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

Sinking Seattle turf rattles residents

Mike Petrone, general manager of the J&M Cafe, talks Wednesday about the basement sidewalk in his building that in recent months has collapsed inward, in Seattle’s Pioneer Square district. (Associated Press)
Martha Bellisle Associated Press

SEATTLE – Each time Mike Petrone wrestles the newly stuck door open and heads to the basement underneath J&M Cafe in Seattle’s historic Pioneer Square, he finds a new crack, a new leak, deeper sinking of a concrete walkway.

“That doubled in size in the past three or four months,” Petrone said, pointing to a diagonal crack running up one of the basement’s outside walls. “The floor used to be level – six months ago it was level – but now it sinks in the center. And now water drips from the ceiling.”

J&M Cafe, established in 1889 to serve Gold Rush prospectors, sits a few blocks away from a giant access pit being dug so crews working to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct can reach a broken-down tunneling machine. When they began pulling water out of deep wells under the pit to lessen the pressure, a monitoring system detected about 1 inch of ground sinking in the area that included the saloon, Todd Trepanier, the state transportation department’s viaduct program administrator, told the City Council.

“We don’t like an inch,” Trepanier told the council, but he quickly added that it appeared to be uniform and stable and no threat to the safety of the State Route 99 bridge the tunnel aims to replace.

After the 61-year-old viaduct suffered damage in a 2001 earthquake, city and state officials agreed on a plan to move the highway underneath the city and open up the waterfront. The tunneling machine, known as Bertha, began drilling last year but broke down in December 2013. Engineers came up with a plan to fix the machine by digging a 120-foot pit in front of Bertha so it could be pulled out. They’d dug about 83 feet before ground monitors detected settlement.

The sinking soil prompted new surveys and inspections of the viaduct and buildings along Alaskan Way and Pioneer Square. Engineers hope to determine whether the deep de-watering and ground settlement are linked. Trepanier said the timing suggested a cause and effect and will report back to the council on Monday.

Thursday afternoon, transportation crews closed a road adjacent to the pit after reports that a section was sinking. Viaduct project spokeswoman Laura Newborn said they were investigating the dip but did not immediately know what caused it.

People living and working in the area say regardless of the cause, buildings in the neighborhood are changing fast.

“This one is definitely new,” said lawyer Robie Russell as he pointed to a foot-long crack that stair-stepped its way along the edges of the bricks making up the wall in his office across the street from the access pit. “It wasn’t there before.”

Next door in the historic OK Hotel, which now holds apartments and artist studios, Cyrus Charters is keeping track of the new cracks. He said he lived through California’s Northridge earthquake, so he watches for these things.

“Six weeks ago this place started changing dramatically,” said Charters, who has lived there since 2006. “I’d be sitting in my apartment and the walls would go click, click, click. And then a few weeks ago the tenor changed, it was lower, more like a clunk, clunk. … It’s settling.”