MLT moves one step closer to new Civic Campus

  • Enterprise staff
  • Tuesday, May 4, 2010 8:53pm

MOUNTLAKE TERRACE — Voters could finally have a say on whether to build a new Civic Campus.

City Council members received an update on project costs and financing options for construction of a new Civic Campus at an April 29 work session.

Satisfied with the information, council requested an ordinance to be prepared in time to be considered at the upcoming May 17 meeting. Should the ordinance pass, it would place a capital bond proposal on the November ballot.

A new Civic Campus has been the topic of study by numerous Mountlake Terrace City Councils since the 1980s.

“What we have in front of us is an exciting opportunity,” Councilman John Zambrano said. “This is the reason I came on council, to move Mountlake Terrace into the 21st century. I think we can do it with this. I say we go in November and let the people decide.”

The old Civic Center was recently demolished following a roof collapse in July 2008 that made the facility unusable.

“The old city hall collapsed down around us because nobody made a decision,” Mayor Pro Tem Laura Sonmore said. “We either have to continue to pay rent, or move forward on what the citizens have already told us to do for the last 20 years.”

The proposed new Civic Campus would retain the library and fire station, integrating community and senior activity centers, police station, emergency operations center, city offices and a civic green with a spray fountain, an ornamental garden and amphitheater connecting to Veteran’s Memorial Park. The project includes public spaces and meeting places that would afford space for year-round events including a farmers market, public safety fairs, senior activities, dance recitals, art shows, outdoor movies and concerts. It also would incorporate sustainable design standards such as green roofs and walls and energy-efficient and environmentally friendly LEED Silver building techniques.

The proposed Civic Campus would form the heart of the new Town Center plan. Planners envision the campus as a catalyst and stimulus for private reinvestment in the downtown area.

Mountlake Terrace has funded civic projects through voter-approved tax levies in the past. A levy for the old Civic Center was passed in 1960; the levy for the Recreation Pavilion was passed in 1964; Evergreen Playfield’s levy was approved in 1975; and a levy for the police station and fire department equipment was approved in 1988.

The Civic Campus project plan was developed by the council-appointed Citizen Task Force. After six months of meetings and open houses, the task force in December 2008 recommended building a new Civic Campus with taxpayer support.

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