THE HERALD   EVERETT, WASHINGTON
HeraldNet on Facebook HeraldNet on Twitter HeraldNet RSS feeds
Welcome, Guest | Register | Sign In
 Home    News   Local news        Follow HeraldNetLocal on Twitter @HeraldNetLocal   RSS feed RSS
Published: Friday, February 20, 2009

Work starts on downtown artists apartments

The four-story, $17.2 million Artspace Lofts in Everett will include apartments and studios for area artists.

EVERETT -- It was an unlikely scene in downtown Everett on Thursday morning.

Despite an economy that has triggered drastic cuts to the arts and frozen many development projects, dozens of people gathered for a groundbreaking ceremony for the long-awaited $17.2 million Everett Artspace Lofts building.

The four-story building, is expected to open in May 2010, with 40 affordable apartments for artists and their families.

Plans for the building include a 19,000-square-foot street-level visual arts education center owned and run by the Arts Council of Snohomish County.

A Minneapolis-based nonprofit arts community developer, Artspace, last year bought an old parking garage in the 2900 block of Hoyt Avenue from the city of Everett. Under the deal, Artspace has 100 years to repay the city $1 million, plus a small amount of interest.

Construction is expected to keep 100 people working for more than a year. The project will be built with money from various sources, including taxpayers and donations from foundations and individuals.

"This is a stimulus package," said Cathryn Vandenbrink, regional director for Artspace. "It's ready to go. Shovel-ready."

Story tags » 

PaintingPhotographySculptureArts (general)Everett
Comments
NORTHSOUND ClassifiedsNORTHSOUND Classifieds
Top Jobs
Homes
Autos

HeraldNet highlights

Sweet 'I love yous'
Sweet 'I love yous': These bonbons are easy to make for Valentine's Day
Flower & Garden preview
Flower & Garden preview: A look at some of the highlights of this year's show (gallery)
Mill town tales
Mill town tales: Everett's early days recaptured in recorded oral histories
Back on their paws
Back on their paws: Therapist helps ailing and overweight dogs get fit