month : 05/2019 311 results

PHOTOS: Turkey (?) turns up in another West Seattle neighborhood

Same turkey (at least, that’s the majority vote on ID so far) as last Sunday in Seola? Charles sent the top photo today after the big bird showed up in his backyard near Lincoln Park; Jon sent the photo below after a backyard visit in Fauntleroy on Friday:

As noted last weekend, the previous wave of turkey sightings was right about this time three years ago.

HAPPENING NOW: Neighbor Day celebration

May 4, 2019 2:12 pm
|    Comments Off on HAPPENING NOW: Neighbor Day celebration
 |   High Point | Neighborhoods | West Seattle news

It’s Neighbor Day! One way to be neighborly – go check out the celebration at High Point Library with the West Seattle Timebank and friends. When we stopped in, Tara was teaching origami:

Tamsen Spengler from the Timebank adds that there’s ice cream at Neighborhood House (6400 Sylvan Way) at 4 pm!

1 week to West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day 2019! Online map and printable guide both now available

One week from today, it’s the 15th annual West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day (coordinated/presented by WSB), on Saturday, May 11th! If you’ve been watching for the map and listings, you might already have seen the online (interactive) version, which went live very early this morning. We now also have published the downloadable/printable guide – with all the sale listings plus map-section screenshots for reference – ready too. Here it is, 16 pages in PDF. While official sale hours are 9 am to 3 pm, note that some start earlier, some end later, and some even are running additional days – read the listings for all those details, as well as sale highlights. We’ll have updates and highlights in the week ahead, but for now – it’s map-browsing time!

10 for your West Seattle Saturday, with sun pillars!

May 4, 2019 7:59 am
|    Comments Off on 10 for your West Seattle Saturday, with sun pillars!
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Saturday morning photo by Carolyn Newman)

Welcome to May’s first Saturday – with a sun pillar to start it, following a similar sighting at sunset last night (photo below)! Highlights from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar:

TROOP 284 RUMMAGE SALE: The troop’s annual garage/bake sale has already started and it’s on until 4 pm at St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church. (3050 California SW)

WESTSIDE SCHOOL GARAGE SALE: You can also shop a big sale at Westside School (WSB sponsor), too – the Parent Association’s 2nd annual multifamily sale, 9 am-2 pm. Not at the school – it’s at the former Apostolic Church just to the south. (3210 SW 106th)

BASEBALL: West Seattle High School‘s next game in the Metro League playoffs is at 10 am at Steve Cox Memorial Field in White Center, vs Eastside Catholic. (1321 SW 102nd)

STUDENT-GROWN PLANTS: The South Seattle College (WSB sponsor) Garden Center is open, 10 am-3 pm. North end of campus. (6000 16th SW)

NEIGHBOR DAY: Celebrate your neighbors today – one opportunity is by dropping in at the High Point Library for this free event with the West Seattle Timebank, 1-4 pm.(3411 SW Raymond)

DENNY-SEALTH MUSIC NIGHT OUT: Enjoy a night out and support the music programs at Denny International Middle School and Chief Sealth International High School. 5:30 pm at Fauntleroy UCC. Ticket info and other details here. (9140 California SW)

WEST SEATTLE MEANINGFUL MOVIES: “A Concerned Citizen” is this month’s movie. 6:30 pm doors open, 7 pm screening at Neighborhood House High Point. (6400 Sylvan Way SW)

CABIN FEVER NORTHWEST: 7:30 pm at Kenyon Hall:

We’re delighted to welcome back this wonderful ensemble, featuring vibrant original songs performed with rich vocals and masterful instrumentation, guaranteed to appeal to fans of folk, bluegrass, Americana, country, pop, and gospel. What began as an adventure by two best friends, Cabin Fever NW has grown into a powerful performing quintet including Dianne Bochsler (vocals, rhythm guitar) and Tara Caldwell (vocals, claw hammer banjo) of Bellingham; Ed Johnson (vocals, lead guitar) of Menlo Park, CA; Cary Black (vocals, bass fiddle) of Sebastopol, CA; and Paul Elliott (fiddle) of Seattle.

For a reservation, please e-mail kenyonhall@earthlink.net. (7904 35th SW)

‘OFFICE HOUR’: First weekend of ArtsWest‘s new play, 7:30 pm curtain. Check here for tickets. (4711 California SW)

GARAGE ROCK: 9 pm at Parliament Tavern: “Garage-rock superstars” The Hard Rocks, The Tom Price Desert Classic, Insect Man, 25-Cent Ride. $8 cover. 21+. (4210 SW Admiral Way)

(Friday night photo by Jim Borrow)

MUCH MORE … on our calendar!

BASEBALL: Chief Sealth IHS vs. Bainbridge in Metro League playoffs

(WSB photos. Above, CSIHS junior Nestor German)

Friday night at Steve Cox Memorial Field in White Center, the Chief Sealth International High School Seahawks faced Bainbridge in the Metro League playoffs.

(CSIHS sophomore Marcel Jones)

It was a must-win game, but Bainbridge shut out Sealth, 4-0, and that was a season-ender for head coach Ernest Policarpio‘s Seahawks.

What’s next for Avalon/35th project, and what SDOT says about problems so far

As we received the end-of-week update on what’s next for the Avalon/35th/Alaska project, we also asked SDOT about related problems reported to us this past week. First, the update:

Here are the main things happening this weekend and next week:

We are wrapping up zone B demolition on the east half SW Avalon Way! This Saturday, May 4 and Monday, May 6, we are planning to pave the road base on the east side of SW Avalon Way from SW Genesee St to SW Yancy (Zone B). Please note that paving is weather dependent and may be postponed if the weather is wetter than anticipated. Once paving is complete, we plan to grind the sections of remaining existing pavement on Tuesday, May 7 and Wednesday, May 8. We will then move traffic to the east side of SW Avalon Way as we shift work to the west side of the street as early as Friday, May 10.

From Friday, May 3 through Sunday, May 5, we will be closing the east side of the intersection of SW Avalon Way and SW Genesee St to demolish existing pavement, grade, and pave the intersection. Crews will need to work across multiple lanes of traffic in the intersection. We plan to reopen this intersection as early as Monday, May 6.

Work on 35th Ave SW from SW Avalon Way to SW Alaska St (Zone E) will begin as soon as Tuesday, May 7. We will maintain one lane of traffic in each direction on 35th Ave SW between Fauntleroy Way SW and SW Alaska St. See below for more information about what to expect.

Current and upcoming side street closures:

-SW Genesee St will be closed through May 5 on the east side of SW Avalon Way. People driving west on SW Genesee St will not be able to access SW Avalon Way and will need to use alternate routes to access SW Genesee St east of the intersection. We plan to reopen the intersection as soon as Monday, May 6.

-30th Ave SW will be temporarily closed for construction staging. You will not be able to access SW Avalon Way from 30th Ave SW. 30th Ave SW will be permanently closed at the completion of this project.

-SW Snoqualmie St will be closed to 35th Ave SW for construction staging. Local access will be maintained from 36th Ave SW.

The full update is here (PDF).

Meantime, the project team also tells us, “We’ve received reports of people driving following people biking too closely through construction areas. Safety is our priority, and we want to ensure everyone can safely get around work areas.” This matches some reports we’ve received, too. Asked whether there’s anything more they can or will do for multi-modal safety, the project team told us:

Regarding safety for people riding bikes, we are continuing to assess and address the concerns raised. We have designed our work in smaller zones to minimize impacts to the current bike paths throughout the project corridor. To date we continue to advised people riding bikes to look for alternative routes through our work zones. We met with the West Seattle Bike Connections group to talk through alternative routes, and we understand this is a challenging geography. We have as much signage that is allowed in our work zone about bicycles merging with traffic and the bicycle lane ending. We also have Uniformed Police Officers to assist traffic in our work zone.

To complete each of the project phases, we have to maintain 11′ lanes and have to request that all modes of transportation share the road through the construction zones. We are adding a radar speed sign to advocate for cars to slow down when heading northbound.

Another issue that’s been brought to our attention: Side-street traffic trouble, like the 28th/Dakota truck problems Laura caught in these clips:

The project team also was sent those clips. Their response:

To access SW Avalon Way, people driving should be using the posted detour route by heading north on Delridge Way SW, turning left onto SW Andover, turning left onto 28th Ave SW and turning right onto SW Yancy St before they get to SW Dakota St.

We have witnessed many people driving bypassing the “road closed” signs in the neighborhoods which can get them into situations like the one shown in your video, making it difficult to make tight turns. To ensure that the “road closed” signs are as visible as possible to drivers, we have adjusted their location at 26th Ave SW and SW Genesee St to discourage people driving from traveling west towards 31st Ave SW.

Last but not least, we noted multiple reports of very late-night and early-morning work in the area earlier this week. That response:

There was unanticipated late-night work this week. Seattle Public Utilities is working along the corridor to renew water services as we have the roadway base demolished. Last night, emergency work took place to secure a leaking pipe. SPU had a noise variance for their emergency work. Unfortunately, due to the urgent nature of the work, they were not able to notify us about this work, otherwise we would have let the public know right away. Additionally, as we work throughout the corridor, private developers may do additional utility connections when we are not working. Our goal is to coordinate with them about work hours to pass information to the public; however, we don’t always get the information in a timely manner.

The project hotline for complaints/questions: 206-900-8734.

UPDATE: Community-planning process launches for West Seattle Junction

6:45 PM: Announced by City Councilmember Lisa Herbold in her weekly update, posted tonight:

Office of Planning and Community Development (OPCD) will have their first meeting with the Junction Neighborhood Origination to discuss community planning around ST3 and updating the neighborhood plan to reflect the final route and location of the light rail station. As I wrote about in a previous MHA update, the community has expressed a desire for additional zoning capacity, but informed by community planning efforts and with understanding of the likely location of a future light rail station. OPCD committed to beginning to scope out this process in 2019, with planning starting in earnest in 2020. This is the first meeting.

When: May June 6, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Where: Senior Center of West Seattle, 4217 SW Oregon

10:09 PM: JuNO director Amanda Sawyer tells WSB the councilmember’s announcement is one month off – the meeting is actually set for *JUNE* 6th. We have updated above.

WEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Bicycle, vehicle tent stolen

Two thefts in West Seattle Crime Watch today:

STOLEN BICYCLE: Kathleen hopes you will watch for this stolen bicycle:

She left the garage open for a little while around noon today in North Delridge – and a thief quickly made off with the bike, a white Univega. We are waiting to hear back on the police-report #, so in the meantime, let us know if you see it and we will connect you.

STOLEN VEHICLE TENT: Nick reports from Seaview, “I had a Cascade Vehicle Tent (CVT) Mt Shasta tent stolen off my truck last night. My truck was parked in front of my house. If anyone sees one for sale, please let me know.” SPD incident # is 19-157402.

From the ‘in case you wondered too’ file: About this week’s frequent low-bridge openings

A Harbor Island worker emailed us wondering why the “low bridge” was opening and closing relatively frequently at midday a few days earlier this week without vessels going through. We checked the @SDOTBridges Twitter feed and found verification of the multiple closures, each lasting about 10 minutes. Testing? Trouble? Or? We asked SDOT, whose spokesperson Ethan Bergerson checked it out and replied: “They were training a new bridge operator. In order to ensure that all staff have a thorough understanding of how to operate the bridge safely, all new (ones) spend three days of training opening the bridge 12 times per day. Yesterday was the final day.”

FOLLOWUP: City picks proposed electric-vehicle ‘fast-charging’ site for West Seattle

Last fall, when the West Seattle Transportation Coalition got briefed on a possible WS location for a public electric-vehicle “fast-charging” location (WSB coverage here), the city was looking at Don Armeni Boat Ramp. Now, there’s an official proposal, and the location has changed: City Light is proposing a site in The Junction, alongside West Seattle Bowl.

Here’s a ground-level rendering of where it would be:

From the City Light one-sheet (PDF) about the proposal:

If built, the location will include two 50-kilowatt (kW) fast chargers located along the curb. Two existing street parking spaces would be converted to “EV charging only” spaces, and drivers would be limited to one hour of parking while charging at these spaces. These 50kW fast chargers can provide a typical EV with about three miles of range for every minute of charging. Average charging sessions are expected to last for 15 to 30 minutes. The chargers are anticipated to have a useful life of ten years.

The one-sheet also explains why this location is proposed, and why others were ruled out, including Don Armeni; that explanation – “(Seattle Parks) identified Don Armeni Boat Ramp as a potential charging station site in West Seattle. However, the site development costs were too high.”

The charging station would cost the city almost $200,000 (users pay for charging, in case you’re not familiar with how these work); regarding a timeline, City Light says it would “begin the engineering and design process in the second/third quarter of 2019. Construction is scheduled to follow.”

If you have feedback about this proposal, the city has set up an online survey that’ll remain open until the end of the month – see it here. The SCL program has already opened one station on Beacon Hill – here’s a city-provided photo:

The city has five others on the drawing board (also listed on the one-sheet) in addition to, potentially, this one. Questions? The City Light Public EV Charging Team is at 206-684-3800 or SCL_ElectricVehicles@seattle.gov.

6 for your West Seattle Friday

May 3, 2019 11:36 am
|    Comments Off on 6 for your West Seattle Friday
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Male Black-headed Grosbeak, photographed by Trileigh Tucker)

Before we get any further into Friday, half a dozen highlights from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar (where you’ll find even more):

BASEBALL: Chief Sealth IHS has a must-win Metro League playoff game vs. Bainbridge, 4 pm at Steve Cox Memorial Park in White Center. (1321 SW 102nd)

WEST SEATTLE SPRING NIGHT MARKET: 5-9 pm at Duos Lounge in Luna Park:

Join Flock Collective for our seasonal curated pop-up market featuring 18 local artists, makers, and bakers. Grab a beverage and browse handmade jewelry, candles, handbags, prints and much more. This event is FREE & all are welcome!

(2940 SW Avalon Way)

CORNER BAR: The monthly pop-up bar/community gathering at Highland Park Improvement Club – info here. Doors open at 6 pm. (1116 SW Holden)

‘HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL’: Madison Middle School production at the West Seattle HS Theater, 7 pm – get a discount for buying your ticket(s) online! (3000 California SW)

‘OFFICE HOUR’: Second night for ArtsWest‘s new play, 7:30 pm. Tickets available online. (4711 California SW)

AT PARLIAMENT TAVERN: 9 pm, it’s time to rock, with Sonic Medicine, Mercury, 1st Saint Street. $6 cover. 21+. (4210 SW Admiral Way)

DEVELOPMENT: West Seattle’s only tower crane set for May 11th removal

Thanks to Eric at West Seattle Computers for forwarding this notice circulated in the area:

It’s an announcement that the only tower crane currently operating in West Seattle – at the Luna Apartments/PCC Community Markets (WSB sponsor) project site – is set for removal one week from tomorrow. As was the case the day it went up in April 2018, that means California will be closed at SW Stevens that day, May 11th (which also happens to be West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day, so we’ll include detour info in the map packet).

UPDATE: Been waiting for a West Seattle shredding event?

9:49 AM: Every spring we get many inquiries about whether anyone’s scheduling a free shredding event in West Seattle. We always promise to publish something as soon as we hear of one. The West Seattle Junction Association‘s email newsletter brings this announcement:

THE MOTHER OF ALL SHRED EVENTS!
Sponsored By: Re/Max Junction and Urban Key.

SATURDAY, MAY 11TH | 10 AM TO 12 PM
4400 SW ALASKA Wells Fargo Parking Lot @ 44th/Alaska

Bring your paper items and we will shred them for free!

Questions: Call 206-766-8400 or 206-932-1090

2:30 PM: We checked with the sponsors regarding logistics and they tell us the location has been changed to “the Wells Fargo parking lot across the street,” so we have made that change above.

TRAFFIC/TRANSIT TODAY: Friday watch

(SDOT MAP with travel times/ Is the ‘low bridge’ closed? LOOK HERE/ West Seattle-relevant traffic cams HERE)

6:59 AM: Good morning! No traffic incidents or traffic alerts for our area so far.

AVALON PROJECT TREE TRIMMING: Scheduled for today – here’s our previous alert.

BASEBALL: 14-inning heartbreaker for West Seattle HS in Metro League playoffs

It was an intense game from the early going and turned out to be a long night for the West Seattle High School Wildcats in their third game of the Metro League playoffs.

Their game at Southwest Athletic Complex against Ballard HS ran 14 innings and the Beavers went home with the win, 8-7.

Head coach Bryan Tupper‘s Wildcats play again Saturday, taking the field at Steve Cox Memorial Park in White Center (1321 SW 102nd) at 10 am against Eastside Catholic.

BOATING SEASON: Spend Sunday learning safety in West Seattle

Boating season officially starts this weekend. Before you get out on the water – get safety education. The US Coast Guard Auxiliary tells us there’s still room in a safety class this Sunday here in West Seattle. If you haven’t already seen it in our calendar, here’s the announcement:

Are you ready for a safe boating season?

About Boating Safely class
Offered by the US Coast Guard Auxiliary
May 5, 2019, 8:30 am to 5 pm

Venue: West Seattle Veterans Center
3618 SW Alaska St (a few blocks east of The Junction).

This course qualifies all those who successfully complete it to get a Washington State Boater Education Card. Topics include boating safety equipment and skills for a variety of types of boats including power, sail, personal watercraft and paddlecraft. Instructors from the US Coast Guard Auxiliary will cover how to prevent accidents, choose the right life jackets and other boating gear, best practices for trailering your boat, local laws and “rules of the road,” and the basics of navigation. Ages 12 and up. Younger teens should attend with an adult.

Course fee: $35. Second person sharing the same book: $20. Please pre-register.

For online registration and more information, go here.

For questions, contact flotillatwentyfour@gmail.com

FOLLOWUP: Felony charges, six-figure bail for repeat DUI driver arrested after hit-run sent teen to hospital

That was the scene on Monday along SW Thistle by Chief Sealth International High School, after a hit-run driver struck a 16-year-old student, sending him to the hospital (WSB coverage here). At least one witness got a license-plate number that led police to Top Hat, where they arrested 29-year-old Carlos M. Villalovos on suspicion of DUI and hit-run. He’s been in jail ever since, and today the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office filed felony charges of vehicular assault, hit and run, and reckless driving. His bail is set at $302,000.

This isn’t Villalovos’s first DUI arrest, according to online records and the charging documents, which list one case in 2008 and two in 2016. In yet other traffic stops, prosecutors say, he was cited for violations including cell-phone use while driving, not having insurance, and driving with a suspended license. He also was found guilty last year of attempted vehicle trespass after a Burien incident in which he was described as acting aggressively, while intoxicated, toward a couple whose car he kept trying to get into. At the time of this week’s arrest, prosecutors say, warrants were out for Villalovos, related to his failure to appear for separate hearings last month in two prior DUI cases. Prosecutors called Villalovos “a grave danger to the community,” saying he’s apparently been through substance-abuse treatment and a “victim impact panel” yet refuses to stop driving while impaired.

On Monday, the probable-cause document says, when officers found Villalovos’s car before finding him, bottles of beer and hard lemonade were in clear evidence. His Honda CR-V also was reported to have damage consistent with what would have happened when the victim – who is reported to have suffered a broken pelvis – was hit. Police say Villalovos blew .16 – twice the legal threshold for DUI – three hours after the crash. We’ve looked up records from his past cases; in one of them, he was described as having blown .19. In another, when he was found driving without the ignition interlock he was under orders to use, he told officers he just used a screwdriver to start his car. His arraignment is set for May 15th.

BIZNOTE: Phoenecia announces new location

They promised their Alki closure at the end of 2018 wasn’t the end of their acclaimed restaurant … and indeed, it wasn’t. The Khazaal family has announced they’ll reopen Phoenecia in The Junction this summer. The new space, 4717 42nd SW, was previously home to Alchemy (evicted last December). The Junction is a past home as well as future home for Phoenecia; as noted when the family patriarch Hussein Khazaal died a decade ago, it is where he founded the restaurant in the 1970s.

New details of Terminal 5 project, plus Department of Neighborhoods ‘pivot,’ @ Southwest District Council

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

The half-billion dollar project that’s about to start on West Seattle’s eastern shore was the first of two big focuses at this month’s Southwest District Council meeting.

That’s the slide deck from the briefing on Terminal 5 (see it here in full-size PDF).

The Port of Seattle/Northwest Seaport Alliance sent a team of five for the occasion, almost equal to the SWDC attendance. They offered more construction details than we’ve heard in previous briefings, as well as other updates about T-5 activity, including Matson having moved its weekly cargo calls to T-5 as of last week (as reported here).

(WSB photo, last Friday)

Read More

Replacing Fauntleroy Creek culverts: Still time to comment

As we showed you earlier this week, it’s salmon-release season at Fauntleroy Creek – part of the annual lifecycle since community advocacy led to work that brought the creek back to life. Part of it remains underground, carried in culverts, and some sections need to be replaced, so Seattle Public Utilities is in the early stages of figuring out how. Back in March, SPU offered opportunities to offer early-stage comments. If you missed those, it’s not too late to comment – SPU reopened its online survey seeking your opinion. As the (short) survey explains:

Design options present tradeoffs. This includes the opportunity to enhance creek habitat with open channel sections. However, these features require retaining walls and potential realignment that can have greater short-term construction impacts, as well as require long-term changes to existing site conditions.

So they’re asking about your priorities – when you can spare a moment or two to comment, go here. (Background info from the March open house is here.)

West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day 2019: Almost map time!

Now just nine days away – the 15th annual West Seattle Community Garage Sale Day is happening on Saturday, May 11th! 300 sales will be on the map, which will be available here (and at westseattlegaragesale.com) starting this Saturday morning, in clickable and downloadable/printable formats. Every sale is registered with a description that you’ll find in both map versions – click to open a bubble for any map marker and you’ll see its description; in the downloadable/printable version, the listings are on several pages. Official WSCGSD hours are 9 am-3 pm but some sellers are starting earlier, some ending later, and some have even added days – you’ll find that information with the map, too. We’ll get into some specific previews starting Saturday – unusual items, benefit sales, lemonade stands, more; one sale even promises a reason to stop by for a photo op! (WSB is proud to have coordinated/presented WSCGSD since its 4th year, in 2008.)

7 for your West Seattle Thursday

May 2, 2019 11:16 am
|    Comments Off on 7 for your West Seattle Thursday
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Another look at a juvenile Bald Eagle on Alki Point – photographed by Jim Borrow)

What’s ahead for the rest of your Thursday includes …

LIONS CLUB: Weekly meeting at noon, Senior Center of West Seattle. Find out about the club at wslions.com. (4217 SW Oregon)

MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR DR. ELIZABETH PLUHTA: We mentioned in Tuesday’s report on the Westside Awards that the passing of Dr. Elizabeth Pluhta, South Seattle College vice president and former West Seattle Chamber of Commerce board president, was announced. Her memorial service is at 3 pm today at >Forest Lawn in High Point. (6701 30th SW)

NEW WSHS STUDENT REGISTRATION NIGHT: 6 pm in the library at West Seattle High School:

This is an opportunity for new students and families to meet their counselors and receive assistance on the course registration process for the 2019-2020 school year. Students and families from all grade levels starting their first year at WSHS this fall are all welcome to attend.

(3000 California SW)

BASEBALL: 7 pm, the West Seattle High School Wildcats play their next Metro League playoff game vs. Ballard at Southwest Athletic Complex. (2801 SW Thistle)

CANNABIS IN NORTH HIGHLINE: King County rules have concentrated much of the unincorporated areas’ cannabis businesses in White Center and Top Hat, and that’s the spotlight topic at tonight’s meeting of the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council. 7 pm at the NH Fire District HQ. (1243 SW 112th)

‘OFFICE HOUR’ OPENS: Official opening night tonight at ArtsWest for the new play “Office Hour”:

(Christian Quinto & Naho Shioya, photo by John McLellan)

Curtain time is 7:30 pm. For ticketing and other info, see our calendar listing. (4711 California SW)

‘DRAG RACE’ & PIE: The second weekly event at A la Mode Pies in The Junction – open later on Thursday nights, until 10:30 pm, so you can watch “RuPaul’s Drag Race” and enjoy pie, boozy milkshakes, and A la Mode’s other fare. The show’s on at 9. (4225 SW Alaska)

MUCH MORE GOING ON … see our complete calendar!

DEVELOPMENT: Admiral District mixed-use project gets OK

(Rendering from design packet by architect for project’s second Design Review Board meeting)

From today’s city-circulated Land Use Information Bulletin, a key approval is in for the mixed-use building planned at 2715 California SW, now described as a “4-story, 49-unit apartment building (44 units and 5 small efficiency units) with retail and office. Parking for 46 vehicles proposed.” We first reported on this plan 2 1/2 years ago; it went through Design Review in 2017, under the project name Admiral Station. The decision sets an appeal deadline for May 16th; this notice (PDF) explains how to file one.