Beverly Barnett spoke for the City of Seattle at the hearing and echoed that the public benefits package didn’t seem commensurate at this stage.Chair Shannon Loew asked, "What is commensurate?" Answer: "It's not clear" but they compared to benefits of similarly-sized Amazon project.
— The Urbanist (@UrbanistOrg) February 16, 2017

What Streets Would Be Vacated?
“The WSCC has petitioned the City of Seattle for a full vacation of three public alleys in Blocks 33, 43, and 44 totaling 7,665 square feet, and subterranean vacations of Terry Avenue and Olive Way, totaling 47,985 square feet,” the Community Package Coalition explained in their editorial in The Urbanist.
How Is the WSCC Addition Funded?
It’s public money and the public doesn’t get to vote on the funding thanks to the special taxing district the WSCC has been granted. The WSCC is primarily funded through municipal bonds backed through a 7% tax on hotel revenue.Why Should We Expand The WSCC?


What Public Benefits Are Proposed?
WSCC presenters at the meeting focused on Pike/Pine corridor improvements for pedestrians and bicyclists, which was also an emphasis of the Community Package coalition. They also mentioned public art and a $5 million investment (or 0.3% of the total budget) in affordable housing in addition to the $5 million King County wrote into the terms for the land it sold for the site. The WSCC said it’d prefer to put the affordable on-site at the tower they plan at Site B.
The Community Package
Public Parks and Open Spaces
- Freeway Park Improvements. Improve Freeway Park to be more safe, accessible, and enjoyable for local residents, employees, and Convention Center visitors.
- Interstate 5 Lid Feasibility Study. Fund a City-led technical study of extending Freeway Park and lidding Interstate 5 in the Center City and beyond for parks, affordable housing, new streets, and other civic uses.
- Melrose Promenade. Implement walking and bicycling improvements, public space, and public art along Melrose Avenue in Capitol Hill.
- Pine-Boren Lid Park. Expand Plymouth Pillars Park by building an approximately 14,000 square foot lid park over Interstate 5 at the east corner of the Pine Street and Boren Avenue intersection.
- Terry Avenue Promenade. Build a pedestrian-oriented woonerf on Terry Avenue between Cherry Street and Marion Street.
- Virginia Street Woonerf. Build a pedestrian-oriented woonerf on Virginia Street between Boren Avenue and Minor Avenue.
Active Transportation
- 8th Avenue Bicycling Improvements. Build a northbound protected bike lane between Pike Street and Bell Street.
- Interstate 5 Overpasses “Kit of Parts”. Implement a suite of pedestrian improvements for I-5 overpasses, such as landscaping and sound buffers, between Olive Way and Madison Street.
- Olive Way Interstate 5 Overpass Walking Improvements. Implement a roadway reconfiguration on the Olive Way I-5 overpass and I-5 interchange to increase pedestrian safety and reduce traffic conflicts.
- Pike-Pine Corridor Bicycling Improvements. Build protected bike lanes on Pike Street and/or Pine Street between Downtown and Capitol Hill.
Affordable Housing
- Affordable Housing. Contribute funding to create 300 affordable homes for workers earning hospitality industry wages (50-60 percent of area median income) within one mile of the Convention Center Addition. For more information on this component, click here.
Washington State Convention Center Expansion Is Not Inevitable