Parking would make a new City Hall in downtown Sequim a tight fit, consultant says

SEQUIM — When you try to think outside that pesky box, parked cars get in the way.

So said architect Mark Spitzer when discussing a new central City Hall during Monday night’s Sequim City Council meeting.

“We support having the City Hall downtown,” Spitzer said.

“It’s difficult to fit everything in . . . primarily because of the parking.”

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

Spitzer is a member of the Seattle architecture firm Arai Jackson Ellison Murakami, hired years ago to help Sequim solve its municipal-complex puzzle.

The City Council had asked the firm to explore the possibility of putting a new, $8 million City Hall on Cedar Street, where the old, poorly insulated, cramped one now sits.

Councilman Ken Hays, also an architect, wanted to look into closing one side of the street and creating a civic plaza.

Nice idea, Spitzer said, but “the latest scary numbers” for parking-lot construction start at about $10,000 for surface parking, and go up to $20,000 for an above-ground garage and $30,000 for underground parking.

And that’s per parking space.

An average of 980 people visit city offices each month, said Frank Needham, the capital projects manager in charge of the City Hall site search.

Spitzer added that those customers and the city’s staff will need about 80 places to park.

He suggested solutions to the Cedar Street problem: Put a staff parking lot off-site and have city employees walk a block or so; set up public-private partnerships and share parking lots with nearby businesses.

The council members said little in response to Spitzer’s presentation, and turned next to Needham, who presented four other potential sites:

  • The Burrowes property off South Sequim Avenue near U.S. Highway 101, where the Burrowes family is asking $1,250,000 for an 8.6-acre parcel.

  • The former Booth farm on North Sequim Avenue, where the 220-home Sorrento subdivision will be built, and where the seller has yet to put a price on a 5-acre site.

  • The Stewart property, a 3.7-acre lot northeast of the Hendrickson Road-Fifth Avenue intersection, priced at $1,447,000.

  • An unidentified property that the City Council discussed in closed session, since City Attorney Craig Ritchie said a public discussion could affect the seller’s asking price.
  • More in News

    Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his 1968 Cessna Aerobat, named Scarlett, at the Jefferson County International Airport in Port Townsend. Lundahl was picking up his plane Wednesday from Tailspin Tommy’s Aircraft Repair facility located at the airport. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
    Fueling up

    Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his… Continue reading

    After hours pet clinic set for Peninsula

    Opening June 6 at Sequim location

    Five to be honored with community service awards

    Ceremony set Thursday at Port Angeles Senior Community Center

    PASD planning for expanding needs

    Special education, homelessness, new facilities under discussion

    Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Animal Control Deputy Ed Bauck
    Clallam Sheriff appoints animal control deputy

    Position was vacant since end of 2024

    Highway 104 road work to start week

    Maintenance crews will repair road surfaces on state Highway… Continue reading

    Supreme Court says no to recall reconsider

    Sequim man found liable for legal fees

    Chimacum Ridge seeks board members

    Members to write policy, balance values, chair says

    Fire destroys shop east of Port Angeles

    A fire on Hickory Street east of Port Angeles… Continue reading

    Jefferson Transit Authority to expand Kingston Express route

    Jefferson Transit Authority has announced expanded service on its… Continue reading

    From left to right, Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding students Krystol Pasecznyk and Scott McNair sand a Prothero Sloop with Sean Koomen, the school’s boat building program director. Koomen said the sanding would take one person a few days. He said the plan is to have 12 people sand it together, which will take a few hours. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
    Wooden boatbuilding school building ‘Twin Boats’

    Students using traditional and cold-moulding construction techniques