cover for a Fundraising Brochure Showing Concept for the Cistern Steps The Growing Vine Street plan calls for the street to zig-zag on the slope between First and Elliott Avenues. From First, the street will slant northerly toward the midblock alley and then southerly back toward Western. The pattern will be repeated in the block between Western Avenue and Elliott, where the Cistern Steps is located. August 2 August 5 August 16 September 2 September 8 October 1 October 7 October 13 The Cistern Steps consists of a series of three terraced concrete planters tapering from a wide plaza at the alley to the narrow sidewalk right-of-way at the intersection of Vine Street and Elliott Avenue. The runnel will flow from planter to planter, ending in a lovely pool of rough-hewn jade at the foot of the slope. In this segment of Vine Street, there is no adjacent building to feed the runnel, so water will be received from the newly constructed Vine Building across the street, which was designed with a special collection system for roof runoff just to supply the runnel. Like the Beckoning Cistern, the Cistern Steps has been designed to delight pedestrians as well as to process and use roof runoff in an ecological manner. The water gardens of the planters will echo the lush greenery of the adjacent Belltown P-Patch. Even more color will be added with inlaid tile signage on the plaza walls at the alley and on the risers of the steps in the sidewalk passing between the P-Patch and the Cistern Steps. Even the stair railings will be works of art forged by Belltown’s own Black Dog Forge! October 18 October 20 October 21, Installation of the Jade Pool 40 Construction Sketch of the Cistern Steps Appendix B: Environment-Friendly Gardening Biofiltration Water Conservation Sustainable Gardening One of the major goals of the Growing Vine Street project is to encourage recognition of water as an integral part of our lives. With this recognition comes an acknowledgement of responsibility. Squandering or misusing this precious resource will seriously damage all of us—and our descendants. The Growing Vine Street project conserves water as well as cleans it. Why use Seattle’s precious potable water to irrigate landscaping while at the same time dumping gallons and gallons of storm runoff into the sewer system? Biofiltration and water conservation are the two environment-friendly gardening features Growing Vine Street has built into its plan. However, there are many other smart gardening practices that will be used to make Vine Street’s landscaping more sustainable. Therefore, one of the project’s themes is the cleansing of storm water runoff through biofiltration. As stated earlier in Growing Vine Street Revisited 2004, biofiltration is the process of exposing polluted water to sunlight, soil, and vegetation to biologically alter and absorb pollutants, thereby improving water quality. On Vine Street, as the streamlet flows through the vegetated runnel, different plants will work in various ways to purify the water. Please see the “Vegetation: Biofilter Plantings” section for a list of suggested plants to be used for this purpose. Cleaning runoff, though, is just one way that biofiltration will help improve the water quality of Puget Sound. Vine Street’s biofiltered storm water will bypass Seattle’s combined sewer system. Under current procedures, storm water channeled into the sewers sometimes overloads the system, resulting in untreated water overflowing into Elliott Bay—not to mention basements! Projects such as Growing Vine Street that lessen demands on the sewer system lessen this danger. Growing Vine Street is experimenting with a better solution. The Growing Vine Street plan calls for large cisterns to be constructed in each block to collect roof runoff. Although much of the water they collect will, of course, be channeled into the runnel, each cistern will be equipped with a spigot for irrigating the landscaped areas. At each cistern, posted signs will warn that the water is not potable. Although Growing Vine Street is experimenting with large cisterns on a grand scale, “rain barrel” gardening— using barrels instead of cisterns—is an environment-friendly, cost-effective practice that has been used by generations of Northwest gardeners. Because it helps reduce demands on both the area’s water supply and treatment system, King County has developed a website explaining the benefits of this conservation measure and how gardeners can set up their own system. See http://dnr.metrokc.gov/wlr/PI/rainarrels.htm for more information on this subject. 41 One of the most important is the selection of plants to be used along the runnel. Native plants—being already adapted to our climate—often require less care. In an environment such as the runnel, however, they must also be able to withstand inundation as well as occasional dry periods. A major function of the Growing Vine Street project is serving as an experimental laboratory to help determine which plant materials are suitable for this purpose. Composting, mulching to promote healthy soil, employing proper watering techniques, and choosing the right plants for the location all promote sustainable gardening. Examples of these and many other techniques are being demonstrated year-round in the Belltown P-Patch, adjacent to the Cistern Steps. Also, King County has prepared Natural Yard Care, a pamphlet describing many of these smart gardening practices, which can be found at http://dnr.metrokc.gov/swd/ResRecy/ composting/naturalyardbooklet.asp Appendix C: Awards, Publications, Presentations, and Funding Awards Ahwahnee Award, 1999; Orion Afield, Working for Nature and Community. Morrison, Chris; “Green Dreams,” Seattle Magazine, November 1998. Funding Seattle Design Commission Commendation, Spring 2003 Oakrock, Barbara; “The Street Becomes a Stage: New Roles for Roads. Streets near many new urban projects are being defined with a complexity that recalls theatrical set design.”, Seattle Daly Journal of Commerce, April 18, 2002; Growing Vine Street is one of three featured projects. Publications Rose, Cynthia; “Jell-O Building Shaky,” The Seattle Times, December 18, 1996. Bennett, Sam; “An Idea Grows on Vine Street,” Daily Journal of Commerce, July 10, 2000. Russell, John; “Will Water Flow Down Vine Street?”, Downtown Source, February 9-15, 1998. Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs Grant ($40,000) Cameron, Mindy; “An Election Winner Already: Seattle’s Neighborhoods,” Seattle Times, October 12, 1997; editorial speaking enthusiastically about Belltown and Growing Vine Street. “Tales of Transformation,” Orion Afield, Vol. 4, No. 4, pp. 6-7. Seattle Public Utilities One Percent for the Fund Waddell, Greg; “Growing Vine Street,” Arcade, September 1998. Contributions from the Neighborhood ($20,000) Williams, Scott; “Belltown Comes of Age,” including “The Urban Place of Choice,” “The Greening of Belltown,” and “Art: Linking Belltown to the Northwest,” insert in Washington CEO Magazine, June 2003. Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine Street Daily, Laura; “Carolyn Geise,” Natural Home, September/October 2003, p. 120. Daily, Laura; “Natural Home Earth Mover: Carolyn Geise Thinks the City of Seattle Could Use a Good Dictionary,” Natural Home Magazine, September/October 2003. Presentations Enlow, Clair; “Growing Vine Street Takes Root at 81 Vine,” Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce, September 5, 2001. Carolyn Geise has made so many presentations about the Growing Vine Street project that she cannot remember them all. They started with a presentation at the National Urban Forestry Conference, American Forests, in the fall of 1998. A more recent presentation, entitled “Infrastructure as Art,” was given at the National Conference of Grant Makers in the Arts - The Edge Tour in October 2003. “Fighting for the Soul of Belltown.” Geise, Carolyn; “The Making of a Neighborhood,” Arcade, summer 1997. Geise, Carolyn, FAIA; “Watching Vine Street Grow.” “Growing Vine Street 1997,” Center City Mosaic, A Summary of Plans, Gaps, and Outcomes Since 1985, December 18, 2000; a publication by City Design, Department of Design, Construction & Land Use. Hayden, Bray and Lowe, Justin; “Provacateur: A Conversation with Buster Simpson,” Column 5, Journal of Architecture, University of Washington, vol. XVI, 2002. King County Grant ($20,000) King County WaterWorks Grant ($5,000) Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Matching Fund ($60,000) 81 Vine Home Owners Association 81 Vine LLC ($50,000) Diers, Jim; “Neighborhood Power: Building Community the Seattle Way,” published by University of Washington Press, December 2004. Enlow, Clair; “A Watershed Moment on a Belltown Street,” Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce, February 19, 2003. Growing Vine Street Concept Committee of 33 ($7,500) John Diers was the Director of Seattle’s Department of Neighborhoods during much Growing Vine Street’s planning process. He, too, has made numerous presentations on the project, including ones in Paris, France; Havana, Cuba; Victoria, B.C.; and Tokyo, Kyoto, and Kobe, Japan. Needless to say, Jim has also presented the Growing Vine Street story to numerous classes and organizations in Washington and in other American cities, such as Glendale, Chicago, Cleveland, and Cincinnati. Other presentations have been made by Buster Simpson, the artist and designer for the Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine Street, and by Tom Hinkley, professor at the University of Washington, on the subject of sustainable design in the city. Geise Architects ($14,500) Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Small and Simple Grant ($10,000) Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs ($81,000) Seattle Public Utilities One Percent for Arts Fund Contributions from the Neighborhood ($5,000) Cistern Steps at the Belltown P-Patch Committee of 33 ($11,500) Geise Architects ($14,000) Intracorp ($30,000) King County WaterWorks Grant ($50,000) Holt, Gordy; “Vine Street Not Yet What It May Be Cracked Up to Be,” Seattle Post Intelligencer, February 2, 1998. Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Matching Fund ($111,500) Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Opportunity Grant ($200,000) Lucas, Eric; “Rebuilding Belltown,” Seattle Magazine, October 1997 Seattle Neighborhood Street Fund 2002 ($25,000) Messina, John L.; “Growing Vine Street: An Ambitious Effort to Transform a Belltown Street,” Downtown Source, January 1997. Seattle Neighborhood Street Fund 2003 ($25,000) 42 Appendix D: Acknowledgements Beckoning Cistern at 81 Vine Street Growing Vine Street Concept Design Team City of Seattle Technical Review Peggy Gaynor, Gaynor Landscape Architects Department of Construction and Land Use Bob Anderson, PLS, W&H Pacific Geise Architects Department of Neighborhoods Gary L. Wiggins, PE, W&H Pacific Theodore Hammer, Structural Engineer Department of Transportation Brad Bastin, PE, W&H Pacific Buster Simpson, Public Artist Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs SvR Design Company Seattle Design Commission Swenson Say Faget, Structural Engineering Sponsoring Businesses Neighborhood Organizations El Gaucho Geise Architects Intercorp 81Vine LLC Construction Denny Hill Association Kruse Brothers Company, General Contractors Denny Regrade Community Council Teuful Landscape Installation Friends of Belltown P-Patch Alpha Graphics Housel Photo Fabrication Specialties Friends of P-Patch Archteck International Kitchens Balfour Place Macrina Bakery Other Agencies and Organizations Baylis Brand Wagner Architects Millionairs Club Cistern Steps at the Belltown P-Patch Supporting Businesses Crime Prevention Council Design Team Bethel Temple NBBJ King County Don Carlson, Carlson Architects Carpenter Hall Oening Company Port of Seattle Classic Lines Polygon Financial Coho Real Estate Ponderosa Players Continental Plaza Razz M'Tazz, Inc. II Downtown Cottage Press Regrade Dispatch Demolition Man Seattle Art Supply Denny Regrade BIA Shallots Asian Bistro Denny Regrade Business Associates Skyway Luggage Driscoll Architects Stuart Silk Architects Egberts The 81 Vine Building Peggy Gaynor, Gaynor Landscape Architects Buster Simpson, Public Artist Design Team Sparling, Electrical Don Carlson FAIA, Carlson Architects SvR Design Company Peggy Gaynor, Gaynor Landscape Architects Greg Waddell, Carlson Architects Marni Heffron, Heffron Transportation Buster Simpson, Public Artist Construction Aidan Stretch, Sustainable Development Group ___________________________ Greg Waddell, Carlson Architects Construction Oversight Funding Research Ewing & Clark Two Bells Tavern Carolyn Geise William Nims, W&H Pacific Hadley Holding Company Western Vine Carribbean Cafe Harbor Properties William Traver Gallery Hensel Design Studio Windermere Realty Barbara Oakrock Hewitt Isley Architects 43 Growing Vine Street Steering Committee Event Participants Carolyn Geise, Chair Lloyd Adaust Delane Heaton Todd Nordling Dale W. Blindheim Seline Albee Turner Helton Rebecca Oasterwyk Don Carlson Sandi Anderson Lisa Hendricks Martin A. Paup Catherine Chaney Robert Aronson Jeff Herman Christopher Peragine Henry B. Ciccone (Ciderman) Robert Ball David Hewitt Sandy Pernitz Gregory Coomer Kari Bohi Kenneth Himma Cindy Pock David Craven Spencer Brady Dana Jaasaud Louie Raffloer Jennifer Donnette Kevin Bunch Mell Jackson Lisa Renoe Kurt Dunphy Glenda Cassutt Bill Jobe Koryn Rolstad Claudia Scholz Ebling Linda Ciotti Jim Jonassen Betsy Rowley Janis Ford Kevin Colby Stuart Keeler Allyn Ruth Peggy Gaynor Bruce Cowan Craig Kolbitz Mary Alice Shea Joseph Turner Helton Tom Crisalli Skip Kotkins Norka Shedlock Tina Hendricks Shane Dewalt Elaine La Tourelle Joshua Skolnik Sandi Hogben Juiliette Engle Mandy Langloas Brent Standlee Susan Risner Hurley Clair Enlow Todd Lawson Julie Stedman Bea Kumasaka Paup Enterprises Karin Link Diane Sugimura Glenn MacGilvra Daniel Fortine Lisa Luppino Barbara Swift Dave Marberg Paul Fuesel Jack Mackie Judy Tucker Gerald McGinnis Rolan Bert Garner Carl and Michelle Mahaney Penny Vielma Barbara Oakrock Jim Gartrell Renie Malik Marcia Wagoner Robert Rubin Allison Gates Evan Mather Shauna Walgren Eulah Sheffield Helen Glynn Joyce Maux Susan Wessman Barbara Sheldon Barbara Goldstein Tim Mitchell Shirley Westfall Buster Simpson Lynnette Goodman Aaron Mollick Randy Wilcox Julie K. Stedman Linda Graczyk Jane Mooney Professor Daniel Winterbottom Aidan Stretch Tom Graff Joseph Moses Sandra Woods Tom von Schraderi Philip Grega Virginia Mugfard Gitte Zweig Peter J. Voorhees Claire Gruenewoldt John Nagy Greg Waddell Monica Harris Kenichi Nakano Maura Woodwlll Wilber Hathaway Don Nelson Myke Woodwell 44