|
PacMed
- Amazon Mitigation
In
September 1998, the Beacon Alliance of Neighbors entered into a
mitigation process with Wright Runstad & Company over the conversion
of the historic U.S. Public Health Service Hospital ("PacMed")
at the northernmost tip of
Beacon Hill for the headquarters of the online retailer Amazon.com.
The
conversion was done by Sellen Construction, involving 260,000 sq. feet
at a cost of $24,310,000. The project lasted from October 1998 to June
1999.
People
who lived around the facility expressed concerns about the
parking situation that would be caused by the influx of hundreds of
Amazon employees, as well as a desire to have the redevelopment of the
site and its new purpose complement the vision the community had for
itself, and contribute to finding solutions for public safety issues in
the area.
The
parties pursued an open process over the following nine months. All
community-generated mitigation points were recorded and then presented
during a mitigation charette held in June 1999.
The
results of the negotiations provided the following community benefits:
-
Implementation
of a Residential Parking Zone, including hiring Japanese translators
to explain the RPZ to elderly Japanese-only speaking residents
-
Two-year
paid parking permits for residents living in the RPZ
-
Building
a parking facility on site to reduce congestion on nearby streets
-
Creating
a shuttle for Amazon employees to Union Station to encourage mass
transit
-
Perimeter
patrols of the PacMed grounds outside the site fence
-
Electronic
monitoring of open spaces on the north side of the main building
-
Monitor
and report public safety issues
-
Milling
and donation of lumber from substantial trees to school
programs; when a topped redwood tree was felled to make way for the
parking facility, several thousand board feet of redwood were donated
to the Cleveland High School shop program and the Seattle Central CC
wooden boat building program
-
Landscaping
with suitable native vegetation that provides habitat for migratory birds
-
Quarters
1 as a monthly community council meeting place
-
Continued
display of the winter star during the holiday season
-
Participation
in community public safety meetings
-
Creation
of a public park on the east side of 12th Ave. S. should the
northern part of the PacMed property be developed for commercial use
In
addition, Wright Runstad made donations of rental equipment and
refreshments for the 2005 Jungle/Dr. José Rizal Park/ Mountain to Sound
Greenway Trail Open House and June 1999 PacMed Mitigation Summit, and
participated in a Habitat for Humanity project on Beacon Hill.
The
project won the Urban Land Institute's 2000 "Award for
Excellence" in the rehabilitation category, and the Building
Owner's and Managers Association's 2004/2005 "The Office Building
of the Year" (TOBY) award in the Historical Building category for
the Pacific Northwest Region.
Wright
Runstad continues to be an engaged, supportive, responsible
neighbor in the community, helping the neighborhood succeed. Although
Amazon.com will vacate the historic site in 2010, Wright Runstad plans
to rent the facility to a single tenant.
Master
Use Permit for the PacMed/Amazon Conversion, Analysis and Decision
of the Director of the Department of Design Construction and Land Use,
WRCo Project Application, Sept. 9, 2000 (pdf)

PacMed
as seen from the Smith Tower, December 2006
|

PacMed's
classy good looks - seen here from the top floor of nearby Beacon Tower
- help define the Seattle skyline and a neighborhood
The
Nisqually Earthquake
On
February 28, 2002, the Nisqually Quake struck Seattle. The PacMed tower
failed, along with other structural elements. The PacMed tower
rises to 14 stories, 15 counting the roof, and stands on four columns:
22-, 16-, 12-, and 8-inches to the top. All suffered extensive damage, as did lower floors. On the
11th floor, eleven cracks ranged as deep as a foot in just one of the
four 22-inch corner beams. On
the 1st floor, in the west wing that houses offices for the medical
clinic of the east wing, a 50-foot crack ran midway through a load-
bearing concrete wall.
Epoxy, stronger than concrete, set the tower straight, and
steel, and skill. Pillars were wrapped in eight layers of blue carbon fiber,
also used to shore the Alaskan Way viaduct. The tower is better, stronger than new. More
epoxy was used in repairs than concrete. PacMed's
original construction used hollow, red clay bricks extensively
throughout its interior, including bricks 1-ft square and 4-inches deep
for flooring and secondary support. The sides of these bricks were about
1/2-inch thick. Some employees confessed a drumming rumbled through those
hollow spaces during the quake. In the tower, gaps appeared in floors. Of
six elevators, only two worked after the quake. A 400-pound section of
red clay bricks crashed through the roof of one elevator car. Outside,
many windows of the building are topped with 400-pound terra cotta
crowns that were held in place by grout. All had to be reset securely to
the building with steel straps and bolts. Approximately every
8 ft, the original builders connected one "dogbone" -
like a 4-inch oblong bent coat hanger - from the exterior wall to the mortar of the interior. On one corner of the tower, dogbones were not connected at all, so
in the quake the section crumbled. Tons of rubble fell on the 10th floor roof. About 80% of the tower was damaged. The north
extension - built in 1994 to stabilize the building during a quake - worked, but to the west, a crack ran some 30
ft up the corner where the addition shifted under the load. Atop both wings, solariums were rebuilt. Sellen
Construction was tasked with the repairs, employing a high-rise crane
near the south entrance to make the building better than new. Sellen built an enclosed chute through the center of the building to remove waste, with interior sprinklers to keep the dust down, accomplishing the majority of cleanup and demolition with little disturbance to the neighborhood. Three crews worked in shifts around the clock. The
project lasted March 2001 to June 2002. High
quality work, modern materials, and professional dedication have made
this architectural gem safe for Seattle's future.
|