Below are two pictures of Redmond's Centennial "ERRATIC" art installation. It was constructed with railroad plates to recognize Redmond's status as a railroad town. It's called ERRATIC to recognize that glaciers shaped Redmond. Erratics are huge boulders left behind by glaciers.
At the January 8th Council meeting Staff announced owing to light rail impacts the ERRATIC wil be moved from it's present location on 166th near Redmond Town Center to "Gilman Landing" south of the Matador near Leary Way. Sound Transit will pay $576,000 towards its re-location. The City will move it....a laborious job. The original cost to the City for the art was $115,000.
A public record request in December, 2019 revealed the total estimated cost for relocation is $616,300 - though, the exact relocation cost won't be known until it's completion in June of 2020. The request also revealed part of the relocation $40,000 will be funded by Redmond Parks CIP. Rumors have it the total relocation cost to the city will be close to $1M.
Bob Yoder
2/24/2020


Christopher Carlson, Ph.D., was elected to the school board in November 2007. He is a faculty member in the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center's Division of Public Health Sciences. His lab focuses on identifying correlations between genetic variation and disease risk for cancer, diabetes, and other common diseases, then identifying the biological mechanism responsible. Carlson is also an affiliate assistant professor with the University of Washington School of Public Health in the Department of Epidemiology. He holds a B.A. in molecular biology from Pomona College. His Ph.D. is in genetics from Stanford University.
