NEW Council moves toward approving downtown pedestrian plaza
Yakima Herald-Republic
More 'Local'
- State Voting Rights Act may mean trouble for Yakima's system
- Yakima man escapes house fire with minor injuries
- Oregon truck driver dies in crash
- Suicidal man subdued on I-82 overpass
- Hatton: With plenty of unsolicited help, Slovenia beckons
- Voters to decide slew of school levies on Tuesday
- Family of former Yakima woman devastated by homicide
Top Read
- Family of former Yakima woman devastated by homicide
- Greyhound leaving downtown station after 50 years
- Pregnant woman shot, killed in Mattawa Saturday night
- Man threatening to jump from I-82 overpass subdued
- Oregon man killed in accident near Goldendale
- Suicidal man subdued on I-82 overpass
- Oregon truck driver dies in crash
Emailed
- Hatton: With plenty of unsolicited help, Slovenia beckons
- McLain | New Plant Hardiness Zone Map moves us up a few degrees
- Greyhound leaving downtown station after 50 years
- Hastings seeks Impact Aid grants for area school districts
- Family of former Yakima woman devastated by homicide
- Photos: Freezin' for a reason
YAKIMA -- The Yakima City Council took an important step today toward the creation of a pedestrian plaza in front of the Capitol Theatre.
Meeting this morning on the stage of the historic theater, the council agreed 7-0 to begin the process of closing downtown South Third Street in front of the Capitol.
The decision does not mean the council has agreed to close the street, only to begin the process.
City Manager Dick Zais told the council the application process to vacate a public street could take about six weeks and requires at least one public hearing.
A final decision must be approved by the council. The closure would affect a one-block portion of Third Street between Yakima and Chestnut avenues.
A pedestrian plaza is the final phase of a $14 million expansion plan designed to remake the theater as the new heart and soul of the city, which has struggled to recover from the closure of the downtown Yakima Mall in 2003.
The theater board has already bought a parking lot behind the Capitol for a modern staging facility that will connect with the back of the theater.
In addition, the theater plans to demolish the adjacent Wilson Building, built in 1902 at the corner of Yakima Avenue and Third Street, and replace it with a new pavilion.

RSS
E-mail
Print