Monday, October 25, 2004

“Paddling upstream”

Here’s a link to a Denver Post article about two champion whitewater kayers - Jed and Katie Selby - who are working to create a 3/4-mile whitewater park in tandem with a New Urbanist subdivision along the Arkansas River in Buena Vista, Colorado. Written by Jason Blevins, Staff Writer, published October 25, 2004.

Denver Post article (244 Kb, Acrobat® file)

Thursday, January 22, 2004

EWU Economic Impact Study

In 2003, Friends of the Falls commissioned EWU economics professor David Bunting to prepare a preliminary report estimating some of the potential benefits of greenways and trails surrounding the Spokane River in the Gorge area. Here’s a downloadable copy of the report, in PDF format.

EWU Economic Study (352 Kb, Acrobat® file)

Friday, January 16, 2004

“Gorge Park could boost economy”

The link below downloads a copy of a January 16, 2004 editorial column entitled “Gorge Park could boost economy”, supporting work necessary to realize the Olmsted Brothers’ plan, especially in light of recent successes downtown and upstream at the University District. Submitted by the Editorial Board of the Spokesman-Review

SR Editorial (69 Kb, Acrobat® file)

Wednesday, June 11, 2003

Sounding Spokane - Gorge Chapter

coverIn 2002, Washington State University professor David Wang asked several Spokane-area architects, planners, and academics to contribute chapters to an effort entitled Sounding Spokane: Perspectives on the Built Environment of a Regional City. The book highlighted many of the City’s most pressing issues, opportunities and political challenges, including one chapter on the history of the river and more recent efforts to renew it. The chapter, “Spokane’s Falls and River Gorge: Evolving Ties Between a Community and its Wellspring,” was contributed by architect/planner Rick Hastings, and covers the origins and primary aims of Friends of the Falls. An excerpt:

“The answer may be that the prime value of the Gorge won’t be as a park at all, but as a civic emblem, a central landscape providing not only beauty but iconic value, and through that value, the growth of identity for a city sorely lacking in self-worth and pride. However cast, the Falls and Gorge define the heart of Spokane; when abused, they present an unsightly centerpiece; when cut off by dams, they convey disdain for nature; when celebrated, they may captivate the world. The condition of the river inescapably affects both visitor and resident.”

By permission, the link below downloads a copy of Hastings’ chapter. Purchase the entire book from Eastern Washington University Press by clicking here.

Sounding Spokane - Chapter 4 (764 Kb, Acrobat® file)

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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