Tech

Pioneer Square: Are better days already coming?

There are new ideas being developed around a neighborhood alliance, which has an energetic executive. Online-gaming developers have already discovered the charms of the place.

Pioneer Square: Are better days already coming?
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Jordan Royer

There are new ideas being developed around a neighborhood alliance, which has an energetic executive. Online-gaming developers have already discovered the charms of the place.

Over  the years there have been numerous revitalization efforts, committees, task  forces, emphasis patrols, and park redesigns of public spaces in Seattle’s  oldest neighborhood, Pioneer Square. It would be easy to be cynical about a new  effort to breathe new life into the Square. But Pioneer  Square is too important to the health of the city to ignore.

A new group of volunteers is taking up the mantle of  revitalization in the neighborhood. Three of the leaders of the new Pioneer  Square Alliance visited Crosscut — now located in the same building as the old Elliott  Bay Book Co. space —to discuss plans and opportunities for the neighborhood. The  co-chairs of the Alliance, Charley Royer and Kevin Daniels accompanied the executive director of the group, Leslie Smith. Royer, a former mayor of Seattle  (and this writer’s father), and Daniels, a partner at Nitze-Stagen and board  member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, bring experience and  technical expertise to the effort.

Daniels is quick to point out that decisions are made by volunteers in  the neighborhood and that this effort is decidedly not top down. His initial  goal, to bring the Main Street Program to the Square, has been embraced by the  neighborhood as well as the city. The city’s Office for Economic Development has  been working on this process since Elliott Bay Book relocated to Capitol Hill  during the Nickels administration. All indications are that the McGinn  administration is continuing to follow through on the effort.

The  Alliance for Pioneer Square has a number of committees, all staffed by an  energetic Smith. There is a committee on economic restructuring, one on  promotion, on design and use of public spaces, organizational sustainability,  and on street civility and public safety. There are over 50  neighborhood volunteers working on these committees and making recommendations  on events, projects, and strategies to attract businesses and residents and  engage city leaders in making needed investments.

One  example of a need that is being highlighted by the group is the need for cleaner  and more reliable energy for electronic data transmission. The Square is  becoming a magnet for the gaming industry — nationally, larger than the movie  industry. The creative people that design games want to live in a fun, urban  environment. They are attracted to the historic buildings of Pioneer Square but  need new technology to develop their product. It will take City Light making a  commitment to Pioneer Square, similiar to one it made to South Lake Union, to make sure  the electricity and data pipes are adequate to support this multi-million dollar  business sector.

Even  now, the Pioneer Square neighborhood contributes significant amounts of B&O taxes per  year.  This is a neighborhood that works. We need to make sure  that it gets the support it needs to grow jobs and contribute even more to the  economic health of the city.

As is  inevitable when talking about Pioneer Square, the issue of Mardi Gras was  discussed. The Pioneer Square group said two club owners hired a consultant from  Portland to put a proposal together to hold a party in the Square under a big  tent during the 2011 celebration. While the members of the Alliance would not dismiss the plan out of hand, it was  decided more time was needed to figure out how to deal with Mardi Gras. It is an  emotionally charged issue and the city was not ready to take on responsibility  for the proposal, they said. However, the Capitol Hill Block Party is run very well and has  turned into a great event for the city. Maybe there can be some lessons learned  there.

Another promising project is a Pioneer Square historic path, Trail to Treasure. This is  essentially modeled after Boston’s Freedom Trail. The Trail would be marked by  places of historic significance and help guide people through Seattle’s history.  The public launch will be in the spring of 2011.

And  finally, the city needs to get serious about making the development of the North  Lot, north of Qwest Field, happen. Daniels has some important ideas here. There is an opportunity to create  work force housing and finally get the population density in Pioneer Square needed to drive the  economic investment and retail that serves residents and not just tourists. The  North Lot development coupled with the new opportunities to connect the Square  to the waterfront when the Alaskan Way Viaduct comes down will be the most transformative  events to hit the Square in our lifetimes.

The  Alliance for Pioneer Square may just be the group to finally see Pioneer Square  realize the potential long envisioned for the neighborhood.

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Jordan Royer

By Jordan Royer

Jordan Royer left city government in 2007 to accept the position of vice president for external affairs in the Seattle office of the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, where he currently works rep