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Community celebrates start of
construction
Rainier Vista ground breaking draws over 300 |
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SEATTLE—August 13, 2003—A crowd of Rainier Vista
residents, employees and friends of Providence Health System, City
employees and Seattle Housing Authority Board and staff gathered
on August 13 to mark the official beginning to the construction of
the new Rainier Vista, a 1,010-unit mixed-income Rainier Vista
housing development in the Rainier Valley. |
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A group of Seattle officials and
sponsors officially broke ground at Rainier Vista on August
13, 2003. Shovel bearers included: (left to right)
Architect Kim Lokan; Cynthia Parker of Seattle Northwest
Securities; Ed Rose, SHA Housing Development Manager; John
Meyers, HUD Regional Administrator; Lewis Ward, Rainier Vista
Leadership Team; Mayor Greg Nickels; Ellen Garcia, Providence
ElderPlace Executive Director; City Council President Peter
Steinbrueck; and SHA Commissioner Al Winston, Jr. |
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Accompanied by lilting jazz provided by Triology,
the crowd of over 300 well-wishers enjoyed snacks from four local
restaurants featuring cuisine of varied cultures. When a group of
about ten local activists from the Labor Employment Law Office
arrived with banners and bull horns, they were invited to join the
celebration and provided with time at the end of the program to
address the crowd regarding the need for jobs for local residents.
The project will provide housing to residents
with a range of incomes, including the elderly and those with
disabilities. It will include a new home for Providence ElderPlace,
a program that serves nursing home-eligible seniors. There will also
be homes built for sale to the general public, in addition to
workforce housing units. |
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The groundbreaking celebration took place on the
construction site. It included special guest Seattle Mayor Greg
Nickels; Seattle City Council President Peter Steinbrueck; Rainier
Vista Leadership Team member and resident Hoa Dieu; Greg Van Pelt,
Vice President and Chief Executive of Providence Health System; HUD
Regional Administrator John Meyers; and Seattle Housing Authority
Executive Director Harry Thomas. |
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Seattle City Council
President Peter Steinbrueck addressed the children who live at
Rainier Vista. "It is for these children that we are
doing this," he explained, "in order to create a New
Vista for you and your future." |
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Background
Planning for the redevelopment at Rainier Vista
began over five years ago. Then, after receiving a $35 million grant
from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in
1999, the Seattle Housing Authority began working closely with
residents and community groups to refine the plans and begin the
process of relocating Rainier Vista residents. |
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Demolition began on the site in late 2002, after the
Housing Authority reached a settlement agreement with advocates who
brought suit to require that every low-income housing unit
originally existing on the site be replaced there. The Housing
Authority agreed to replace all but 71 of the original 481 units on
site. The remainder will be replaced elsewhere in Seattle. |
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Rainier Vista resident Hua
Dieu (left) shares his thought about the Rainer Vista
redevelopment while Linh Tranh listens in preparation for translating
the remarks from Vietnamese into English. |
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The project will be completed in two phases, with
Phase I consisting of the area west of Martin Luther King, Jr. Way.
Phase I will include the following:
When the redevelopment began,
all of the residents living in Rainier Vista received
individual counseling to assist them with relocation. Prior to
demolition, 99 households moved from the west side of Martin Luther
King, Jr. Way to apartments on the east side. Some residents moved
offsite to other housing - 57 households moved to other SHA housing
and 87 moved to non-SHA housing. Four families have become home
owners. One hundred households chose to move off site using a
Housing Choice Voucher, which provides rent subsidy in the private
sector. Ninety-five households stayed in their original housing on
the east side of Martin Luther King, Jr. Way and will move into the
new housing on the west side when it is completed.
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