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Ball
Fields Replace Disposal Facility in Eastern Washington
Medical Lake - The familiar call of "play ball"
soon will be heard across the Graham Road Recycling and Disposal
Facility in Medical Lake, Wash. The Waste Management-owned
and -operated landfill is leasing 25 acres to the West Plains
Little League Association for a six-field baseball complex.
The 15-year lease will provide space for two girls' softball
fields, three Little League fields (one of which will be lighted
for nighttime play) and one full-size junior league field.
Other amenities will include a concession stand, bleachers,
landscaping and paved parking.
Currently, the West Plains Little League Association plays
on public adult softball fields. The three-year-old league
is outgrowing its current fields, which aren't well-suited
for children's baseball, said Adam Smith, Little League president.
Waste Management is leasing the property for $1 per year.
Construction of the 25-acre complex will be completed in four
phases, Smith said. The estimated cost is $2 million to $2.5
million, which the Little League will fund through grants.
Korsmo Rebuilding
Historic Park Lodge at Paradise
Lakewood - The National Park Service has selected John Korsmo
Construction of Lakewood, WA and Watts Constructors of Novato,
CA to jointly build the new Paradise Visitor Center and complete
historical renovations and preservation of Paradise Inn at
Mount Rainier. This is the largest current National Park Service
project in the nation.
Initial
construction of the $34.7 million project began on June 5.
Visitor center construction and rehabilitation of the Paradise
Inn will continue through summer 2008 followed by demolition
of the existing visitor center and redesign of the parking
lots.
When completed, the new visitor center will replace the existing
Henry M. Jackson Visitor Center. The new center will be located
in the upper parking lot next to Paradise Inn and feature
architecture that complements the inn.
Paradise Inn was originally built in 1916. The scope of work
includes stabilizing and rebuilding the foundation, cleaning
and rebuilding the three historic 90-foot chimneys and a complete
modernization of seven guest rooms to ADA accessible standards.
Korsmo forecasts the project will employ approximately 150
people at a time when construction reaches full stride. All
of the subcontractors are from the Pacific Northwest, with
the vast majority from the Puget Sound region. Nearly half
of the overall contract price is for subcontractors.
Visitors to Paradise should expect some inconvenience during
construction although the National Park Service and Watts
Constructors/Korsmo are proactively working to minimize it.
Among those steps are the Watts Constructors/Korsmo Good Neighbor
Policy which limits noise and interference with guests
Planning Awards Go To Local Firm
Seattle - BHC Consultants, LLC, formerly a division of Berryman
& Henigar, earned awards for three municipal projects
in the 2006 Planning Association of Washington - American
Planning Association competition. The Vision 2010 for Skykomish
and the City of Port Townsend, Shoreline Master Program received
Merit Awards. The City of Orting Parks, Trails and Open Space
Plan received an Honorable Mention Award.
BHC helped Port Townsend become the first community in the
state to adopt a Shoreline Master Program (SMP) under new
state guidelines. The program, developed over two years, involved
citizens, the City, the Port of Port Angeles and government
agencies, many with differing agendas. The updated SMP balances
the fundamental goals of public access, environmental protection
and appropriate uses with retaining the small-scale historic
character and maritime heritage of the city.
The Vision for Skykomish was an intensive public involvement
process done in conjunction with the University of Washington
Northwest Center for Livable Communities to show how the town
should look after the cleanup required to mitigate contaminants
in the soil and groundwater from a former railroad maintenance
facility. The plan establishes strategies - from economic
planning to infrastructure development - designed to help
local businesses survive and grow during and after the cleanup
and will make the city a model of environmental restoration.
Orting's Parks, Trails and Open Space Plan has energized
the community with a myriad of new initiatives. The Parks
Commission is expanding recreation services and upgrading
existing facilities. The City has started construction of
a new downtown park where a farmers' market will open next
year, and, with the Orting School District, has secured a
$750,000 Pierce County Conservation Futures Grant to acquire
a significant site adjacent to a new middle school along the
Puyallup River.
Barvern Breaks Ground as Areas Latest Downtown
Condo
Bellevue - Skanska will immediately begin removing 330,000
cubic yards of dirt - enough to fill 100 Olympic size swimming
pools - from the site and will continue for the next 11 weeks.
A later excavation for The Bravern's second phase is expected
to remove another 170,000 cubic yards of dirt.
The construction kickoff comes just a week after Neiman Marcus,
the renowned fashion and specialty retailer, announced that
it will anchor The Shops at The Bravern.
The Bravern is located at the highly visible interchange
of I-405 and NE 8th St. in Bellevue, next to the Bellevue
Transit Center and Meydenbauer Convention Center.
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