Northshore School District’s plans for building two schools
on the Wellington Hills property is disturbing on many levels.
Primarily, the Wellington Hills site should remain a
community park. That’s plain and simple.
Of considerable importance is what Snohomish County has done
– and not done – concerning Wellington Hills Park … and that’s another story,
and one of lawsuits.
But the main point of this posting is this: I was surprised
by the archaic feel of Northshore's proposed plans for new schools, that is, the design+location of
their in-construction and proposed new schools.
Key points:
• The Wellington Hills area has a stable or slightly shrinking population.
• Millennials have already created new housing-living-employment trends.
• Northshore’s latest school, North Creek High School, in final construction, is, in my opinion, architecturally dated - especially when considering environmental issues, land and space value and modern living-employment trends.
• Limited taxpayer dollars
• Millennials have already created new housing-living-employment trends.
• Northshore’s latest school, North Creek High School, in final construction, is, in my opinion, architecturally dated - especially when considering environmental issues, land and space value and modern living-employment trends.
• Limited taxpayer dollars
Please read or listen to the following KUOW news story:
"Every day, 10,000 baby boomers reach the traditional
retirement age of 65. But many choose to stay in the workforce part time, or
opt to do contract or freelance work, something that's driven millennials into
leadership positions—the group is now the largest share of the American
workforce.
These shifting demographics are re-shaping suburbia. Office parks—sprawling corporate campuses—are now nearly obsolete: Nearly 1 billion square feet of inventory sitting idle, a figure that adds up to about 7.5 percent of the country's office inventory. Shopping malls are also being driven to extinction by changing consumer habits—about 15 percent will fail or be converted within the next 15 years, something that's telling a bigger story about where Americans like to work, live and shop.
And as malls and office parks shutter, communities are looking for ways to revitalize these spaces to fit modern work and retail habits. Ellen Dunham-Jones, co-author of "Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Solutions for Redesigning Suburbs" and a professor of architecture and urban design at the Georgia Institute of Technology, explains."
... take a look around ... this may, in part, explain why we see empty commercial-industrial buildings ... and suggest better alternatives to the old-fashion approach of ripping up acres of property and altering neighborhoods for new schools.
Perhaps some of those shuttered office parks are perfectly suited for new schools.
********
Here’s a current photo of a suburban high school built in 1960 ... 56 years ago!
Here's Northshore's proposal for Wellington Hills
Pics of the under-construction North Creek High School
No comments:
Post a Comment