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1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.
 

And for Seattle's next 'world's fair,'...

Puget Sound boosters are proposing to launch an annual Global Health Celebration in 2012 to re-brand Seattle for the new century.

This summer the city of Seattle is celebrating the centennial of the city's first world's fair, the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909. But another world's fair anniversary in Seattle has been targeted for a major event, this one on a global scale.

The Prosperity Partnership, a coalition of business and trade leaders and policy makers that's an arm of the Puget Sound Regional Council (PSRC), is in the planning stages for what they envision as an Annual Global Health Celebration to be held in Seattle starting in 2012.

The Prosperity Partnership is a pro-growth group focused on Central Puget Sound (King, Pierce, Snohomish, and Kitsap counties). It has a number of working groups scheming in various policy and employment sectors, one of which is tourism. PSRC senior economic analyst Eric Schinfeld gave an overview of the "tourism cluster's" work at a recent symposium on Historic Preservation and Cultural Tourism held in Snohomish last week (I was a paid speaker and moderator for the event). The Partnership's tourism strategy document is available here (pdf).

The group has set several priorities, including the expansion of the Washington State Convention Center and finding ways to make Seattle more friendly to international visitors. Anyone who has traveled much overseas knows that Seattle, by comparison, doesn't cater much to international travelers, except for the Opera's Wagner Ring cycle each four years. We have poor signage, mediocre taxi service, and few people who speak foreign languages. This "world-class" city doesn't put out much of a welcome mat.

Still, travel and tourism have a big economic impact according to various agencies (pdf). Washington's Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development reports that travel spending in the state was $15 billion in 2007, up 7 percent over the previous year. The travel industry ranks just behind aerospace and software. In 2007, an estimated 150,000 state jobs were travel-related. The lion's share of the tourism is in King County, which accounts for 43 percent of all visitor spending. Promoting tourism also has another advantage: as Schinfeld puts it, people "come, spend, and leave." That's music to a mossback's ears.

The Global Health Celebration envisioned would be big, 10-day event drawing up to 250,000 visitors (locally and from outside the region). It would key off Seattle's role in global health, a natural given the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's central role, and tie in with the annual Pacific Health Summit (which is coming up next week). It would showcase the region's heritage of health and life sciences work. "It would," says the PSRC's principal economic policy analyst Chris Strow, "celebrate Seattle's leadership and status as the non-profit capital of the world when it comes to global health." It could gather together the health professionals, dole out awards, raise money for health causes, and feature entertainment events covering the arts, film, sports, and recreation.

Models for the summit draw on the Aspen Institute's Aspen Festival, which features ideas, food & wine, and music. Such events bring together heavy hitters and thinkers. From the standpoint of the region, the summit would pump up the local tourism/travel industry and help "brand" the region as an international leader in global health. Another possible model: the Cambridge University Science Festival in England.

The broadening of the travel and tourism field is important. Much of the local growth in tourism employment is due to the casino boom, says Schinfeld. Tourism wages tend to be low because much of the work is entry level service jobs or part-time. Cultural tourism, which includes travel related to the arts, history, and food, is an important sector in that research indicates that cultural tourists stay longer (great for generating hotel taxes) and spend more than other tourists. An annual celebration/summit would create a regular, high-end, travel-related cultural event that could have the added advantage of bolstering other economic sectors, like bio-tech, that in turn generate even higher-paying jobs.

The year 2012 is significant target for a couple of reasons. One, it is close on the heels of the projected opening of the Gates Foundation's new $500 million headquarters, slated for late 2010 (or possibly 2011). The celebration could function as a kind of unofficial one-year open house. The year will also mark the 50th anniversary of Seattle's first big global science fair, the 1962 Century 21 Exposition.

That world's fair was important for many reasons, one being that it was driven by a New Frontier science agenda — an effort to popularize and promote public awareness of science and generate enthusiasm for technological development. It was Space Age-oriented, boosted in part by Sputnik and the space race, but much broader in what it showcased, from atomic cars to computers that could answer questions. The fair, in fact, may have been the first place a young Bill Gates encountered a computer face-to-face and it certainly energized the imagination of sci-fi buff Paul Allen, who has since spent chunks of his fortune on various imaginative projects, including the search for extraterrestrials and an actual working rocket ship.

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Comments:

Posted Fri, Jun 5, 8:50 a.m. inappropriate

The event itself should be seen more as a way to advance thought, get brains together, raise funds, etc. It should be seen less as economic development or branding. That stuff will be a side effect if the real purposes are served. Further, visiting participants will come only if they see it as a serious gathering, or something of value to their organizations.

That said, bringing more visitors is a great idea, and capitalizing on Seattle's critical mass of global health organizations/efforts is a great idea. Seattle has been growing as a destination in recent years, and this is thrilling to watch.

Posted Fri, Jun 5, 9:22 a.m. inappropriate

Whereas such a conference would increase the region's visibility in the medical science industry, and is certainly worthwhile, I'm not convinced it would boost tourism. I suppose the state could start an advertising campaign: "Come to Seattle! See Puget Sound, the Space Needle, and doctors from all over the world!"

Posted Fri, Jun 5, 10:50 a.m. inappropriate

Oddly enough, doctors and scientists are a special niche for Seattle tourism, because they're a special niche for our convention industry. (Because unlike some professions they have lots of events that fit our small center, they can afford our hotel rates, and they turn out in higher numbers for conventions in cities they like)

Posted Fri, Jun 5, 4:07 p.m. inappropriate

What are the chances that this will result in the 2nd "Battle in Seattle"? Bring on the anarchists!!!

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