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The city's own series of tubes
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As long as we're beating up on the mayor today ...
A city of scolds
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Greg Nickels' rebel yell
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As long as we're beating up on the mayor today ...
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Seattle goes gah-gah over choo-choos
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It's not over until Hillary Clinton's cash runs out
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Responding to her readers on paid family leave
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The city's own series of tubes
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Puget Sound on Prozac
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Fast times and loads of fun, despite expensive gas
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Parlez-vous a software language?
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UW President Mark Emmert wants undergraduates to have a richer student life, beyond just attending classes and the occasional football game. Having more places to live on campus, and in dorms that have seminar rooms and auditoriums, is a good step in this direction. Most nights, the UW really does feel like a commuter campus, with few folks around and few events scheduled. And of course with housing so expensive in Seattle, more UW students have to live farther away from campus.
For a long time, the University District tended to think of the UW as a large beast that needed to be kept in its cage, stopped from expanding outward. The new thinking is that campus and nearby city should not be sharply demarcated but more shuffled together, with commercial spaces interpenetrating ivory towers. The Ave, having been hollowed out by competition from University Village and the invasion of teenagers, is now much more interested in welcoming the University to revitalize dead blocks and bring more streetlife. The UW has a fine record of building handsome, contextual new buildings on campus. Now it has a chance to show architectural and urbanistic flare on the perimeter.
A footnote: Mike McGavick, who was Safeco CEO from 2001-05, is leaving Seattle to head a Bermuda insurance firm, XL Capital Ltd. McGavick was a strong advocate, while at Safeco, for creating a more vibrant University District, along the lines of Cambridge, Mass. It wasn't easy: the UW was standoffish, and ultimately Safeco (under McGavick's successor) decided to move headquarters to downtown. Safeco Tower will now become UW Tower, staking new presence for the U. in the district. So maybe McGavick's advocacy paid off? At any rate, his strong concern for city values will be missed.
Report a violationPosted by: mhays on Mar 18, 2008 2:27 PM