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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Center for Community Design RECEIVED FEB 2 d RECT To: City Council, City of Port Angeles City of Part Angeles From: The Center for Community Design Re: Waterfront Design, we deserve better! The Port Angeles harbor and waterfront is a living thing. The story of the Port Angeles waterfront, known up until the time at which the native peoples were ordered off of it as Tse Whitzen, is a story of a place where the life of the water and the life of the land meet in a way that serves its inhabitants in a balanced and sustainable way. It is an elegant and complex whole comprised of parts and pieces too numerous to count or fully understand. Nevertheless, it functioned in a continuous and sustained way over millennia. Following European contact and possession of the waterfront for the exploitation of natural resources this whole, or holistic, system was divided into separate uses by a system of ownership and economic form which depended on dividing the land into parcels. Each successive regime of power since that initial division, zoning and assignment of economic uses has continued to dissect and/or rebuild areas based on this "`divide and use" approach. This is true even to the present day policies and practices of the current Department of Community Development. This model and approach have endured as a consequence of slow but steady strengthening of a bureaucratic approach to economic development by jurisdictional governments including the City of Port Angeles, Port of Port Angeles and Clallam County. The cardinal rule of these bureaucracies is that all decisions made by the bureaucracies are not measured as one would expect "progress" to be measured. Bureaucratic decisions do not focus on results, efficiencies, innovations or creative ideas for the maintaining of the sustainable whole. Bureaucratic decisions are made in an economy of Time and Effort for one purpose only. That purpose is to ensure that the decision makers continue to remain in power, firmly holding on to their desks (bureaucracy: holding on to one's desk) and to insulate those positions from any fault or "failure" being traced to those desks. Decisions are made primarily for the protection of that desk's occupant in an ongoing regime of power and control. This is a systemic and structural leadership without name, face, empathy or consideration for things beautiful, wholesome or of delight. It is a systematic, heartless "plan by the book" approach which cannot be truly progressive. It can only be restrictive. Its purpose is merely survival of the system. No advancement, no progress, no "new", or one could argue, no "living and growing"' things will result from these bureaucratic processes. This is often known as "designing to the status quo", in other words planning for no change. Planning and designing at this level of aspiration results in, at best, "good enough" buildings, mediocre neighborhoods, a downtown business community that struggles and a waterfront that is absent of active daily life. In essence the heartbeat and respiration of the place is maintained without the patient growing or thriving. It is keeps the community on "life support". Therefore designs like the one now being proposed for our waterfront often emerge from a padded cell of small town political power as "safe" variations of borrowed themes (Bremerton or Bellingham or Spokane Riverfi ont), old recipes or as of-the-shelf generic schemes which are then sold to the public as "awarded winning" designs. Who could question them? They are, after all, crafted through an "all inclusive public process". Unfortunately, this approach can be the straightest road to a homogenized and lifeless urban design. A recent Forbes magazine article title "The Secret Power of Introverts" points out that extrovert, charismatic leaders do not have better production performance; that brainstorming results in lower quality ideas....that the extroverts lead the passive and compliant, while introverts working out of the spotlight often come up with more well thought-out, innovative and creative ideas. And that makes all the difference. If you look at how the public process was conducted on our waterfront planning every event surrounding the design process was carefully orchestrated and controlled to satisfy the appearance of a design without more than a token measure of controversy or discomfort for the participants; essentially a design by Cesarean Section. Now we find ourselves looking at the results of that process with the nagging question in the back of our minds, "Where is the soul of it?" The esplanade will undoubtedly look very clean and competently detailed and neat and tidy but will it have life? Can it sustain growth? What about it's edges? How do they relate to the adjoining uses and the ecosystems as a whole? How does it relate to the "whole place""? We predict the design as it's currently presented will not survive the test of these questions. Why will it have no life? Because the results of the AIA SDAT report were sliced and diced and divided and categorized and ranked and voted upon and prioritized and arranged so the public, and the City Council members, could "understand" it. No fuss, no mess. Unfortunately, the more you dissect something to understand it the sooner you realize that the whole is lost and, consequently, everything being studied becomes even more mysterious. Its form and wholeness becomes lost in the study of the pieces of itself. Ironically, there was a volunteer group of local, willing, passionate, loyal and talented professionals working through The Center for Community Design who took it upon themselves to dig deeper and drill down to the depths of the implications of the SDAT study beyond the obvious recommendations. They contemplated our waterfront as a unique place, a place that cannot be compared with other places. They spent many , many hours mind-mapping, arguing, sketching and studying the history, culture, anthropology and environment (both built and natural) of this whole place. Finally, driven by no incentive other than their love of the place, they were able to precipitate a few concentrated drops of the essence of this place. It wasn't surprising to them that those catalytic drops of design-essence didn't look very much like the design to which we are now being asked to give our communal blessing. So now we are again, as a community, perched on the brink of building yet another "Gateway to Nowhere in Port Whatever". Little will actually change with this design for the business owners around the waterfront other than it being easier to sweep and a better skateboard platform. We firmly believe that the design as currently envisioned will be a major disappointment in terms of a harbor and waterfront economy that deserves to live and grow. Using the accepted measures of "sustainability and resilience" for an economy that ultimately relies only upon the talents embodied in our local population we think we will look back on this design and give ourselves a failing grade if we buy into the "good enough" standards and grade ourselves on a very forgiving curve. Studio Cascade will eventually return to their homes in Spokane and to their riverfront with their exemplary downtown business opportunities. Poor Angeles, however, will be left in a declining or, at best, flat-line business environment still wondering... "who were those guys" , "who are we?", "why do investors and developers avoid us like the plague?" and "what could we have discovered about ourselves and this truly unique place in which we live?" had we taken full advantage of this opportunity "on the waterfront"'. You may want to know if we at the Center for Community Design have something more constructive to suggest, something more to offer now that we have been so critical of this most recent setback in our city planning and design. After all, it's the project that no local designers or planners were hired to do. What could we have to offer? Our answer to this is that we already possess the seeds of a better alternative plan. Growing those seeds was not something the leadership of the City of Port Angeles supports. The Center. for Community Design group could have been allowed to pursue a lively and sometime uncomfortable debate on the uniqueness of this place, on the measures we should use to make informed decisions about what really does set us apart and how that unique character could be expressed in the best waterfront design we are capable of creating. But it was not given that opportunity. The last thing we needed was a nice, tidy, civilized presentation of competent design but that`s what we got. No emotion, no controversy, little debate, smooth sailing, only consensus, and without soul. We have seen little in the recent design presentations that calls out "this is our unique place". So far, we have seen grim, lifeless and colorless presentations. Where is the "life" that design team said they would inject into our waterfront? We feel we are again losing an opportunity that can never be regained if the current design is adopted and constructed. We believe the City has not delivered a design which respects the whole and will be sustainable and living for generations to come. We recommend that a forum be sponsored by the Center for Community Design (funded by the City), along with other citizen representative groups such as the Port Angeles Downtown Association, the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and others to re- evaluate the current design. This review should address the current design in terms of the uniqueness of the entire waterfront including surrounding business interests and areas of future development such as the Tse Whitzen Village, PenPly site, Salish Village (Payonier site), Nippon Paper and Ediz Hook. Furthermore, we recommend that as alternatives and improvements emerge from this process that those recommendations be presented in a fair and transparent manner and in a neutral location such as the Center for Community Design, allowing all citizens to give comment and participate in the customization of the waterfront design that truly expresses our unique sense of place and maximizes opportunities for economic development. The Center for Community Design