Sequim senior center scores prime property

SEQUIM — Seniors in this community are taking a step closer to a new, larger activity center with the purchase ­– at an enviable price — of some prime Sequim real estate.

“We won the bid for the land that was going to be the Sequim rest area,” Michael Smith, executive director of the Sequim Senior Activity Center, said Friday.

Only bidder

At a public auction Wednesday in Tumwater, he was the only bidder on the parcel, which the state of Washington once planned to turn into a place where truckers and other travelers could pull in.

The price for the nearly 4.5 acres is $218,542.81, or $1.12 per square foot, Smith said.

The land, which lies just north of U.S. Highway 101 between Simdars and Lofgrin roads near Sequim’s eastern edge, is to be the site of a 20,000-square-foot senior center with a 140-space parking lot, Smith added.

He estimates the construction costs to top $5 million, so fundraising is well under way.

Already, 140 Sequim senior center members have donated $52,005 toward the land purchase and now, Smith noted, “We need to pay the $166,538 balance by June 21” to avoid having to borrow.

He’s feeling confident about Sequim’s generosity, in light of the gifts so far. And on Friday, a couple who are members of the senior center brought in a $4,500 check.

Bus tours

Smith is also inviting all community members — senior or not yet — to take one of many planned bus tours of the center’s new property.

The next one will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday, May 11, and participants should phone the senior center at 360-683-6806 or e-mail sequimsr@olypen.com to reserve seats.

Smith and the center’s board of directors, meantime, have been studying what other senior centers are doing to serve their growing constituencies.

They envision an ultramodern center for Sequim –possibly, Smith added, a multistory building to take advantage of the land’s position overlooking the city and the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

A covered portico for loading, solar panels and a rooftop garden are other features he hopes for.

Move in by 2018

The goal is to raise enough money to start construction within five or six years and move into the new center by 2018, Smith said.

He and the board will seek grants and gifts from foundations, government entities and individuals, and are exploring the possibility of naming the center for a major donor.

The existing senior center, at about 10,000 square feet, is a low-profile building at 921 E. Hammond St.

Smith, the board and the members fill it with activities, however, and membership has risen to 1,495.

For a newsletter listing classes, trips and social events, phone or visit the center or see www.SequimSeniorCenter.org.

When announcing the land purchase, Smith didn’t rein in his delight. A couple of months ago, he and several board members saw an ad in the Peninsula Daily News for the auction.

“We drove to Tumwater [on Wednesday] to turn in the bid in person,” and that afternoon, a state official announced that the Sequim Senior Activity Center was the winner.

“We let out a little ‘whoo-hoo'” and drove back home, Smith said.

Rest stop

The transaction also follows a change in direction for the Washington Department of Transportation, which had planned for years to build the Northeast Peninsula Safety Rest Area on the Sequim parcel.

The state bought the land in 2000 for $151,500, said Don Plotfelter, Transportation’s maintenance operations manager for the Olympic region.

But “there was a lot of opposition,” he added. “The neighborhood had grown up around it,” and some residents didn’t want trucks rumbling in throughout the night and day.

The Sequim City Council agonized over the rest stop too, with some members fiercely opposed.

Then “Clallam County stepped up,” Plotfelter said, and expressed interest in building a rest area near the Morse Creek viewpoint off Highway 101 just west of Port Angeles.

And so the Deer Park Safety Rest Area will be built within the next two years, Plotfelter said.

“It makes good sense,” he said.

________

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Reporter Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-681-2391 or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Impacts go beyond owners of short-term rentals

House cleaners, yard care workers expect to lose income

Seth Stewart of Silverdale-based Hanson Signs inspects the side panels on a new business sign at Swain’s General Store in Port Angeles on Thursday. Swain’s general manager Don Droz said the original iconic sign dated back to the 1960s and was in need being replaced. Droz said the neon-lit lettering from the old sign was preserved and incorporated into the new marquee. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
New marquee

Seth Stewart of Silverdale-based Hanson Signs inspects the side panels on a… Continue reading

Olympic Medical Center to hire two urologists

Doctors recently completed residencies in Connecticut, Utah, respectively

Law books available at no cost

The Clallam County Law Library is disposing of surplus… Continue reading

Port Angeles to host storefront studio sessions next week

The city of Port Angeles will conduct a series… Continue reading

David Fletcher, left, and Sean Hoban.
Clallam County sheriff promotes two deputies

Clallam County Sheriff Brian King has promoted Deputy David… Continue reading

The Whiskey Creek bridge, located near milepost 18 on the 25-mile Olympic Adventure Trail route, is 60 feet long, 6 feet wide and cost about $83,106. (Clallam County)
Whiskey Creek bridge replacement complete

$83,000 project funded by Clallam County lodging tax

Clallam County to take lead in applying for septic replacement grants

Agency aims to replace Flaura’s Acres failing septic system

Wildcat Cafe at Lincoln School reopening Tuesday

The double-cross club and the Cobb conspiracy might sound… Continue reading

EYE ON BUSINESS: This week’s meetings

Breakfast meetings with networking and educational… Continue reading

Port Angeles Parks Department workers walk along the Port Angeles City Pier moorage floats after they were removed for seasonal storage on Tuesday. The floats will be towed to a storage area near the McKinley Paper mill to protect them from winter winds and waves. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Seasonal storage

Port Angeles Parks Department workers walk along the Port Angeles City Pier… Continue reading