Showing posts with label restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restaurant. Show all posts

Monday, October 19, 2015

Going…Going…Gone! The Olympia Brewery Sold to….

Above: The auction sign as seen at the “modern” brewery on Sunday.

Auction Time for “Modern” Tumwater Brewery

By Janine Gates

It’s a diamond in the rough and the outcome of Tumwater’s land use future is in someone’s hands.

The sprawling “modern” brewery is hard to miss from any direction and it’s now up for auction. Dull beige buildings with broken windows boarded up with plywood, the vacant eyesore is taking up vast acreage in the heart of the City of Tumwater.

Four separate parcels are for sale with three buildings on 7.2 acres with frontage on the Deschutes River, two industrial warehouses on 22.2 acres with rail service via Union Pacific and two vacant lots are zoned multi family. The buildings were built anywhere from 1930 – 1973.

Over 300 brewing tanks are located throughout the buildings. The main brew house contains the former brewing operation, fermenting vat storage and cellaring. In the six story “M” Cellar building, each floor is devoted to large stainless fermenting vessel storage with the majority of vats still in place.

Real estate agent Troy Dana has been marketing the location for years as a possible mixed-use combination of brew pub, contract brewery, winery, distillery, office, restaurant, and retail space.

The auction will be held Wednesday, October 28, 11:00 a.m., at the Red Lion Hotel, 2300 Evergreen Park Drive, Olympia.


Above: The back of the RST Cellars building on Custer Way as seen from Tumwater Falls Park last week. The fence delineates the park and the thin, one lane road down to the Old Brewhouse. The widening of this road, required to meet current standards for transportation and emergency vehicles, would result in the loss of trees along Tumwater Falls Park.

Public Comment for Draft Old Brewery Plans Due October 30

Meanwhile, the historic Old Brewhouse is not readily visible unless you’re on top of it. It too is old and vacant except for occasional trespassers and sits like a medieval castle, deteriorating on the shores of the ever changing Deschutes River. 

Visible from Tumwater Historical Park, peek-a-boo views of the six story tower can also be seen from Tumwater Falls Park. 

Owner George Heidgerken has made public his desire to fully develop this property to the maximum intensity possible. 

The Old Brewhouse would never be allowed to be built at its current location today, according to current shoreline management and environmental regulations, and yet two out of three draft planning options presented by the City of Tumwater are to explore significant mixed-use redevelopment of the area.  

A deadline for the public to comment on these scenarios is October 30.

The first scenario, a “do-nothing” approach, assumes the development would occur within the site consistent with existing zoning and development regulations. Any development that occurred would require the repair of existing structures.

The second scenario, one that the Old Brewhouse Foundation prefers, is still an impressively built out design, and includes a parking garage for 600 vehicles.

The third scenario, preferred by property owner George Heidgerken, and his development company, Falls Development LLC, is a full build out.

At an informational public meeting last week hosted by Tumwater city staff, former Olympia Mayor Bob Jacobs suggested a fourth scenario, which is not in the city’s plan: move the historic, six story Old Brewery tower, brick by brick, and rebuild it in a different location altogether.

“All three of the alternatives they're considering all seem impractical to me…Another possibility would be where the newer brewery stands now. That building could be torn down and replaced by new development with the old tower as a centerpiece and visibility from the freeway would be excellent…other possibilities exist too, of course.  A public process would produce lots of ideas for evaluation. Even the airport area or the city center area,” says Jacobs.

City of Tumwater's permit manager Chris Carlson said that in the 25 years he has been at the city, he has never heard that approach suggested. As for the end-of-the-year limitations for the state Department of Ecology grant that funded the city’s planning action, Carlson said he did not think there was time to assess such a possibility.


Above: Tumwater Falls Park, owned by the Olympia-Tumwater Foundation. This view could change dramatically if a planned action proposal by the City of Tumwater is approved.

At the time the Old Brewery was built in 1906, Model T cars were popular. Today, the creation of any access to a proposed parking garage by the Old Brewhouse would require that the narrow road, currently about 15 feet wide, be widened to 32 to 36 feet. 

In a conceptual cross-section of the proposed road leading down to the old brewhouse, a sidewalk is also shown as being a minimum of six foot wide, but the preferred width is eight feet wide, with four foot planters on the other side, said city staff.  This will require a lot of trees to be cut down.

Nancy Partlow, a Tumwater resident, also attended the city meeting, and sees problems with many aspects of the scenarios presented by the city.

“For years I've heard Tumwater city staff and elected officials say that the Old Brewhouse would never be allowed to be built at its current location today due to the environmentally sensitive nature of the site....

The combined footprints for a parking garage, residential units, and access roads to the Old Brewhouse site constitute an excessive amount of forest destruction in Tumwater's most environmentally and historically important area.
 
“The access road to the Old Brewhouse appears to be nearly a third of a mile long.  For about two thirds of that length, the road parallels the Deschutes River and the Tumwater Falls Park fence line. Some of the trees seen above the river from inside the park aren't actually in the park itself, but on the Falls Development LLC property next door.  A great number of those would have to be cut down to widen the road.

“An additional access road down to the proposed parking garage is being suggested from the north end of a parking lot owned by the Olympia-Tumwater Foundation. This road would also be built through a forested area, and next to the Union Pacific rail line, says Partlow.


Above: Another required access road for a proposed parking garage in the area of the Schmidt House would be located here, next to the Union Pacific railway. The parking lot drops off steeply to the railway and through the trees, the Old Brewery. 

The Olympia Tumwater Foundation has almost no comment on the Tumwater’s brewery planned action draft environmental impact statement or Heidgerken’s plans, says the Foundation’s executive director John Freedman.

The Foundation owns Tumwater Falls Park and the Schmidt House and related property. Heidgerken will need the Foundation’s cooperation to access a proposed residential area and parking garage through the Schmidt House’s back parking lot.

A heavily treed, steep ravine and the Union Pacific Railway is in that area of the property.  No conversations about access have taken place between the Foundation and Heidgerken’s company, said Freedman.

“We have not seen anything concrete that requires action on our part. We have no objections to any progress…we’d like to see it historically developed,” he said on Friday. 

As the Foundation expands its history program, Freedman has said that they would want to become involved in the proposed craft brewing and distilling center project in the area of the Old Brewhouse.

To comment on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Tumwater Brewery Planned Action, contact Chris Carlson, Permit Manager, City of Tumwater, 555 Israel Road SW, Tumwater, Washington 98501, ccarlson@ci.tumwater.wa.us, (360) 754-4180.

For more information about Tumwater, brewery district planning, the Old Brewery, George Heidgerken, go to www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com and type in key words into the search button.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Oyster House Restaurant Takes Shape


Above: Oyster House restaurant owners Leticia and Tom Barrett inspect the progress on the framing earlier this afternoon.
 
By Janine Unsoeld
Construction has begun on the rebuilding of the Oyster House restaurant in downtown Olympia. The framing for the walls was built in the back parking lot of the property on Sylvester Street near Percival Landing and put up yesterday morning with a crane in three hours. 
Today, Oyster House owners Tom and Leticia Barrett stopped by to check out the progress. They said they hope to open by mid July.
“It’s all still up in the air, and depends on the weather. God willing, everything will work out… there are a lot of people out of work,” said Leticia Barrett.
About 50 employees were put out of work when the restaurant burned down due to a suspected dryer fire in July 2013.
Leticia Barrett said they hope to rehire some of their previous employees, but many have moved on to other positions. Barrett said she is in conversation with the state Department of Labor, who will host a special hiring day for them about a month before opening.  
As the Barrett’s left the job site, Butch Livengood, a framer for Bailey Construction, who was busy doing his job, said, “We’ll get it done.”
Above: The Oyster House restaurant yesterday morning, shortly after the framing went up.
 
High Tides, Sea-Level Rise and Wiring Concerns
When asked about the electrical wiring along the Budd Inlet side of their property, which is often underwater depending on the tides, Leticia Barrett said they have all their permits and is confident everything is up to code with the city. 
Last September, Little Hollywood asked city staff about the integrity of the wiring around the Oyster House since the high tide of December 2012:
“….As you probably know, the New Jersey boardwalk businesses may have burned down a couple weeks ago because of waterlogged wiring after Sandy. This is being disputed, but Governor Christie is convinced. Is there a way to find out if electrical inspections were made of city/private property wiring after December's high tide?”
In a series of September to October 2013 emails from Little Hollywood to city staff, Paul Hanna, the city's fleet and facilities supervisor for the public works department, said that the city’s department does normal electrical preventative maintenance inspections on city buildings only. 
“We have not done any inspections specific to water intrusion, because our buildings were not affected by the high tide.  I’m not aware of any other inspection work that was done,” said Hanna.
David Hanna, associate director of the Olympia Parks, Arts and Recreation department, also said in an email that there was no inspection of the Percival Landing electrical system after the heavy rains.
In a conversation late this afternoon with Tom Hill, the city’s building official and code enforcement supervisor and permit and inspection manager, Hill said he'll have the city's electrical inspector take a look at the situation.
Above: As seen from Percival Landing looking toward the Oyster House and the state Capitol Building in the distance, this picture was taken February 28, 2014, at 4:40 p.m. when the high tide was about 14.4 feet near the Oyster House.
 
Above: A close up of the wiring. The wire is imprinted with “Above ground and Underground - Sunlight Resistant” Is the wiring sea water resistant? Picture taken February 28, 2014 at about a 14.4 foot tide.
 
Above: A lamp post and another electrical box up close. The paint on the lamp posts is in direct contact with Budd Inlet and looks corroded. Picture taken February 28, 2014 at a 14.4 foot tide.
 
Above: The Oyster House, seen here, with the wiring and its parking lot fully submerged by sea water on December 17, 2012 after the high tide.
 
Above: At another angle, the Oyster House's parking lot, lamp posts, and wiring to the restaurant is seen here fully submerged by sea water on December 17, 2012 after the high tide.
 
To read more about the Oyster House and see more December 2012 high tides pictures, go to www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com and type keywords into the search button.
 
Sample articles include, “Witnesses to High Tide in Olympia” posted December 17, 2012 and “Olympia's Shoreline Master Plan and the Oyster House Restaurant: A Missed Opportunity for Budd Inlet Restoration?” posted September 20, 2013.
 

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Doing Something About Homelessness

 
 
Above: The Smith Building, across from the former Olympia city hall, is served by Intercity Transit buses #60 and #64 on 8th Avenue.
 
by Janine Unsoeld
www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com

The Family Support Center of South Sound is rehabilitating the Smith Building located at 837 7th Avenue SE from a vacant office building to six emergency shelter and seven permanent affordable housing units for families with children.

The building was formerly owned and occupied by the City of Olympia. The improvements will include remodeling the interior of the building to include the units and onsite social supportive services.

Heavy equipment operators and construction workers were already well under way during today's groundbreaking and had to pause while dozens of local elected officials and supporters held a ceremony today that didn't actually involve the use of their ceremonial golden shovels.

The Family Support Center will be holding a local "Extreme Makeover" type contest for the design of the new rooms, said Schelli Slaughter, executive director of the Family Support Center, and residents are expected to be able to move in by April 1st.

The current family support shelter is located at First Christian Church. Currently, 26 individuals, including at least 13 babies, are staying at the temporary shelter offered by First Christian Church, said Slaughter,"...and because of First Christian Church, they have a place to stay tonight."

Glenn Wells, architect for the shelter, described his passion for the project after seeing the Will Smith movie, "In Pursuit of Happiness."

Olympia city councilmembers Mayor Stephen Buxbaum, Mayor Pro-Tem Nathaniel Jones, Julie Hankins, Jim Cooper, and councilmember elect Cheryl Selby, were present at the ceremony.

The shelter will serve homeless and low income families with children under age 18, and will not serve single men or women. The majority of children served by the Family Support Center are under five years of age. Management will be on-site to respond to any issues that may arise.

The cost of the project is $1.9 million dollars, funded through grants from local, state, and federal sources including the Washington State Housing Trust Fund, the City of Olympia, Thurston County, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The City of Olympia sold the property and building to the Family Support Center through a competitive grant process for $1 in 2011. If the building stops being used for the purpose of a shelter, ownership reverts back to the city.

Olympia Mayor Stephen Buxbaum gave a few remarks explaining how the community got to this point, saying that, "Today, we are both acknowledging homelessness and doing something about it. Two years ago, we could have simply ignored that we were sitting on a seriously deteriorating building, but we didn't. Instead, we are putting it to use....The Smith Building...in its new use, will provide significant public benefit by giving homeless children and their families a safe place to sleep and pull their lives back together...."

The Family Support Center is encouraging the community to help fund the project with an opportunity to buy a personalized brick for $100. Bricks will be used to pave the entrance to the new shelter.

Coffee for the morning's ceremony was provided by next door neighbor Casa Mia restaurant, and pastries were provided by the Bread Peddler.

For more information about the Family Support Center, the new Family Shelter and Affordable Housing Project, or buying a brick, contact the Center at www.fscss.org or (360) 754-9297.

Above: Celebrants paused for a photo at this morning's groundbreaking ceremony of the Family Support Center's new family shelter at 837 7th Avenue SE, Olympia.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Olympia’s Shoreline Master Plan and the Oyster House Restaurant: A Missed Opportunity for Budd Inlet Restoration?


Above: Rising like a Phoenix from the ashes, an Oyster House oyster creature, possibly named Oscar, appears to have been rescued during demolition of the restaurant on August 11. The downtown Olympia restaurant burned down July 19. No one was injured.
 
Olympia’s Shoreline Master Plan and the Oyster House Restaurant: A Missed Opportunity for Budd Inlet Restoration?

By Janine Unsoeld
www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com

After many years of work, the Olympia city council deemed its draft Shoreline Master Plan just about done earlier this week. After staff makes final changes and gets it back to council on October 1, the mind-numbing 100+ page document will be handed it off to the Washington State Department of Ecology for review.
The City of Olympia is updating its Shoreline Master Program (SMP), which is required by the Shoreline Master Act, and regulates the use and development of properties along certain shorelines. 

According to Keith Stahley, City of Olympia’s community, planning and development manager, it will initially take Ecology staff about three months to review the document to ensure it is complete according to a checklist provided by Ecology. After more public hearings and possible policy clarifications, Ecology could approve, suggest amendments, or deny the application. In any case, the city is expected to see the draft back in September of 2014.

Meanwhile, during SMP discussions, a tragic and unexpected disaster took place on Budd Inlet at the southernmost tip of Puget Sound: the Oyster House restaurant in downtown Olympia burned down in the wee hours of July 19.
 
The owners, Tom and Leticia Barrett, didn’t waste any time obtaining a city demolition permit on July 30, and the restaurant is in the process of demolition and reconstruction. Construction activity requiring the closure of the 4th Avenue sidewalk between Sylvester Street and Water Street is anticipated to be completed by the end of February 2014. Access to the boat ramp and boat dock will remain open.

In light of the Olympia city council’s update of its Shoreline Master Plan (SMP), there is additional scrutiny on this piece of property. To be clear, the Oyster House reconstruction is not affected by the pending adoption of the SMP and the current draft SMP would not impact the owner's ability to replace the structure.
While the Oyster House restaurant occupies a tiny parcel of land in the overall discussion of the health and restoration of Budd Inlet, it is a highly visible and strategically located example of past and current land use practices and the ongoing, frustrating efforts to protect, clean up and restore our little part of Budd Inlet.

Despite all the local and regional discussions, meetings, research and reports about the environmental impacts to Olympia’s downtown from climate change and sea-level rise, surface water runoff and stormwater pollutants loading South Puget Sound, and the need for better earthquake preparedness, it appears the rebuilding of the Oyster House, as a case example, could be a missed opportunity in shoreline restoration.
Project Update

“The owners are planning to replicate what the Oyster House looked like before it burned down,” says Ben Barnes, City of Olympia building inspector. “They’ll rebuild it back-to-back since the fire didn’t get to the back side. It’ll need a little structural upgrade, but that’s about it.”
Asked about the integrity of the building and the small concrete slabs stuck into the fill under the backside of the restaurant that can readily be seen at low tide, Barnes said, “Somebody at some point piled those up there, I don’t know who did that. It’s a lot sturdier now than before the (2001 Nisqually) earthquake. There’s a thick slab under the restaurant – it has a really good foundation under there.  There’s some exposed rebar that’s starting to rust, and will need to be cleaned up,” he said.
 
Above: The Oyster House on Budd Inlet has been demolished. A recent low tide exposes concrete slabs placed there to stabilize the northeast portion of the restaurant. Support beams along the underside of the now burnt down front part of the restaurant appear newer.
 
MC Squared, Inc. is doing the structural work and piling improvements, design, and seismic upgrades.

"The building burned down to the concrete slab that was in place since 1920. We’ll be putting up new wood frame walls, and just finished designing two trusses that are similar to, but not identical, to the ones that were there. It will all meet current code, and restored close to the architectural design from 20 years ago,” said Mike Szramek of MC Squared. Asked about the stabilization of property, Szramek said the northeast corner will be stabilized to hold up that corner of the building.

There is no official shoreline monitoring program at the city level, but city staff, including Todd Stamm, City of Olympia planning manager, is very familiar with the site.

"The moment this burned, we kicked around a few ideas and regulatory schemes. Under the shoreline code, it’s a fast path to build within the same envelope and restore what was there. If the owners start wanting change, there’s a slow shoreline regulatory, traditional permit process. Both paths were described to him. (Owner Tom Barrett) is in the restaurant business, not the development business,” said Stamm.

Asked what the city is concerned about, Stamm said, “We’re looking at the material underneath the building, and the rip rap there to prevent erosion. If he (the owner) wants a seawall, then it’s his choice to make improvements.”

A building permit to rebuild will go through the normal shoreline two-step process through the city and the Washington State Department of Ecology. As of this writing, plans have not been submitted.
Reached by telephone and asked about current demolition and rebuilding efforts, possible shoreline improvements, and confirming the rescue and identity of an unidentified oyster creature, Oyster House restaurant owners Tom and Leticia Barrett both chose not to comment for this story.
The Oyster House Restaurant

According to the Oyster House website, the restaurant is the oldest seafood restaurant in the State of Washington. It is the old original culling house of the original Olympia Oyster Company, which was formed prior to 1900. For many years, the Olympia Oysters were culled after being barged in the basin immediately to the north of this building. As far back as 1859, Olympia Oysters were sent to San Francisco where gourmets would pay $20.00 per plate for them.

The original owners started a small seafood bar in the southeast corner of the building where Olympia Oyster Cocktails were served to patrons. In 1948, the restaurant started to evolve into a large scale operation with two or three additions. The current owners, Tom and Leticia Barrett, have operated the business since 1995.
 


According to the city of Olympia website, the Oyster House is listed on inventory lists by the City of Olympia but is not listed on any local, state or national historic register. Originally built in 1923, it is divided into two parcels.

According to Thurston County records, the total market value in 2013 was $62,604 for the intertidal zone. The owner and taxpayer for this parcel is listed as Oyster House Inc. Only $848.03 is due in taxes in 2013 for this parcel. The county assessor’s database lists no land or building for this parcel.
The owner and taxpayer for the parcel containing the actual land and building is T&L Limited Liability Company. The total market value is listed at $1,438,900. Part of the .57 acre parcel is in a flood zone, and in the city’s Urban Waterfront zone. The land is valued at $887,100 and the buildings are valued at $551,800. It was taxed at $62,604 in 2013. The square feet of the building is 5,312 and the parking lot square feet is 6,750.

Olympia city manager Steve Hall confirmed that the tidelands to the east of the Oyster House restaurant do appear to belong to the Barrett’s and the city does not pay anything to use this intertidal zone area for public access. This is the portion of Percival Landing featuring a foot bridge connection along Budd Inlet, an area where The Sandman tugboat is usually seen.

Some shoreline restoration advocates have entertained the idea that the city consider a land swap with the Oyster House, swapping the Sylvester Street right of way west of the building for the piece of land that the Oyster House sits on. 
“Allowing the Oyster House to rebuild on that piece, leaving a very narrow strip that could allow some shore restoration, removal of all those pilings and giving the restaurant solid ground to build on is much less expensive to build and maintain,” suggests Rob Ahlschwede, a Thurston County resident who has been involved in the SMP deliberations for the last four years. 

“They would still be right on the water, have a place for outside dining again and the Inlet would be a little closer to healthy.  It would take some legal stuff to do the swap, but it's been done in other places around the country,” says Ahlschwede.
Hall confirmed that a land swap was a possibility.

“Shortly after the fire, city staff met with the Barrett’s about future plans, including perhaps moving the restaurant to the west. While very cordial, the Barrett’s indicated that the best way to ensure getting their employees back to work as soon as possible was to rebuild in place and not try to do a land swap. Their insurance would not cover the cost of the move and much of the building core was salvageable. Also, city staff confirmed that a land swap would open up new shoreline use permit and land use approval processes which could take up to two years or more to compete. By contrast, building in place is relatively simple with few administrative hurdles for the owner,” said Hall.
When asked, both Stamm and Hall said that they are unaware of any incentives for shoreline restoration in a rebuild such as the one presented by the Oyster House situation.

Hall added, “One encouraging sign was a willingness of the Oyster House owners to partner with the city in the future rebuild of part of Percival Landing onto land rather than over water which is currently the case. This could be a good environmentally sound option for the city once we figure out how to fund the rebuild.”
Above: The Oyster House before demolition in July. The foreground illustrates the convoluted ramp system providing public access to the water.
 
Mayor Pro Tem Nathaniel Jones, who has been actively engaged in the SMP update, agrees that there is room for improvement in this highly developed area of Budd Inlet.
“As you know, Percival Landing is kinda funny, right in the area of the Oyster House. To stay on the boardwalk you have to go down one ramp, across a float, and back up another ramp. In some ways, it's nice to get close to the water, but the current design breaks up the connection between one part of the landing and the other. At the time this section of the landing comes due for refurbishment, it makes sense to consider our options for connecting up the two halves of the boardwalk. Perhaps this would involve some sort of land deal, including the Oyster House, but that decision is way out in the future.”

Jones added, “I am glad that the Oyster House is committed to Olympia and intends to rebuild. This is a difficult time for any business to lose income. The reconstruction must be very disruptive to the staff who depend upon the restaurant for their paycheck. If there were a workable way for the business to relocate so they were not over the water, I would be interested. And if there were a workable way for them to make improvements to the shoreline in the process of rebuilding, I would be interested. But, I don't see that the city has the ability to make these things happen. Private business will pursue those things which make sense to private business.

“While the Oyster House fire is a significant loss and has had a dramatic impact on our downtown, I expect that most of that impact will be short lived. Before long, they will be serving sandwich baskets and oyster shooters just like before,” said Jones.
The Threat of Storm Surges and Sea Level Rise

Above: Budd Inlet, left, threatens to drown the Oyster House restaurant, its parking lot, and nearby Sylvester Street during a 16.2 foot high tide incident in December 2012. Electrical wiring and light posts are also visibly under water. On the far, upper left, the Washington State Capitol Building can be seen in the distance.

During the most recent high tide event in December 2012, city staff and community members witnessed the forces of Budd Inlet covering the Oyster House’s parking lot with storm surge literally lapping at the outer walls of the restaurant, and waterlogging outdoor electrical outlets. This incident, measuring a 16.2 foot high tide, was not even the worst on record for this area.

A strongly worded portion of the city's Storm and Surface Water Utility section of the restoration appendix to Olympia's draft SMP acknowledges that climate change will "considerably influence the kinds of restoration implemented, when it is implemented, and how successfully. Known influences of a change in climate have not been confirmed, but potential effects include longer periods of drought, increased instances of flooding, changes and shifts in plant and wildlife populations, reduced snow accumulations and melt and sea-level rise."

The council agreed late last month to get rid of zero setback incentives for developers to create more height if they added amenities such as trails, vegetation buffers, and make an effort combat sea level rise on the Budd Inlet side of the isthmus and Percival Landing. 

The discussion took shoreline restoration advocates, including members of Friends of the Waterfront, and some council members off guard, complicating the SMP conversation late in the game.

When asked about it, Stamm insists the zero setback concept was suggested by council and specific approaches were proposed by staff after reviewing flexible incentive approaches adopted by other jurisdictions.

“The various incentive packages were provided by staff in response to requests from the city council for proposals for how the standards could be more ‘flexible’ and how such flexibility provisions might create incentives for shoreline restoration and enhancement beyond what would be required to mitigate the impacts of development,” says Stamm. 
 
Above: Budd Inlet threatens Bayview Thriftway during the early morning hours of a high tide event in December 2012. The water rose even further an hour later. This is the northwest corner of the building containing a deli. Picture is taken from Percival Landing.
 
The SMP Draft and Restaurants

One major area of contention with the SMP draft was restaurants.

“In the latest draft, restaurants, especially water-oriented restaurants, are allowed in many shoreline designations, but they would not be permitted in some more restrictive shoreline environments such as ‘natural’ and ‘conservancy.’ Grass Lake, Chambers Lake and much of Capitol Lake is ‘conservancy’ shoreline.  And in many cases, although the shoreline program might allow such uses, they are prohibited by the underlying residential zoning,” says Stamm.
Asked about various South Sound restaurants along Budd Inlet and their distance from the water, Stamm responded, “According to the city’s shoreline inventory, although it’s generally behind the Port Plaza at its closest point, Anthony’s Homeport is only about 30 feet from the ordinary high water mark, also known as the shoreline. Our estimate is that Bayview grocery is set back 22 feet at its closest point, and Tugboat Annie’s is over water in part, possibly by as much as 30 feet – it is definitely not a good example of zero setback with incentives as it doesn’t include any of the enhancement that would be required."  

Above and Below: TugBoat Annie's restaurant on West Bay Drive significantly extends over the water.
 
 
All three restaurants are located on different sides of Budd Inlet: Anthony’s Homeport is on the eastside of Budd Inlet, Bayview Thriftway is downtown on the southern end, and TugBoat Annie’s is located on West Bay Drive.

Bayview’s deli is in the northwest corner of the building, closest to the water. It is so close, that during the high tide event in December 2012, the massive forces of Budd Inlet rose precipitously near to the back door of the deli portion of Bayview. Windows on the second floor of the Bayview deli overlook Percival Landing and Budd Inlet, making it a popular luncheon and informal meeting area for community members.

Stamm says the Bayview Thriftway deli does qualify as a restaurant, even though it is within the same building as the grocery store,  (but) “this does not mean that if new, the entire building would qualify as a ‘water enjoyment’ use,” Stamm said, emphasizing the word ‘not.’ To be clear, Stamm clarified that putting a small ‘water enjoyment’ use, like a deli, inside a larger building wouldn’t allow a developer to place a large structure where it would not otherwise be allowed.
 

In a case of déjà vu, the rebuild of the portion of the Oyster House over the water would be under the same rules as the rebuild of Genoa's restaurant a few years ago, which also burned down.  Now Anthony's Hearthfire Grill restaurant at Northpoint, it has a different appearance, but was rebuilt in the same location, on pilings overlooking Budd Inlet, within same footprint as Genoa’s.

Regarding unintentionally damaged or destroyed structures, a new section was added to the draft SMP:
In the event that a structure or building housing a nonconforming use is damaged or destroyed by fire, explosion, act of nature, or act of public enemy, such damage or destruction shall not constitute a discontinuation of the nonconforming use. In the event that a structure or building housing an existing use considered a “conditional” use is damaged or destroyed by fire, explosion, act of nature, or act of public enemy, such use may be re-established without obtaining a conditional use permit.

This section further states, as in the current SMP, that in order to take advantage of this section, “a complete application for a building permit must be submitted within one year of the unintended event that caused the destruction of the structure. The applicant loses their rights under this subsection if the building permit lapses without construction of the structure proposed under the building permit.”

“Where the public seeks to enhance or restore the environment and not just mitigate adverse impacts, there is always a careful balance to be struck between the obligation of private property owners to be imposed by regulations, and efforts of volunteers, the public and government,” says Stamm.
The Regulatory Roles and Responsibilities of the City and State: Restoration vs. Mitigation

Chrissy Bailey, shoreline planner at the Washington State Department of Ecology, is working with the City of Olympia on its update of the SMP. She was asked several questions about the plans for the Oyster House, whether there are any opportunities or incentives for private property owners to help with Puget Sound shoreline restoration, and the respective city and state responsibilities.
Bailey responded, “Since the city’s new SMP hasn’t been adopted or approved yet, the rebuild of the Oyster House would have to comply with the regulations in the city’s current SMP.  If they are building waterward of the ordinary high water mark, there are other permits and approvals they would have to get as well, from other agencies.” 

“As far as the SMP goes, the city is actually the main permitting agency, not Ecology.  There are certain types of permits we also have to approve after the city does (conditional use permits and variance permits) but exemptions and substantial development permits are issued by the city and Ecology only gets notified that they have been issued. Permit decisions can be appealed to the Shoreline Hearings Board.”
“Generally, if there will be impacts to shoreline resources, mitigation is required. Ecology cannot require restoration, we can only require mitigation equivalent to the impacts of any project.” 

“The SMP guidelines strictly limit Ecology’s authority to require mitigation,” Bailey says, and quotes the relevant Washington Administrative Code, “in excess of that necessary to assure development results in no net loss of shoreline ecological functions.” 
Bailey is careful to differentiate between the terms restoration and mitigation.

“As you mentioned, there could be an improvement in the ecological condition from mitigation a project proponent has to do as a result of impacts associated with their project, impacts that couldn’t be avoided or minimized, or from restoration that is done voluntarily.” 
“Many jurisdictions that update their SMPs include incentives for restoration to try and exceed “no net loss” and actually improve ecological conditions or functions.  Olympia has been tossing that around and I’m not sure how it will shake out in the new SMP.”

“Basically, I would say the city’s main responsibility would be to assure any reconstruction complies with the applicable regulations in their SMP and any other city codes, which may include the need for mitigation.  Often times if structures are rebuilt to the exact same extent they existed before a fire or other disaster, jurisdictions don’t consider that to be an intensification - rather it’s a return to the baseline that existed before the disaster - and so they will not require mitigation. 

“Any restoration would be voluntary, and I am not familiar with any incentives that exist at this time under the Shoreline Master Act.  There are grants available to entities that want to do shoreline restoration so I think there are opportunities to do something different, it just depends on if the project proponent or land owner wants to do it.”
No-Net Loss vs. Net Gain: Is Budd Inlet Really a Priority?

As defined in the draft SMP, under Chapter 3.69, 18.34.850, “restoration is the reestablishment or upgrading of impaired ecological shoreline processes or functions. This may be accomplished through measures including, but not limited to, revegetation, removal of intrusive shoreline structures, and removal or treatment of toxic materials. Restoration does not imply a requirement for returning the shoreline area to aboriginal or pre-European settlement conditions.”

Open to debate perhaps is the definition of “intrusive shoreline structures” which, for some, could mean certain area restaurants, and the Olympia Yacht Club.
 
Above: The Olympia Yacht Club with new support beams as seen from Percival Landing in July.
 
In an appendix to the city's draft SMP, the following four priorities and associated restoration projects are identified: improve water quality in Budd Inlet and its tributaries; improve natural sediment processes; preserve and restore wildlife habitat; and restore shorelines as opportunities for humans to connect with the natural environment.

No doubt, Budd Inlet has seen improvements in the form of greater stormwater control, the new Percival Landing boardwalk structure projects, the removal of about 200 creosote pilings, restoration of an acre of shoreline to function as a native habitat, park development, West Bay site clean-ups, and general public education efforts. The Port of Olympia continues to test the high concentration of dioxin-laden sediments which will lead to the development of a clean-up plan. The continued work of the Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL) water quality study of contaminants of concern in the Deschutes River, Capitol Lake, and Budd Inlet, led by the state Department of Ecology is also underway.

A comprehensive list of projects intended to restore Budd Inlet was identified by the Squaxin Island Tribe in 2010. Of those projects, 53 were identified in or within 500 feet of the City of Olympia. Of those 53 projects, 27 have been identified as potentially feasible for evaluation or implementation within the next 10 years with the City of Olympia as the lead or partner agency. Implementation schedules for many projects in the downtown area are to be determined by funding availability and/or redevelopment.

However, the biggest, most effective proposal toward Budd Inlet restoration, advocates say, would be the removal of the dam built on Budd Inlet in 1951, which blocks sediment transportation from the Deschutes River and Percival Creek into Budd Inlet.
 
The community will continue to pursue the delicate balance between human uses of our shorelines with environmental protection, but will we keep focusing on a goal of no net loss or will we begin to work toward environmental net gains?
 
Above: Sea stars attach themselves to the pilings holding up TugBoat Annie's restaurant in June.