Monday, April 29, 2013

Seattle International Dance Festival Descends on SLU June 14 - 23, 2013

We love seeing events like this grow and thrive in our neighborhood. Learn all about the festival and contact them to get involved. 


The 8th Annual Seattle International Dance Festival (SIDF), Beyond the Threshold runs June 14-23, 2013 and like South Lake Union, the neighborhood it occupies, continues to grow by leaps and bounds. In addition to its largest roster to date of regional, national and international dance artists, and three new Spotlight on Seattle curators, Art on the Fly will seal off two blocks of Terry Avenue for a day-long urban art fiesta, including “surprise” and roving performances, a music stage, free dance classes, an artisan craft fair, a beer and margarita garden and food provided by restaurant sponsors like Tom Douglas’ Cuoco and Brave Horse Tavern. The Art on the Fly kickoff is topped off with a Dusk Dance Party hosted by KEXP DJ Will Myers and a “Dancing with the Seattleites” Dance Contest. Details Below.

This ten-day dance explosion fills this thriving neighborhood. And this popular festival strives to educate while providing free and paid entertainment for South Lake Union workers, residents and visitors of all ages. This year there are seven artistic programs including: Art on the Fly, The Inter|National Series, Spotlight on Seattle, The Threshold Institute, Dusk Dance Party, Dancing with the Seattleites and the Sanity Cafe.

Tickets to most performances are $20 in advance, $25 at the door (Students/Seniors are $15 in advance $20 at the door). An All Festival Pass can be had for $50, offering entrance to every event in the program. All details, including performance times, locations and ticketing information are available at www.SeattleIDF.org.

ART ON THE FLY - June 15; 12 - 6pm – KID-FRIENDLY. FREE DANCE CLASSES. FOOD. BEER GARDEN. DANCING WITH THE SEATTLEITES DANCE CONTEST FINALS.
Dozens of FREE kid-friendly dance events will take over the streets surrounding Amazon’s Van Vorst Plaza and turn the Seattle Streetcar stops into a giant “art ride.” through downtown and South Lake Union. Contemporary dance springs to life in everyday environments. Massive Monkees and former PNB dancers lead a variety of free dance classes. Indie rock bands No Clouds, Shenendoah Davis and Exohxo provide surprise “pop up” concerts (impromptu dancing is, of course, encouraged) and there are crafts, exhibits, food and a beer garden.

ART ON THE FLY / DUSK DANCE PARTY - June 15; 6 - 9pm
Hosted by KEXP’s favorite Latin DJ Will “Chilly” Myers. Chilly hosts “El Sonido” Mondays from 6-9pm but he will transport the Latin sounds to Van Vorst plaza for one very special outdoor dance party.

INTER|NATIONAL ARTISTS SERIES WEEKEND 1 - June 14
Tere Mathern Dance (Portland OR) performs Gather a dance about convergence, digging in, interdependence and the moment of interaction. A collaboration between Tere Mathern Dance and the music group, Battle Hymns & Gardens including saxophonists Reed Wallsmith and Joe Cunningham (both members of Blue Cranes).
Idan Cohen performs Wayfarer, set to Mahler’s composition.  This piece manifests the inner journey of the wanderer, searching for symbols and images of a home. As Israel's leading young independent choreographer, Cohen was born and raised on Kibbutz Mizra and danced with world-renowned Kibbutz Contemporary Dance Company.

INTER|NATIONAL ARTISTS SERIES WEEKEND 1 - June 15-16
Yurek Hansen and Manimou Camara (Idaho and Guinea, Africa ) collaborate and merge traditional West African dance with hip-hop, ballet and martial arts.
Kokoro Dance (Vancouver Canada) perform A Simple Way, embodying the concepts of yugen (profound, mysterious sense of the beauty of the universe and the sad beauty of human suffering) and wabi (transient and stark beauty)-sabi (the beauty of natural patina and aging).
Khambatta Dance Company (Seattle WA) presents their final local performance of their highly regarded Truth and Betrayal.

INTER|NATIONAL ARTISTS SERIES WEEKEND 2 - June 21
Dance Construction Company (Washington, D.C.) performs Collision Course a.k.a. Pillow Talk directed by Maida Withers. It is about the fiction and reality of LUV for the digital age. Features an electronic visual installation by Alissandru Caldiero and electronic music by audacious performing poet/story teller Steve Hilmy.
Dancing People Company (Ashland, OR) perform a trio of dance works, Threshold, which happens and is about remaining within the confines of a small patch of grass, Ephemeral Lifetimes, a duet inspired by all the possible lifetimes one could have had, and Untitled, about the process of unwrapping the soul

INTER|NATIONAL ARTISTS SERIES WEEKEND 2 - June 22-23
Jennifer McLeish-Lewis (Nanaimo, Canada) perform Lucid. As Margaret Atwood once wrote, “You're sad because you're sad. It's psychic. It's the age. It's chemical. Go see a shrink or take a pill, or hug your sadness like an eyeless doll, you need to sleep.”
Wuza Wuza (Ghana, West Africa) collaborates with Seattle’s Version Excursion. Merging two influences from East and West, these two companies come together in a collaborative performance, Full Circle. Dancers bridge the gap between two very different cultures and explore the facets of human experience in a fusion of traditional African and contemporary dance.

SPOTLIGHT ON SEATTLE - June 18-20
Spotlight on Seattle brings together three dance world icons to curate and express their take on the Seattle dance scene. This years’ curators are Amy O’Neal (Velocity, Pat Graney, Dance This) Tere Mathern (Tere Mathern Dance) and Kiyon Gaines (PNB).
June 18 - (Amy O’Neal, Curator): Paige Barnes, Coyote; Corrie Befort, Aphorisms; Alice Gosti performs a vogueing piece exploring gender; Beth Graczyk. Celia; Jody Kuehner performs a new untitled work; Danny Long performs a new piece about the role of men as care takers/givers (my life as a black gay housewife), Devin McDermott, The Marble Made our Cheeks Look Pink; Amelia Reber, We Need Another Saxaphone; and Lou Henry Hoover, Future Purchase explores fatherhood and aging using stylized cabaret and burlesque genres.
June 19 - (Tere Mathern, Curator): a celebration of the unique relationship between Seattle and Portland.  Co-presented with Conduit Dance Center in Portland.  Allie Hankins, Like a Sun that Pours Forth Light but Never Warmth; Danielle Ross, Together We Fall; Tara Dyberg, Net//Works; Umami Performance, Constellation Half-Remembered; Kate Wallich, It Girl and Them.
June 20 - (Kiyon Gaines, Curator): Amy Johnson, Madmen; Badmarmadance performs and excerpt without context or provocation; Corolis Dance, Insofar; Ashani Dances, Like Sand Through My Fingers; Shannon Stewart, Come.Get.To.This.is.

SANITY CAFE - June 22, 10pm
A bar somewhere in South lake Union -
This late evening cabaret-style performance event serves up a common theme and gives a group of up-and-coming as well as established choreographers one week to choreograph a piece. The theme is selected by the opening night festival audience on June 14, 2013 and the final venue announced at that time. Immediately the selected choreographers will gather and decide how they are going to tackle the theme. They decide the structure of the evening and can collaborate or divide the tasks Artists include: Abigail Wallace and Alice Gosti.

THRESHOLD DANCE INSTITUTE - JUNE 17-21 9am- 5pm
Ninth Avenue Studio – Cornish College of the Arts – 427 9th Ave. N.
Each year The Threshold Institute offers master classes with national and international artists/teachers. It is a week-long daytime intensive track culminating in a professionally produced performance at SIDF. Artists/teachers leading the repertory class and performance in 2013 include: Yawuza Alhassan (Ghana), Barbara Bourget (Canada), Yurek Hansen (Idaho Ballet), JenniferMcLeish-Lewis and Cyrus Khambatta (Seattle). Final performance is Sunday June 23 at 2pm.

The festival is produced by Khambatta Dance Comany and provided to the community to enrich the availability and diversity of contemporary dance.

Friday, April 26, 2013

Richard Conlin on the Rezone



The following is a letter we received on April 25th regarding the SLU Rezone:

Thank you for your message about the South Lake Union rezone. On Monday, April 22, the City Council celebrated Earth Day with a unanimous Committee of the Whole vote approving a far-reaching rezone of South Lake Union. The land use changes will allow for more jobs and housing close to downtown, reducing sprawl and the environmental degradation that accompanies it. The Council modified the legislation submitted by the Mayor by adding additional requirements for green buildings, historic preservation, and view protection, strengthening affordable housing provisions, and making a few changes in development capacity. However, the core provisions of the legislation continue to embody the recommendations of the South Lake Union Community Council, the stewardship body for the South Lake Union Neighborhood Plan update. The legislation will go forward for formal approval on Monday, May 6, but it is likely that only technical or minor changes will be made after the ten months of Committee work.

This action completes eight years of work to implement the 2004 designation of South Lake Union as an “Urban Center” in the Seattle Comprehensive Plan. Urban Centers are a key element in the region’s implementation of the Growth Management Act (GMA). They are intended to have high levels of housing and employment growth, in contrast to the rest of the City, which is intended to grow more gradually. Ensuring that South Lake Union and other Urban Centers can accommodate Seattle’s continued growth will take pressure off other neighborhoods that would have to absorb greater numbers of residents than are currently planned.

In 2004 South Lake Union was assigned a twenty year growth target of 8,000 households and 12,000 jobs, approximately 17% of the City’s household growth and 19% of the employment growth for that period. The planning horizon for this rezone extends out twenty years, and by 2031 South Lake Union would have to absorb some 12,000 households and 22,000 jobs in order to continue to meet its share of future growth. Decisions made on this rezone will shape the neighborhood for the next hundred years.

The rezone prepares the way for South Lake Union to become an integrated part of the downtown core and gets rid of the current zoning that fosters ‘breadbox’ buildings occupying full blocks. While allowing greater height in the form of towers, the new zoning also imposes development standards and incentives to encourage a diverse urban form, more open space and an enlivened streetscape. For example:
•     Only one tower per block would be permitted on the Mercer blocks. Other blocks can have two towers but they must be more widely spaced than anywhere else in the city.
•     There are strong street-level design standards and incentives to ensure a lively and vibrant pedestrian environment such as requiring retail at ground level.
•     A series of subarea standards will maintain the character of specific communities through incentives for preservation of landmark properties and existing open spaces.
•     A new program that preserves farm and forest lands by transferring development rights into South Lake Union will also generate funds for transportation improvements.

Much of the public discussion centered on increases in building heights. Tower heights will be 400 feet on Denny, matching the zoning on the south side, and will be 240 feet in the central area of the neighborhood. Towers are only permitted for residential development. On the Mercer blocks, between Mercer and Valley, towers will be limited to 160 feet. In the southwest portion of the neighborhood, heights will generally be limited to 85 feet to protect the flight path for Kenmore Air, and there are lower heights in the Cascade neighborhood and in the blocks nearest Lake Union.

Major amendments approved by the Council include:
  • Reducing the allowed height on the Mercer blocks from 240 feet to 160 feet, and reorienting the towers to protect views by limiting east-west width to 105 feet.
  • Adding the opportunity for three or four 125 foot residential towers on two blocks between Westlake and Dexter and Highland and Galer, where the slope of Queen Anne Hill creates a significant change in the topography. This will replace most of the development capacity lost with lower heights on the Mercer blocks.
  • Requiring all new buildings to meet the Gold standard of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program of the US Green Building Council.
  • Expanding incentives to encourage preservation of all landmarked structures.
  • Raising heights in part of the Cascade neighborhood from 75 feet to 85 feet to allow more flexibility in design.
  • Strengthening the incentives to developers if they include a school in their project.
  • Creating permanent setbacks on east-west corridors to protect views of the Space Needle, which was accomplished without reducing development potential.

The Council also made modifications to the affordable housing incentive program. The Mayor’s proposed legislation created a requirement for developers to either include affordable housing in their projects or to contribute to funds for building low income housing if the developer wants to build above the base height, which is 85 feet in most of the neighborhood. The Council increased the amount of the required fee by about 30%, in hopes that this would stimulate more affordable housing in developments. If fully implemented, this could provide 10 to 20% of the City’s goal for affordable housing in the neighborhood. The challenge in creating these kinds of provisions is to balance the goal of providing affordable housing against the risk of decreased development. Raising the cost of residential development too much could cause developers to build offices instead, or even to decline to take advantage of the new zoning and only build less risky smaller developments.

Getting to the “right” fee amount is incredibly tricky, which is why I favored maintaining the Mayor’s proposed fee of $15.15 per gross square foot for residential units -- the same as what developers pay to build across the street in Denny Triangle and downtown. This would put SLU on an equal playing field for development in the short-term and give Council time over the next few months to conduct a rigorous analysis of options for overhauling all our incentive programs, not just for SLU but also other neighborhoods with incentive zoning programs. However, a majority of Councilmembers believed that some increase over the proposed level could be included in this legislation, and we ultimately came to an agreement on a compromise package that can later be modified as we study the issue further.

There is general agreement that the incentive zoning included in this legislation is only one part of the answer. Recognizing this, the Mayor has convened a task force of stakeholders to analyze other tools to increase the supply of affordable housing and make recommendations on a comprehensive program that would consider not only South Lake Union, but the entire City. The Council will adopt a resolution that complements this by creating an Expert Review Panel to fully examine options for revising and expanding the incentive program. Ultimately, getting more housing built – affordable or market-rate -- is the most critical step in making sure that all residents have a place to live, and the rezone is a major accomplishment in reaching that goal.

The Council will also adopt two additional resolutions as part of the South Lake Union package. One accepts the recommendations of the Council’s Race and Social Justice (RSJ) analysis of the rezone, and creates a work plan for job training and placement as well as actions to strengthen community resources for low and moderate income residents. The second resolution proposes several additional work plan items to follow up on the rezone, including providing view protection from Lake Union Park, funding a historic preservation survey, and advancing a review of transportation improvements.

Cities all over the country are looking at South Lake Union with envy. Seattle is incredibly fortunate in having the confluence of private and public investment that is creating a new neighborhood and providing jobs and housing for our future. While in the last two recessions, Seattle lagged a year or more behind the national recovery, this time we are leading the way. This legislation is a thoughtful and careful action that will enable Seattle to continue to prosper and will allow South Lake Union to be the great Urban Center envisioned in the South Lake Union Neighborhood Plan.


Councilmember Richard Conlin
206-684-8805

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

It’s All Happening in SLU on May 5




What could be more fun, or a better chance to promote South Lake Union, than hundreds of people coming to the neighborhood to have fun and support a great cause?  

Yep, it will all be happening on Sunday, May 5, when the American Lung Association brings its signature Fight for Air Walk to the neighborhood.  While the Walk starts at 10am, at 9:30am everyone can warm up with pre-Walk yogic stretching, courtesy of Be Luminous Yoga.  Then the Walk makes a loop around Denny Park, and continues through the neighborhood for a 2.5 mile scavenger hunt; participants will pass sponsors such as Group Health, PEMCO and NBBJ, as well as the cool new urban residence Stack House

Have a four-legged friend?  Bring Fido for the Canines for Clean Air Pet Parade sponsored by Scraps Dog Bakery – with dog treats of course – and Lake Union Vet, who will have docs on hand to answer your pet questions.  Any dogs who preregister their owners will get a free doggie kerchief!  Bring the kids for fun with Radio Disney, Air Guitar contests sponsored by Guitar Center and paper airplane contests courtesy of Kenmore Air. 

Afterwards many local businesses such as Lake Union Wellness, Car2Go, Toyota of Seattle, Align Chiropractic and Springhill Suites will have booths near the Downtown Spirits beer garden and the kids root beer garden, while Umpqua Bank hands out free ice cream!  The Lung Association’s very fun Breathe Boot Camp will be ongoing, as will workshops on how to make the air in your home healthier to breathe and how to manage asthma and other lung diseases.  

When it’s all over? CleanScapes has generously donated their clean-up crew.  Many other SLU businesses such as One West Commons have contributed time, talent or treasure to make this event a success.  Everyone is invited to come on out for the fun, and to receive $5 off registration by entering SLU as the discount code!  Your tax-deductible contribution helps keep youth off tobacco, supports those with lung disease, and helps keep the air we breathe clean.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Aurora-Mercer Traffic and Tips for getting around South Lake Union

The media loves to talk about Mercer Construction. And all of us who live and work in South Lake Union know the lane closures can be a pain. But we want to be loud and clear:

Businesses are open and accessible in South Lake Union!

Daniel's and Chandler's  have done an excellent job of helping to get the word out that businesses on the lake front (and in the rest of the neighborhood) ARE accessible, even during the latest construction closures.

Take a look at the edits they made to this handy map. In their own words, "Navigating through South Lake Union has never been easier."


Mercer East, the project that has been impacting us in recent years, is actually nearing completion. The recent news has been about Mercer West and how it interacts with Aurora. Here's a quick look at the impacts:

You can stay posted by following SDOT's Mercer West page.

If you're planning to drive to SLU, remember that Vulcan is still offering great rates on parking in a few garages, including at 2201 Westlake and Alley24. If you haven't been in the neighborhood for awhile, we encourage you to explore and take a look around! You may discover a new favorite coffee shop or piece of public art work.

Monday, April 8, 2013

April 10th Complimentary Earth Launch Event: a lunchtime fair to put Earth Month into orbit

Stop by for a complimentary organic lunch on

Wednesday, April 10 from 11:30 – 1:00pm at 415 Westlake in South Lake Union, Seattle.

More than a dozen local organizations working to protect the planet and keep Seattle green will join us to share green-living tips and volunteer opportunities. You’ll also see live demos that will help you unleash your earthly powers long after Earth Month has passed.
We’ll also be giving away some fabulous prizes donated by Flying Fish, Kenmore Air, Daniel’s Broiler, Strawberry Moon, Urban Yoga Spa, Strawberry Moon, Tom Douglas, Espresso Vivace, and many more. Don’t miss it!
Let us know you're coming and invite your friends via Facebok.

http://www.esw.org/earth-launch-lunchtime-fair-put-earth-month-orbit

Great 4th of July event: The Center for Wooden Boat's 36th Annual Wooden Boat Festival! July 4th-7th

36TH ANNUAL LAKE UNION WOODEN BOAT FESTIVAL

The 37th Annual Lake Union Wooden Boat Festival will be Thursday, July 4th, through Sunday, July 7th. All your favorite activities will be back, and we're planning a few special new ones, too!
 
Festival Registration for 2013 will open in the Spring. If you have Sponsorship questions, please contact Dan Leach at dleach@cwb.org. For all other Festival inquiries, please contact Aislinn Palmer at apalmer@cwb.org.
 

Lake Union fireworks look like no-show (Seattle Times)

One Reel, the production company that puts on the Family 4th fireworks show, says it could not raise enough money this year and the show won’t go on, though history shows a last-minute rescue still could be possible.
 
Say it ain’t so, Seattle: No fireworks on Lake Union this Fourth of July?

A day after a self-imposed deadline expired for raising a half-million dollars, organizer One Reel Productions announced that it had commitments for just one-tenth of the money and was pulling the plug on the fireworks extravaganza.

“No April Fool’s joke,” said One Reel spokeswoman Aubrey Bergauer, underscoring expectations that the fireworks display is not going to happen in 2013.

Still, One Reel has come up short of donations in the past, and there were indications Monday that at least City Hall thought the show’s demise wasn’t entirely a done deal.

“It is unfortunate that the event does not appear to be working out this year as it traditionally does at Gas Works Park,” Mayor Mike McGinn said in a statement. “I will be meeting with local business leaders and stakeholders to discuss options.”

Meanwhile, some smaller donors reacted with dismay at the news.

“We can fund big stadiums, but we can’t fund fireworks displays?” asked Chris Gaspard, a resident of Skyway, in South Seattle, who was one of dozens of small contributors who gave money for the show.

“It’s a crime for a city as vibrant as Seattle not to have a 4th of July fireworks show,” said Ed Lazowska, another donor and computer-science professor at the University of Washington, by email. Lazowska, who has been watching the fireworks with his family for 30 years, said he counts the show as one of those events that makes Seattle a great place for families.

One Reel had raised just $50,000 by Sunday, despite a nine-month fundraising effort, Bergauer said. “We’ve tried to be as clear as possible to the community that we’re willing to produce it, at no profit to us, if people are willing to step up and fund it,” she said.
Spokesmen for Microsoft, Starbucks and Amazon all said on Monday that their companies had pledged to help sponsor the fireworks this year, although none of the three would say how much they promised.

Bergauer, of One Reel, said it had a March 31 deadline for fundraising because suppliers needed to know by that date whether there would be a show in Seattle. She said the only way the fireworks can still be saved is if a single company stepped forward to sponsor the entire show.
But no single company has yet offered to do so. “You name the company, we have talked to them,” she said.

It’s not the first time that the March 31 deadline has triggered an announcement by One Reel that there would be no fireworks show.

On April 1, 2010, One Reel announced it was canceling because it couldn’t find a title sponsor. KIRO-FM radio host Dave Ross and restaurateur Tom Douglas launched a radio campaign to save the fireworks. Within one day, pledges totaled $503,000 — more than enough.

A year later, One Reel secured two big sponsors — Microsoft and Starbucks — then continued fundraising until late May, when it announced it had found enough money for the show.
Washington Mutual served as the title sponsor from 2002 until the bank collapsed in 2008. In 2009, New York-based JPMorgan Chase, which bought WaMu’s assets, agreed to sponsor the show.
But “the recession changed all that,” Bergauer said. No one company is interested in paying for the entire event, which draws hundreds of thousands of spectators, and “I don’t know if we’ll ever see that model again.”

The closest city to Seattle with a major fireworks show is Bellevue, which puts on a family Fourth event with sponsorship from Bellevue-based Symetra and help from the city and the Bellevue Downtown Association.

The fireworks are shot from Bellevue Square’s parking garage, and the best views are from Downtown Park, which can handle gatherings of about 65,000 people, said Bellevue Fire Lt. Troy Donlin.

Last month there was speculation that another Seattle summer tradition, the Blue Angels precision flying team, might be canceled due to funding woes — in this case, the federal budget sequester.
But Melissa Jurcan, a spokeswoman for Seafair, said Monday that the Navy has only canceled Blue Angels shows in April. And while it’s “certainly a possibility” that more shows could be canceled, Seafair officials don’t expect that to happen, she said.

To make sure Seattle gets a good air show, Seafair officials have signed a contract with the Patriots Jet Team, a civilian-owned aerobatics team from California.

Staff reporter Lynn Thompson contributed to this report, and information from The Seattle Times’ archives was also included. Katherine Long: 206-464-2219 or klong@seattletimes.com. On Twitter @katherinelong.
Seattle Times staff reporter

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2020689495_fireworkscanceledxml.html


Friday, April 5, 2013

Public Safety in South Lake Union

We had a great conversation yesterday evening with Sgt. Paul Gracy and Officer David Hockett from the West Community Police Team of the Seattle Police Department (SPD).

Overall, public safety is looking good in our neighborhood. Of course, the best thing we can do as a Chamber is to stay on top of issues and keep it that way.

The number one takeaway from last night's meeting: If you think you should call 9-1-1, then do call. Trust your instinct. Go ahead and call 9-1-1 and, if it is not an emergency, just let them know, "This is a non-emergency." They'll be able to quickly process your call.

SPD has some great online resources to best understand what's going on in the area. You can browse the 9-1-1 Incident Map by location, and filter through various types of incident responses. The main SPD website has several other handy resources.

One issue police are seeing around the city these days is smart-phone theft. Be aware as you're checking your phone in public spaces. It may seem common sense, but we all have those moments where we're reading an important email, and aren't as aware of our surroundings. It's easy for someone to snatch the phone right out of our hands and run off.

We take safety in our neighborhood seriously. After you have contacted the police about an incident, please feel free to let the SLU Chamber know about trends you are seeing. When we hear about public safety issues from our members, we can do our best to get out in front of them, bring awareness to our membership organizations, host additional public safety events, and help keep South Lake Union safe.


Sgt. Gracy and Officer Hockett are here for us:
Sgt. Paul Gracy - (206) 386-9135
Officer David Hockett - (206) 684-7720