Monday, December 17, 2007

Year in review: 2007

girls(Editor’s note: as promised earlier this month, the following is a summary of Friends of the Falls’ efforts this past year. As you’ll see, it’s been a busy year, and one we’re proud to recount here for members and potential members alike. Thanks to our Chair, Barb Chamberlain, and to Executive Director Steve Faust for putting it together. A downloadable file of this year-end review is available as a link at the bottom of the article.)

In 2007, Friends of the Falls continued our work to transform the River Gorge into a vital, dynamic 400-acre public playground where all citizens of Spokane can enjoy a meaningful connection with this natural, free-flowing stretch of the Spokane River. To recap recent accomplishments:

• In 2007 the Great Spokane River Gorge Strategic Master Plan won the “Mayor’s Choice” award for excellence in urban design. The result of five years of work by the community, the plan identifies 15 key projects to further the restoration and enhancement of the river gorge, and establishes a clear strategy to implement these projects. Published in May 2005, after a year of public planning work, the Gorge plan has been endorsed by the City of Spokane, its Parks Department, the Spokane Tribe, and many other organizations, as well as over 1,500 of our citizens.

• This year, we began a process of formal engagement with the City of Spokane with the goal of fully integrating the Gorge plan into the City’s Comprehensive Plan. As part of that effort, we established a planning committee led by board member Travis Nichols to review the comp plan and see where gaps need to be filled. Adoption of the Gorge plan as part of the City’s comp plan is also a goal of our newly elected Mayor, Mary Verner, and the time seems right to move this effort forward in 2008.

• In 2007, we also actively engaged in the process to update the City’s Shoreline Master Plan. We took part in meetings of the Shorelines Policy Committee and submitted written comments on key planning issues.

• We are playing an active role in the update of the Downtown Plan through our executive director’s participation on the Downtown Plan Update Task Force.

• Since release of the Gorge plan, FOF has worked to implement a whitewater park as the first of its 15 priority projects, securing over $650,000 in grants and private contributions to construct the facility. The park will enhance recreational quality and water safety, and will be constructed with careful attention to the needs of fish and wildlife. In 2007 we completed fundraising for project design, permitting and construction.

• In 2006, we identified the opportunity and wrote a grant that awarded the City of Spokane $530,000 to construct another priority project from the plan – a visitor center at the entry to People’s Park that will provide amenities such as restrooms to reduce negative impacts to the environment. Over this past year, we worked closely with the Spokane Parks Department to shepherd this grant through a competitive evaluation process and get it funded. Best of all, the money we raised for the whitewater park provided the required 50% match for this grant to the City, bringing a total of over $1 million in state funding and private contributions to the river in 2006-2007.

• This summer we formed a partnership with the City to move the whitewater park and the visitor center forward. We are now engaged in design and permitting. Construction should begin next summer, but there is much left to do before this project becomes a reality, and Friends of the Falls must continue our efforts to keep it moving.

• In 2007, we formed a partnership with the Peaceful Valley Neighborhood to restore riparian habitat and build a walking trail along the south bank of the river – another priority project of the Gorge plan. Led by Matt Phillipi and his neighbors in Peaceful Valley, this project is in the early planning stage. Look for a design workshop in early 2008.

• We are supporting efforts in partnership with other groups to implement several other priority projects from the Gorge plan, including a tribal cultural center, a “Southern Gateway” business district along the Sunset Highway, and completion of the Fish Lake Trail.

• At this year’s Spokane River Clean-Up, 750 volunteers assembled in High Bridge Park and recovered six tons of trash along the banks of the river. This is our fifth year organizing the clean-up event, which invites citizens to connect with the river and gorge on a personal level and promotes a community ethic of stewardship for this resource.

• As we advocate for the Great Spokane River Gorge Master Plan, we also work with other community leaders to find a sustainable solution to fund operations and maintenance of the growing network of trails, green spaces, access points, and other amenities along the Spokane River.

girlsThrough these many efforts, we seek to fulfill a vision first articulated for Spokane by the Olmsted Brothers in 1908: a 400-acre “Gorge Park” framing one of the most unique and impressive landscapes found anywhere in the United States. Such a park would connect downtown’s Riverfront Park to scenic greenbelt areas downstream and ultimately to the 10,000 acre Riverside State Park, creating an 11-mile river corridor rich with opportunities to recreate and enjoy a natural amenity that is uniquely Spokane.

Imagine an 11-mile river corridor accessible to all people - in kayaks, canoes, rafts and inner-tubes; birdwatchers and disc golf enthusiasts; cyclists, mountain bikers, hikers, trail runners and walkers. Imagine the opportunities for school field trips where children learn about their local environment, history and culture; where unique natural amenities attract university students, knowledge workers and entrepreneurs, and where adjacent neighborhoods enjoy multiple connections to open spaces and fantastic views within a natural, protected, accessible and distinctive urban river corridor.

We believe the Gorge plan will change the self-image of the Spokane region. An active, stunning and accessible river corridor will fill people in Spokane with pride and will reinforce a sense of place, while increasing the health and enjoyment of future generations.

Our advocacy will continue in 2008. Check back for updates, and consider joining Friends of the Falls today to help us continue our efforts on behalf of the river.

Year in Review 2007 (285 Kb, Acrobat® file)

Friday, December 14, 2007

Olmsted Lecture Series

girls2008 marks the centennial of the Olmsted Brothers’ presentation of its parks plan to our city.

As the first in what’s likely to be a busy year commemorating the plan, the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture’s Historic Preservation Committee will host a “Discovering Olmsted Landscapes” lecture series on January 24, January 31, and February 7, 2008. Full-series registration costs $30 per person for MAC members, or $35 for non-members.

What’s on the agenda? Lots of Olmsted researchers and specialists, like Joan Hockaday, renowned John Charles Olmsted historian and author; local Olmsted researcher Sally Reynolds, landscape designer Kerstin Martell discussing proposed restoration of the Olmsted-designed grounds of the Bozarth Retreat Center, and - we like this one - FOF board members Rick Hastings and Mike Terrell, presenting on the Olmsted-inspired Strategic Master Plan for the Spokane River gorge, including more on the the proposed whitewater park.

Advance registration is recommended, and tickets for single lectures will be sold as space permits at the door. All lectures are scheduled from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. on the MAC campus in the Eric A. Johnston Memorial Auditorium, Cheney Cowles Center, 2316 W. First Ave., Spokane.

For more, check out the flyer, linked below, that we received from the MAC. Drop in for the whole series!

MAC Olmsted Flyer

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Shoreline Master Program - Open House

girlsThe long (LONG) overdue update to the City of Spokane’s Shoreline Master Program continues to progress, which is great news.

What’s the Shoreline Master Program, you ask? Think of it as a shoreline-specific policy overlay, guiding the type, placement and characteristics of development within areas abutting the Spokane River or Hangman (Latah) Creek. It’s a critical document for places like Spokane, where the river and shoreline play such an important role in our civic health, quality of life and well-being. We’re proud to say Friends of the Falls has played a role in the process thus far, including representation on the plan’s Stakeholder and Policy Committees.

But things are still in-process, which brings us to the announcement that the next significant milestone will take place Tuesday, December 11, when the update team will host a public “Open House” at the West Central Community Center, 1603 N. Belt Street, starting at 5:30 pm.

Check out the work produced thus far, including a full mapping and inventory of our shorelines, including existing built and ecological conditions, and - we really love this part - draft restoration plans for impacted areas.

Show up to pose questions, express concerns, and basically make sure City staff and consultants know you care about Spokane’s shorelines.

For more, visit the Shoreline Master Program webpage at the link below, or get in touch with the City’s lead planner for the project, JoAnne Wright at 625-6017 or at the e-mail link below. We’ve included the City’s event flyer and an invitation letter from planning director Leroy Eadie, too.

Event Flyer (720 Kb, Acrobat® file)
Eadie Letter (48 Kb, Acrobat® file)
Shoreline Master Program Webpage (City of Spokane)
, Lead Planner (E-mail link)

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Downtown plan, part II

girlsAhh, working on Spokane’s Downtown plan. Seems like yesterday.

Except that it was 1999 - nearly a decade ago!

Since then, Spokane (with the plan as a catalyst) has accomplished an amazing number of things, including:

• Restoration of the Davenport Hotel
• Completion of the new Convention Center
• Revival of Downtown as a mixed use center
• Post Street “Promenade” improvements
• Growth of the Davenport Arts District
• Restoration of the Fox Theatre

... and a number other projects, large and small. In all, over $3 billion in new investment and construction.

So for Friends of the Falls, it’s important to note that a major update to the plan is getting underway with a workshop scheduled for Thursday, November 29, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm at 412 E. Spokane Falls Boulevard, next to the “Bookie.”

Of course, the previous plan missed on many counts - the giant “public square” called for in the 1999 plan never materialized (although Wendell Reugh’s new parking lot bears an ironic resemblance to the plan’s image and location of such a feature). But that’s why plans need updating, and we applaud the effort.

As we were then, Friends of the Falls will be there to encourage the community’s continued focus on the river, including developing a tighter integration of the downtown plan and the Gorge Master Plan.

If the Spokane River is important to you, too, please take part in this crucial effort. As the e-mail we received said, “Be a part of what comes next!”

Welcome!

Friends of the Falls is a non-profit organization working to protect and improve access to the historic Spokane Falls and river gorge. Primary activities include leading implementation of projects identified in the community-based Strategic Master Plan developed for the area.

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