According to the Project Viewer, this "LMC-Marymoor" master-plan project is still under review. It's 5-6 stories, with 433 residential units, 41,500 commercial space and 524 parking stalls, completion 2022. It sits in a 4.9 acre parcel with room for additional projects. LMC-Marymoor is master-planned and should integrate public art into this development. I certainly hope so. |
Councilmember Hank Myers was disturbed to find 29 pages of design regulations.
-- Source: 3/5/19 Parks Council Committee meeting & memo (edited)
The Design Review Board stated "As a primary goal for this Marymoor Village is that it become a cool/eclectic place, the architecture, and/or some of the primary elements of the development, should exude eclecticism. On the contrary, the goal of the neighborhood is that it be different from the Downtown neighborhood in that it should be funkier, cooler, eclectic, and different looking than Downtown. The Redmond Zoning Code is silent on how these goals/elements are to be achieved. Therefore, much of this will fall to the Design Review Board to establish. Thus, these ideas need a great deal of attention from the Design Review Board." (Yes, their recommendations appear quirky.)
-- Design Review Board, 9/20/18
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A great deal of attention is needed by more than just the Design Review Board! For a project of this magnitude, the City hasn't sufficiently engaged the community in art selection and other "cool and eclectic" elements for Marymoor Village. The Arts Commission and Park Planning & Cultural Arts Manager should hold 1-2 community meetings in City Hall to present their plan and ask residents for their ideas. Councilmember Hank Margeson agrees. We need splashes of art in the development not just buildings.
-- Bob Yoder
It's hard to think of a better way to ensure that Marymoor Village will not be "cool/eclectic" than for city government to decree that it be so. What is "cool/eclectic" now won't be in five years, and certainly won't be defined by officials of Redmond.
ReplyDeleteBy "cool and eclectic" I think the city officials want to make the roads, lighting and parks as such. They are also working on public-private partnerships for art. The developers only need to follow Design Review Board requirements.
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