Showing posts sorted by relevance for query redmond town center. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query redmond town center. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, July 7, 2022

11th Annual Redmond Arts Festival

 

Redmond Town Center, 2022

VALA Eastside and Redmond Town Center are excited to gather artists, craftspeople, and designers for the 11th Annual Redmond Arts Festival at Redmond Town Center. This two-day outdoor festival takes place July 8th-9th, 2022, and features approximately 60 artist booths, a community art project, and live entertainment. The festival is produced in conjunction with Redmond’s annual Derby Days celebration at Redmond City Hall which features a parade, music, food, and kids' activities, and has an expected combined attendance of over 15,000 people. The entire City of Redmond is activated with art and festivities on these days. 


ARTS FESTIVAL DATES/TIMES

Friday, July 8th            12pm-8pm
Saturday, July 9th        12pm-8pm

Friday, May 6, 2011

Rotary Club of Redmond organizing 24th Annual Redspoke Bike Tour

Rotary Club of Redmond Changes Lives in Our Community One Mile at a Time with the 24th Annual Redspoke (Redmond to Spokane) bike tour.

(Redmond, WA) - Every summer since 1988 bicyclists from as far away as New York and Alaska have been participating in RedSpoke, the Rotary Club of Redmond’s five day, 300-mile bicycle tour from Redmond to Spokane. The 2011 ride will be July 13th through July 17th & Redmond Rotary hopes to raise more money than ever for local life changing programs.

Redspoke is the Rotary Club of Redmond’s major fundraising event, with proceeds making a difference in the lives of underprivileged youth in our community. Last year, impact donations to Hopelink and Eastside Baby Corner were made possible by Redspoke. The 2011 Redspoke proceeds will assist homeless families with transitional housing through Hopelink and provide therapy for disabled children and adults through Little Bit Therapeutic Riding Center. These programs, in addition to the club's other charitable activities, are funded by this event and the club welcomes the community to participate.

“You’re invited to come ride with the sun on your face and the wind at your back while experiencing fun, excitement, fellowship and adventure on this 300-mile bicycle tour across beautiful Washington State – while raising money for a great cause.” according to RedSpoke Committee Chair, Will Miller.

If riding is not quite the level of involvement you see for yourself, Redmond Rotary hopes you will consider making a tax deductible donation. Visit http://www.redspoke.org/  to learn more. You can find information about this year’s beneficiaries at http://www.hope-link.org/  and http://www.littlebit.org/   To "Read More" click on blue link.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

City to hold three public meetings to get feedback on Parks & Rec plan update

Redmond, WAThe City of Redmond invites everyone who uses Redmond’s parks, arts, and recreation facilities and programs to participate in the Future of Fun initiative, which will result in the update of the Parks and Recreation Department’s long range plan for capital projects. The Parks, Arts, Recreation, Culture and Conservation Plan is updated every six years. Now is the time to get involved and help create a renewed vision. You can participate by attending a meeting, engaging in our online platform, and participating in a survey.
Three public meetings will be held in May throughout the City. The meetings will take place from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm, with a short presentation at 6:30 followed by small group discussions about arts and culture, parks and recreation, trails, and conservation. The meetings will be held on the following dates:  Read More >>

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

The City of Redmond's History

Redmond sits in a fertile basin created by ancient glaciers that once covered much of King County. Thousands of years before the first fur trappers entered the area's dense forests, the rich bottomland of the Sammamish Valley provided shelter and food for Native Americans. Salmon were so abundant in the Sammamish River when the first pioneers arrived in 1871, they called their settlement Salmonberg. 

A primary activity for early homesteaders was clearing the vast tracts of towering trees. During the 1880's, loggers who poured into the area built lumber and shingle mills. Their substantial payrolls created a demand for products and services. In 1888, the Seattle Lake Shore and Eastern Railway reached the town, and with it, the marketability of the area's timber was insured. 

In its logging heydays, Redmond was a rollicking town with a stagecoach office, saloons and hotels, blacksmiths and eateries. In 1912, the community of 300 needed a modern waterworks system and, in order to tax its thriving saloons, Redmond incorporated. Soon, many new buildings rose in the downtown area, automobiles became a frequent sight on Main Street, the first doctor took up residence in town, and a two-story brick schoolhouse was built. 

As virgin forests were exhausted in the 1920's, local logging faded. In the following decades, agriculture became the mainstay of Redmond's economy. Dairy and chicken farms abounded, and farmers plowed fertile bottomland for profitable truck farms. The town's population grew very little during this period, with many young adults seeking jobs elsewhere during the Depression. 

Friday, October 16, 2009

Artist Christopher Janney's "Sonic Forest" will connect and inspire the public at Redmond Town Center


"The Sonic Forest" is coming to Redmond Town Center

Recently, an arts enthusiast and neighbor told me Christopher Janney’s exciting light and sound “Sonic Forest” art will be installed at Redmond Town Center Dec. 4-12. Perfect timing for Redmond's “Winter Festival of Lights!

Mr. Janey is an architect and jazz musician, world renowned for his "sound and light" art installations found in public spaces throughout the nation. Read my report and opinion  on Janey's May 15 interview with the Redmond Arts Commission and learn more about his installation art!

Paraphrasing Arts Commission Chair John Stilin: 'Art connects people. The purpose of Art in Redmond is to build community. Art brings people together. It's what gets people talking together.'

Last week the Arts Commission pounded out their new Vision Statement: "The community is connected and inspired by arts and culture". Will you connect and be inspired in the Sonic Forest December 4 -12?

Monday, August 29, 2022

EvergreenHealth Opens Redmond Town Center Primary Care

Yeah! KUDOS EveregreenHealth! Now let's get "Behavioral Health Urgent Care" in our community to keep patients out of the emergency room and in safe hands.

EvergreenHealth Primary Care, Redmond Town Center opened its doors on Monday, but today we made it official with a ribbon-cutting featuring Dr. Jeremiah Pamer, Dr. Jordan Collier, and Dr. Eliana Vasquez.

Many thanks to Redmond mayor Angela Birney, EvergreenHealth Commissioners Virgil Snyder and Dr. Chuck Pilcher, CEO Dr. Jeff Tomlin, COO Chris Bredeson and more for joining the celebration! (EvergreenHealth Facebook page.)

EvergreenHealth Primary Care - RTC
7345 164th Ave NE, Suite 1-105
Redmond, WA.  98052
425-522-8312

How to find us:  Our entrance is on the ground level right off of NE 74th Street between 163rd Place NE and 164th Avenue NE. 

Get care from the experts at our clinic in the comfort of your home when you select a virtual visit when scheduling your appointment. Hours 8-5 Monday through Friday.  Closed Saturday and Sunday. If you need a same-day appointment, we ask that you call the office. 

We're located in the southwest corner of the Redmond Town Center directly across NE 74th Street from the Seattle Marriott Redmond.Free parking is available behind the building off of 163rd Place NE.

 Website, 8/29/2022, excerpted

Posted by Bob Yoder, 8/29/2022

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Council and "Lodging Tax Advisory Committee" plan for more visitors to "Experience Redmond", 6/2011

 
Since this opinion was published on 6/30/2011 Realize Redmond, and Redmond Economic Development Assoc have been disolved and consolidated into "ONE REDMOND."   The Chamber has "tentatively consolidated" into ONE REDMOND.  ONE REDMOND is barely in the radar, led by Group Health, Microsoft and other stakeholders.  Please read the comments below this post for "the rest of the story."  And please, post your own..  BY

REPUBLISHED OPINION (6/30/2011):  History was made in three different ways (1) in this week's Council meeting. The Lodging Tax Advisory Committee (LTAC) met with city council members and the mayor for the first time in their 13 years of operation.  If  Dan Angellar, General Manager of the Redmond Marriott of Redmond Town Center has his way LTAC will be meeting and partnering with Council every year.

A community role for LTAC might be described as a "tourism alliance". Agnellar said they try to bring Redmond's three economic groups together to stimulate tourism and increase "heads and beds".  Over $337,300 was raised last year from from the 1% lodge tax. So far 50% of LTAC tax revenues go to "Bullseye Creative" - a website branding organization.  (A Blog was created and tags with RNB on search engines.)  $31,365 goes to promoting private and city sponsored events. Councilmember John Stilin suggested allocating more funds towards the events to attract more people and perhaps less emphasis on the website.  Read More >>

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Derby Days 2010

Redmond Derby Days Summer Festival July 9 and 10

Redmond, WA— This summer, Redmond will celebrate the 70th Annual Redmond Derby Days Summer Festival. The festival begins on Friday, July 9 from 6 to 10pm and continues on Saturday, July 10 from 10am to 10pm at Redmond City Hall Campus, 15670 NE 85th Street.
Back by popular demand is the free multi-band concert, Friday Night Live. The first group on the Nintendo sponsored stage is Gentleman GaGa, an Old Firehouse Classic Rockathon finalist, followed by The Daily Flash, playing classic 60’s rock. The headliner is the area’s premier Beatles tribute band, The Nowhere Men. They play all the Beatles classics, sounding just like the original Fab Four. Food vendors are on hand for dinner or a snack and the beer and wine garden, sponsored by Black Raven Brewery, provides a great spot for both people and band watching.
New this year is the REI Friday Night Poker Ride, benefitting Little Bit Therapeutic Riding Center. The 22.5 mile ride through Redmond and Issaquah begins at the Redmond REI store from 5 to 7pm and ends at City Hall Campus, where riders will pick up prizes and enjoy the entertainment, food and drinks. Participants can register at REI.com.
Saturday begins at 10am with the Derby Days Kids Parade, the longest running kid’s parade in the nation. Children and families decorate their “wheels” and themselves in one of the many parade categories. Parade sign-in begins at 9:15am in the Redmond Medical Center parking lot, with the parade beginning at 10am. Arriving early is strongly recommended in order to sign-in before the parade starts.

The Grand Parade immediately follows the Kids Parade. Best viewing of the bands, drill teams and floats is at the corner of NE 85th Street and 161st Avenue NE and along 85th to City Hall.

The Criterium, the nation’s longest running bicycle race, starts at 1:15pm with the last race at 7:15pm. Race spectators can enjoy the fast paced race from the Black Raven Brewery Beer and Wine Garden, located just off the first corner. The beer and wine garden opens at 1pm and offers a prime view seat.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Sonic Forest at Redmond Town Center - Last Night is December 15!



Play and dance in the Sonic Forest until December 12, at Redmond Town Center!

This is an innovative and exciting interactive sound and light sculpture.  Children love it, too! It was created by internationally known artist/architect, Christopher Janney. This is one of Janneys urban instruments played by people waving their hands over different parts of the sculpture. Brought to Redmond Town Center, December 2009 by the City of Redmond and the Redmond Arts Commission.

Video by Eva Moon
Facebook

Saturday, June 30, 2012

City Honors 2012 Redmond Arts Awards Recipients


City Honors 2012 Redmond Arts Awards Recipients

Redmond, WA  The "2012 Redmond Arts Awards" event celebrated the 25th anniversary of the Redmond Arts Commission by honoring pioneering volunteers and city employees who established Redmond’s first arts program.  During an event held Friday, June 22, at Redmond Town Center. City Council President Pat Vache' paid tribute to the following individuals:

The First Arts Commissioners: Ceil Church, Gordon Gray, Rick Heier, Dr. Evelyn Kest (posthumous honor), Cheryll Leo-Gwin, Jacqueline Sorensen Pinch and Sam Weirbach.

Melna Skillingstead, Redmond’s first Arts Program Manager

The Honorable Doreen Marchione, former Mayor of Redmond

The Redmond Arts Commission was established in 1987 to champion arts and culture in Redmond. For a quarter century, the commission has been building community through the support of audiences, artists and arts organizations in Redmond.

“Art enhances all our lives by giving a powerful voice and reflection to our humanity. Art inspires innovation and economic vitality, fosters tourism, and gives our children the critical thinking and creative skills they need to lead in a 21st Century workplace.” Said Mayor John Marchione. “This year’s recipients reflect a legacy of creativity in Redmond and our commitment to helping all enjoy and participate in the arts."  Read More >>

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Redmond Town Center Police and Fire Substation

Redmond Town Center Police Fire Auxiliary
The Redmond Police and Fire Departments have a substation located at the Redmond Town Center.
16321 NE 74th Street, just down from Tully's and across the street from Marriott.  425-556-2692
Monday - Thursday 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Friday 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

**PLUS** Special appearances from McGruff the Crime Dog every final Thursday of the month!!

CURRENT FREE RESOURCES:  

1. Child ID Kits -- are you prepared should your child go missing? Receive fingerprints, DNA sample, and picture to help identify them.
2. Engravers -- check out an engraver to engrave valuable items/electronics with your drivers license number--this helps to return found property when recovered if lost or stolen
3. Gun Locks -- While we neither encourage or discourage gun ownership, we do ask that if you choose to own one to please lock them. FREE locks are available at the substation. 
4. Crime, Fire, and Disaster Preparedness Material --  about prevention of crime and fire, disaster preparedness, Neighborhood Watch Program, and Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Neighborhood Program.  N1H1 "Swine" Flu prevention and emergency phone to Evergreen Hosp.
5. Smoke Detectors -- we have limited supplies remaining, but they are available while they last.

-- this city website information can be found on the city search engine.

posted by Bob Yoder

Monday, August 22, 2016

Labor Day 4 Mile Run/Walk and Half Marathon at Redmond Town Center

Walk Run Clip ArtOffering one of the FLATTEST half marathon courses in Western Washington with less than 130 feet of cumulative elevation gain/loss over the 13.1 mile course, runners come from all over to gain their personal best! Participants will enjoy the colorful fall leaves and scenery at the start/finish area within the city of Redmond, Washington and along the courses that wind along the Sammamish River Trail.
6:30am – Day-of-Race Registration and Packet-Pick-up Opens
8:00am – Half Marathon Run/Walk & Redmond Town Center Family 4-Mile
10:00am – Awards Ceremony
11:15am – Kids’ Run Start
Event participants and supporters alike can then celebrate in the BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse Beer Garden and Redmond Town Center Family Zone while enjoying delicious BBQ, live music, awards and other finish line fun!
$10 - $80 (price varies by race and date of registration)

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Reducing stress for shoppers, raising funds for birds

REDUCING STRESS FOR SHOPPERS, RAISING FUNDS FOR BIRDS
Conservation Group Brings Holiday Gift Wrapping to REI in Redmond Town Center
 
KIRKLAND — Busy shoppers can give a gift to conservation and conserve some time for themselves this season, when Eastside Audubon brings its Holiday Gift Wrap service to REI at Redmond Town Center.

Volunteers from Eastside Audubon will be on hand during the busiest days before Christmas to turn items purchased at REI into cheerily wrapped presents ready to take home and put under the tree.

Donations raised by the gift wrapping service will help support Eastside Audubon’s programs in wildlife conservation and youth education. Those programs include habitat restoration on the Audubon BirdLoop at Marymoor Park and classroom presentations about birds and bird behavior for school age children, two examples of year-round Eastside Audubon activities that REI helps make possible through its community outreach efforts.

The Holiday Gift Wrap desk at REI in Redmond Town Center will be open on December 15 and 16 and from December 19 through 24, from noon to 8 p.m. (Ending times may vary on some days to fit store closing times.) Suggested donations will range from $3 to $9 depending on package size.

About Eastside Audubon

Eastside Audubon is the National Audubon Society chapter active in Bellevue, Bothell, Carnation, Duvall, Issaquah, Kirkland, North Bend, Redmond, Sammamish, Snoqualmie, Woodinville, and unincorporated East King County.
Eastside Audubon works to protect, preserve, and enhance natural ecosystems and our communities for the benefit of birds, other wildlife, and people. We welcome new and experienced birders on our birding walks and field trips and in our birding classes. Visit www.eastsideaudubon.org.



Friday, August 26, 2016

Redmond Town Center's Block Party

Attend Redmond Town Center's Block Party, Saturday, September 10, Noon - 5PM 

This year, Redmond Town Center and Spirit 105.3 explore the wild west with country fair fun.
Activities are FREE, except where pricing is noted below.
  • Arrive in your country western duds!
  • Look all pretty with professionally face painting, western style by Merry Makers
  • Watch balloon artists recreate the wild west by Merry Makers
  • Nosh on the most finger lickin' county fair food while you relax on bales of hay from Raven Rock Ranch
  • Meander in The Root Beer Store Saloon
  • Boot scootin' to country music on the main stage
  • Climb over hills and valleys on a bouncy obstacle course and Western bounce house by Merry Makers
  • Care for the farm animals in the country petting zoo by Josie Rooz
  • Pose in the haystack photo booth by A A'more Events
  • Decorate mini bandanas, sheriff badges, cowboy boots, and make your own mini-lasso
  • Take part in county fair games with ring and horseshoe toss, and a country selfie board
  • Mine for gold with geode cracking at Utopia's booth ($8, $10, $15 - depends on geode chosen)
  • Paint Away! ($4 handprint or $5 tote) more information
  • Meet everyday sheriffs, cowboys and cowgirls from Redmond Police and Fire Departments
  • Reach for the stars with Springfree Trampoline
  • Sample the finest milk from Smith Brothers Farms
  • Leave the event line dancing with Recess Monkey, performing at 4 p.m.
  • And more...

Popular with the younger set, Recess Monkey performs on the main stage at 4 p.m.!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Overlake to open primary care and urgent care clinics in Redmond

Rendering of Overlake Urgent Care Clinic/Redmond
10-exam rooms with full-service imaging
Overlake Expands its Physician and Clinic Network in Redmond and Kirkland
Bellevue, Wash. – Overlake Hospital Medical Center continues to grow its network of primary care medical clinics on the Eastside with three new clinics in Kirkland and Redmond opening in the next six months.
Overlake will open a primary care clinic in Redmond Town Center, at 7525 166th Ave NE, and an urgent care clinic in Redmond’s Creekside Crossing development near SR 520, at 17209 Redmond Way. The Redmond primary care clinic is scheduled to open in January 2012 and the urgent care clinic is scheduled to open December 2011.
Patient care services at the two primary care clinics will include same-day and walk-in appointments, comprehensive care for adults, immunizations, physical exams, acute care and chronic disease management. In addition, both primary care clinics will offer digital X-ray and an electronic medical record. The Redmond urgent care clinic will include 10 exam rooms and a full-service imaging center with digital X-ray, CT and ultrasound. 
"At Overlake, we're looking for ways to provide Eastside residents with better access to convenient cost-effective medical care,"  Read More >>

Saturday, April 8, 2017

About Redmond

RedmondRedmond is the seventh most populous city in King County and the sixteenth most populous city in the State of Washington, with a residential population of approximately 59,180 in 2015. It encompasses an area of over 17.14 square miles and is located less than 20 miles east of downtown Seattle at the north end of Lake Sammamish. The city prides itself for its high quality of life with good schools, a healthy economic base, a parks system that provides a variety of active and passive recreational opportunities, diverse offerings for shopping and dining, safe neighborhoods, and an emphasis on quality development and protection of the natural environment. 

Redmond's park system consists of 31 developed and 14 undeveloped parks on over 1,345 acres and 29 miles of developed trails. Facilities range from community, neighborhood, and resource parks to undeveloped open space, beautification areas, and gathering places. They include a waterfront park on Lake Sammamish (Idylwood), a wildlife preserve known as the Redmond Watershed, and a farm with equestrian facilities at Farrel-McWhirter Park. Recreation programs provide learning, socializing, and entertainment opportunities for preschoolers through senior adults and an active cultural arts scene. Facilities include a senior center, a teen center, a community center, and two log cabins at Anderson Park. In addition, King County operates numerous trail connections with Redmond's system and points beyond. 

The city is well known as a center of technology and the location for a number of nationally known high-tech and biomedical companies. Among these are Microsoft, Nintendo, AT&T and Physio-Control. Redmond Town Center, a large downtown retail center, offers numerous shops, restaurants, three movie theaters, special events, and live performances by a repertory theater company and other arts-related groups.

As Redmond continues to evolve into a thriving city of increasing diversity, it seeks to promote its sense of community through programs designed to celebrate its heritage, enhance its neighborhoods, and preserve its historical and natural treasures.

With 53 schools and more than 24,000 students, the Lake Washington School District, the school district for the cities of Redmond, Sammamish and Kirkland combined, is one of the largest in the state. It is also a reflection of the community it serves, generally upper middle class and technology-comfortable. Scores on standardized tests place the district in the state's top 10 percent. The curriculum has been praised in several national education publications for its comprehensive approach to student-centered learning, and over 100 districts around the country are adapting it for their own use.

-- redmond.gov, 2016 -- two log cabins? fuuuunty!  Who wrote this?   by

Monday, October 23, 2023

UPDATED OPINON 10/26: Seattle Times Spotlights City Of Redmond Planners

 Post and photo by Bob Yoder, 10/22/2023

Under construction, Redmond Square Apartments (aka The Grand) located in the heart of Redmond (Redmond Way and 166th Avenue NE); narrow sidewalks, limited bicycle infrastructure, pedestrian and street shadowing, flat facade. Legacy Partners ($3 billion) partnered with a Bejing-based company to build this monolith. They didn't partner with the community as are the Redmond Town Center owners. 

Below are excerpts and highlights from Gregory Scrugg's Seattle Times October 10, 2023 opinion: 
"Redmond Could be a Model for Re-inventing Suburban Downtowns."  Mr. Scruggs is their outdoors reporter. The story primarily focuses on multimodal transportation in Downtown Redmond, not building design or character.  

"As Redmond has grown to 76,000 residents, a proper downtown has sprouted up around the city center’s handful of pre-World War II buildings. This kind of reinvention is happening around Puget Sound and across the country, a phenomenon called “retrofitting suburbia” in a 2008 book of the same name. Some argue multimodal Redmond is a national model for the trend.

Planners like the city of Redmond’s Jeff Churchill are tasked with a tricky job: figuring out how to revamp an outdated, car-dependent suburban template into a place that’s easier to get around on foot, bike or transit.

“The vision for this area becoming what it’s becoming has transcended multiple mayors and city council members,” Churchill said. “It’s been a very durable vision with a fair amount of buy-in.”

** “We’re going to put all our growth into downtown,” Churchill said. “That’s been the plan since the 1990s.” 

Civic interest in Redmond’s future remains high. On a September weeknight, several dozen people — local residents, civil servants and elected officials — joined advocacy group Move Redmond to see highlights and lowlights of navigating downtown Redmond on foot. 

The existing transit center, where express buses whisk residents to Microsoft’s Overlake campus or further along Highway 520 to Bellevue or Seattle, generally won praise. A curbless shared street between two apartment buildings, also known as a woonerf, elicited interest. A block lacking sidewalks near the new light-rail earned a “thumbs down.”

“Redmond is a suburb but downtown is trying to be a city,” Stevens said. “But it could be so much more.”

For example, Redmond touts itself as the bicycle capital of the Northwest, with its annual Derby Days races and its cycling velodrome at Marymoor Park, but on-street bike infrastructure is lacking. 

“I’m comfortable riding in the street, but I want the kids I see riding on the sidewalk to feel comfortable being out on the street, especially because that’s something cool about Redmond: families are living downtown,” Stevens said.

These were the kinds of insights that Move Redmond Executive Director Kelli Refer hoped to hear. Folks are eager to see what’s next, provided downtown Redmond keeps sticking with the plan.

That kind of steady hand offers lessons for retrofitting suburbs everywhere.

“Redmond is setting itself up to be a national model,” Refer said."

Gregory Scruggs: gscruggs@seattletimes.com; Gregory Scruggs is the outdoors reporter at The Seattle Times.

###

** What's coming next... (City of Redmond)

** Redmond 2050 is evaluating higher densities by allowing taller buildings (generally between 10 and 19 stories depending on the Overlake station area). This would accommodate 19,000 to 23,000 new housing based on the development alternative options selected.  (Draft: Future Vision for Redmond:  Urban Centers.)

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Redmond's "Winter Lights Festival 2011" - a glowing success, Eastside festival destination

SUZANNE QUERRY/ City Hall Light
Redmond's  "Winter Lights Festival 2011" a glowing success.

OPINION:  The thousands of citizens, families and tourists lucky enough to discover Redmond's "Winter Lights Festival" last Saturday are probably still glowing from their holiday experience in Redmond.  

It was the two magnificent, lit-up trees - one evergreen and the other deciduous - that drew my wife and I to the event.  We drove closer towards the downtown streets and then City Hall to see the trees and get a pulse on the event.  OMG.  The numbers of people moving around  the festival was absolutely astounding.  Never, in my wildest dreams did I expect thousands of residents and visitors would show up!  One of the mayor's favorite words and goals for the city is "vibrancy" and seeing people walking on our sidewalks.  The energy and movement around the various entertainment events and displays was almost frenetic.  The luminary trail lined with families and community from City Hall to Redmond Town Center was absolutely beautiful!... with entertaining "discoveries" at every turn.  Visit the website to see them!

My wife and I fully embraced this grand celebration when we saw the entire community was behind Winter Lights, including the Redmond business community.   Prior to the Marchione Administration, these festivals were funded almost exclusively by citizen taxpayers.  Expansive, city run entertainment is "nice to have" and significant to our culture and heritage, but not required of the city with the same emphasis as  community safety. Read More >>

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Special Olympics Law Enforcement Torch Run

REDMOND, WA – Law enforcement personnel from the Redmond Police Department will be joining officers from across the nation to escort the “Flame of Hope” torch to the 2018 Special Olympics USA Games as part of the Law Enforcement Torch Run Final Leg® 

Before competition begins on July 2, an elite group of law enforcement officers and Special Olympics athletes will escort the Special Olympics “Flame of Hope” on a journey across Washington State. From June 27 through July 1, 47 law enforcement officers representing 47 states, along with six Special Olympics athletes, will make up the prestigious “Final Leg” team for the 2018 Special Olympics USA Games Law Enforcement Torch Run®.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

And then there were three...'Old Redmond Historic Guided Tours'

Historic Guided Tours usually begin at the "Justice White House" - once a hotel and later
the Club House for Redmond's nine-hole golf course (now Redmond Town Center)   
Three 'Old Redmond Historic Guided Walking Tours' remain:
The Old Redmond Cementary, 7/15
Olde Towne, 9/10
A Haunted History Tour, 9/30
Have you ever taken one of  the guided walking tours of Redmond's historic downtown core?   It is guaranteed to provide facts, figures, and fun, with local historian Tom Hitzroth emcee'ing the stories, gossip, and names.  Did you know in whose building an alleged bordello operated?  Hint:  He would later become Redmond’s longest serving mayor!  Three tours remain.

Walking Tours run from 1:00 to 2:30 p.m., usually beginning on the front steps of the Justice White House, 7730 Leary Way NE.,  at the west end of Redmond Town Center where the Saturday Market is held.

Don't miss Tom's tour of the Old Redmond Cemetery on July 15, from 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., which will begin at the flag pole located inside the Cemetery at 7000 180 Avenue NE. The tour begins at the flag pole, located inside the Cemetery at 7000 180th Ave NE.   Parking is available in the Home Depot parking lot immediately north of the Cemetery.  Details here.  Tours are cancelled with rain.

Tom is conducting his last Olde Towne tour on September 9 and a haunted history tour on September 30.  Registration is required by the Thursday before the tour.  A fee of $8 per person will help fund Society research.   Contact the Redmond Historical Society (RHS) office  at 425-885-2919,  or  email  at info@redmondhistoricalsociety.org, or go online  at www.redmondhistoricalsociety.org.

Released By Doris A. Schaible, a past Redmond City Clerk of 30 years
Community Relations, RHS
Photo By RHS
Android Walking Tour Ap for $2.75
City Walking maps of Olde Towne Loop, Rookery Loop, and Bridle Trails Loop