EvCC’s promising future

Redevelopment is urban biology. For planning to click, construction, building and transportation need to nestle into a larger community web. Unnatural objects are (or should be) expelled.

The growth of Everett Community College is a profile in farsighted development, enriching and breathing life into north Everett. New construction and a campus reorienting to Broadway has had a catalytic effect. The old Topper Motel and other notorious drug and prostitution haunts are history. The culture and walkability of the neighborhood have changed, public safety improved.

The shifting landscape is not the result of conventional urban renewal, the misguided postwar strategy of razing neighborhoods and plunking down pre-conceived monstrosities without carrying capacity or arteries into the community. (Think Robert Moses and the sprawling disasters conceived half a century ago in New York.) A focused, piecemeal building out, the EvCC strategy centers on transforming the campus into a vital community of students and educators. That vitality radiates through the city.

The Student Fitness Center, built without state dollars and supported in part by student fees, has become a money-generating venue for athletic competitions. The interior is stunning, featuring floor boards from the old gym recast as wall art. Index Quad is coming together, and the college is moving up the state’s capital funding ladder to construct a new library. The nursing and life sciences programs will soon relocate to Liberty Hall, the campus jewel on Broadway slated to open in April. (EvCC buildings are named after Cascade peaks.)

Everett Community College President David Beyer is credited for his leadership, herding the political, community and fundraising cats to make whole a dynamic vision for EvCC. Beyer is instrumental in furthering the college’s partnership with Providence Hospital, a key funder and health care employer.

On the east side of Broadway, WSU is considering its first campus building to accommodate a swelling undergrad curriculum. The next few years will determine whether WSU/Everett is an anchor campus like Vancouver or a more modest branch like WSU/Spokane.

With WSU as a backdrop, here’s a redevelopment brainstorm: Partner with local investors, policymakers and the city to land a WSU bookstore in Everett. The mission is to spread that catalytic love and extend it south into the downtown core. A downtown WSU bookstore would invigorate legions of Cougars and provide a needed gathering place close to small businesses, restaurants and county offices. Mix caffeine and WSU sportswear and let the alchemy begin.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Friday, May 10

A sketchy look at the newss of the day.… Continue reading

Making adjustments to keep Social Security solvent represents only one of the issues confronting Congress. It could also correct outdated aspects of a program that serves nearly 90 percent of Americans over 65. (Stephen Savage/The New York Times) -- NO SALES; FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH NYT STORY SLUGGED SCI SOCIAL SECURITY BY PAULA SPAN FOR NOV. 26, 2018. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED.
Editorial: Social Security’s good news? Bad news delayed a bit

Congress has a little additional time to make sure Social Security is solvent. It shouldn’t waste it.

Schwab: The Everett Clinic lost more than name in two sales

The original clinic’s physician-owners had their squabbles but always put patient care first.

Bret Stephens: Why Zionists like me can thank campus protesters

Their stridency may have ‘sharpened the contradictions,’ but it drove more away from their arguments.

Saunders: Voters need to elect fiscal watchdogs to Congress

Few in Washington, D.C., seem serious about the threat posed by the national debt. It’s time for a change.

Charles Blow: Will young voters stick with Biden despite rift?

Campus protests look to peel away young voters for Biden, but time and reality may play in his favor.

Michalle Goldberg: Why senators need to stop anti-semitism act

The application of a standard against anti-semitism was meant as tool, not a basis for legislation.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks to reporters during a press conference about the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act, on Capitol Hill in Washington, on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. Senate Democrats reintroduced broad legislation on Wednesday to legalize cannabis on the federal level, a major shift in policy that has wide public support, but which is unlikely to be enacted this year ahead of November’s elections and in a divided government. (Valerie Plesch/The New York Times)
Editorial: Federal moves on cannabis encouraging, if incomplete

The Biden administration and the Senate offer sensible proposals to better address marijuana use.

A radiation warning sign along the road near the Hanford Site in Washington state, on Aug. 10, 2022. Hanford, the largest and most contaminated of all American nuclear weapons production sites, is too polluted to ever be returned to public use. Cleanup efforts are now at an inflection point.  (Mason Trinca/The New York Times)
Editorial: Latest Hanford cleanup plan must be scrutinized

A new plan for treating radioactive wastes offers a quicker path, but some groups have questions.

A driver in a Tesla reportedly on "autopilot" allegedly crashed into a Snohomish County Sheriff's Office patrol SUV that was parked on the roadside Saturday in Lake Stevens. There were no injuries. (Snohomish County Sheriff's Office)
Editorial: Tesla’s Autopilot may be ‘unsafe at any speed’

An accident in Maltby involving a Tesla and a motorcycle raises fresh concerns amid hundreds of crashes.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Thursday, May 9

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Nicholas Kristof: Biden must press Israel on Gaza relief

With northern Gaza in a ‘full-blown famine,’ the U.S. must use its leverage to reopen crossings to aid trucks.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.