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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Down To Earth

Save the old brick building on West Main from demolition!

Spokane - the city of surface parking lots! (photo pulled from Facebook note)

Spokane Preservation Advocates has learned that the owner of the historic brick building at 7 W. Main housing Main Street Antiques has applied for a demolition permit and design for a parking lot to be approved before the new parking lot ban goes into effect in about a month.

Today, please send a short note to Mayor Verner and the City Council encouraging the City to get involved to save the building. *Choose from sample talking points below.

Send your email to:
Mayor Mary Verner -- mverner@spokanecity.org
Susan Ashe -- sashe@spokanecity.org
Joe Shogan -- jshogan@spokanecity.org
Steve Corker -- scorker@spokanecity.org
Nancy McLaughlin -- nmclaughlin@spokanecity.org
Bob Apple -- bapple@spokanecity.org
Richard Rush -- rrush@spokanecity.org
Jon Snyder -- jsnyder@spokanecity.org
Amber Waldref -- awaldref@spokanecity.org
Please Cc Spokane Preservation Advocates -- matt_2941@yahoo.com

Sample Talking Points:
-- I urge you to take creative and swift steps to ensure the continued existence of this building in a manner that will encourage redevelopment.
-- This 2-story, brick building helps create a pedestrian-friendly environment that attract tourists and local shoppers, an urban character that distinguishes Spokane's unique downtown from the suburbs, and an expanded tax base.
-- The building at 7 W. Main resides along Division Street, the "gateway" to our fair city. It is part of a collection of "incubator buildings" that can provide lower-rent opportunities in which new businesses can take root.
-- Maintaining this 100-year-old building for redevelopment is in Spokane’s best economic interest. It plays a crucial role in the historical character of the newly-vibrant East Main Street district.
-- Allowing this building to be torn down would sacrifice an integral part of the East Downtown Historic District and is counterproductive to the economic revitalization that is occurring there.
-- That district includes such local landmarks as the Community Building, Zola, and the soon-to-open Main Market.
-- There are already five parking lots on this block. Parking lots do not incubate new businesses, they create economic dead zones. The razing of 7 W. Main for a parking lot would hurt this fledgling new downtown hot spot immeasurably for decades to come.

Please share this note with friends. Thank you!



Down To Earth

The DTE blog is committed to reporting and sharing environmental news and sustainability information from across the Inland Northwest.