From the Yakima Herald-Republic Online News.


Posted on Monday, March 23, 2009

A Street buildings erased
By PAT MUIR
Yakima Herald-Republic

 

YAKIMA, Wash. -- They stood for 100 years. They fell in a single day.

Sandi Westwood watched from across the street as the Yakima County-owned “A Street buildings” fell under the weight of a CAT trackhoe Monday.

For Westwood, whose father, Robert Saxton, had operated Robert L. Saxton Realty in the buildings for about 40 years, watching their demolition was like grieving.

“I’m very sentimental about the whole thing,” the 66-year-old Yakima retiree said. “My brother and I roamed the hallways behind those offices. We’d roam over next door to Hazel’s Candy. And we’d roam over to Clark Jennings and Associates — he was my father’s best friend.”

Westwood’s father, who died in 1991, occupied the corner office in the row of downtown Yakima storefronts from the late 1930s well into the 1970s, she said. Like a handful of other onlookers, she thought more could have been done to save the buildings.

“But I have to admit I didn’t really do anything either,” Westwood said. “I just didn’t believe it was really ever going to happen.”

In fact, it’s been in the works for a long time. The buildings, which over the years have housed restaurants, offices, a candy shop and a mortuary, saw their last tenant, the Lunch Box Cafe, leave in 2007.

Also in 2007, a county facilities task force recommended the buildings, on the corner of A and Second streets, be demolished so the underlying property could be “banked” for future county use.

When downtown advocates protested, the county commissioners voted to put off demolition and allowed developers to propose renovation projects — with the caveat that the buildings would revert to county control in 20 years to be demolished and replaced.

Yakima developer Diane Vance, who renovated the downtown Talcott Building, made such a proposal before determining it wouldn’t be cost effective. She determined that, including decontamination and asbestos removal, renovation would have cost $1.6 million, and she would not be able to make a profit during the 20-year lease term.

Commissioners considered the vacant buildings a liability risk, and in January approved a $125,000 contract with Russell Crane Service to tear them down.

That includes asbestos and lead removal, which has been done over the past two weeks, and removal of the chemical storage tanks underneath the building. That will be done after the demolition debris is removed this week.

County commissioners have scheduled a study session Thursday to discuss options for the site, which they plan to keep as green space in the immediate future.

“What we had there was some old, deteriorated, contaminated buildings,” county Commissioner Mike Leita said.

Approval of the demolition contract spurred another round of public outcry, including protests from the city of Yakima’s Historic Preservation Commission. Members of the commission faced off with the commissioners at a heated county meeting earlier this month.

The buildings were owned by the county but were located within city limits.

The preservation commission’s Jenifer Wilde-McMurtrie, believing she’d found a procedural misstep in the county’s environmental review, made a last-ditch attempt to save the buildings Monday morning. She thought the county had left out language in its last report related to the appeal process.

But, as city staff explained to Wilde-McMurtrie while she watched demolition begin from a second-floor City Hall office, the county had in fact met the legal obligations for a demolition permit.

“It just makes me sick to my stomach,” Wilde-McMurtrie said as demolition began.

Not everyone watching the demolition was sad to see the buildings go.

“The buildings had outlived their usefulness back in the ’60s really,” said Denny Herreid, 57, of Yakima.

Though Herreid used to have lunch occasionally at the Lunch Box Cafe, he said he’s not going to miss the buildings at all.

“I don’t think they really had any value architecturally either,” he said.

Linda Lidke, the owner of the relocated Lunch Box Cafe, which moved a block down A Street from the buildings, was similarly unsentimental about the demolition. The business is now located between First and Front streets.

“I was in that building for eight years, so I know what it was like inside,” she said. “It’s in really bad shape.”

Bad shape or not, the buildings and their century of history meant something to some people in Yakima, said Scott Irons, chairman of the city’s Historic Preservation Commission.

“Everybody (in the commission) is kind of in mourning right now,” he said, watching the last stages of demolition Monday afternoon. “An old building is like an old friend. And how you choose to treat it is indicative of who you are.”

The  A St. buildings were built nearly a century ago and have housed a variety of businesses including a print shop, restaurant and undertaker. However, shortly after 8 a.m. March 22, 2009, demolition of the buildings began.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The A St. buildings were built nearly a century ago and have housed a variety of businesses including a print shop, restaurant and undertaker. However, shortly after 8 a.m. March 22, 2009, demolition of the buildings began.
Jenifer Wilde-McMurtrie, an opponent of the A Street building's demolition, showed up at the site with paperwork early Monday morning, contending all the rules had not been followed and that the demolition could not proceed. A few minutes later however, even as she was talking with county and city officials, the demolition began.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Jenifer Wilde-McMurtrie, an opponent of the A Street building's demolition, showed up at the site with paperwork early Monday morning, contending all the rules had not been followed and that the demolition could not proceed. A few minutes later however, even as she was talking with county and city officials, the demolition began.
Yakima County Commissioners Mike Leita, front left, and Rand Elliott, rear, and the county's public services director Vern Redifer briefly watch as the demolition of the A Street buildings began Monday, March 23, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Yakima County Commissioners Mike Leita, front left, and Rand Elliott, rear, and the county's public services director Vern Redifer briefly watch as the demolition of the A Street buildings began Monday, March 23, 2009.
Demolition of Yakima's A Street buildings began shortly after 8 a.m. Monday, March 23, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Demolition of Yakima's A Street buildings began shortly after 8 a.m. Monday, March 23, 2009.
FILE PHOTO: The upper story of the A Street buildings is demolished Monday morning, March 23, 2009. Th century-old building once housed an undertaker.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
FILE PHOTO: The upper story of the A Street buildings is demolished Monday morning, March 23, 2009. Th century-old building once housed an undertaker.
Despite a last-ditch effort by the city of Yakima's Historic Preservation Commission, the A Street buildings were demolished March 23, 2009. It was determined, after review, renovation of the nearly century-old buildings would be too expensive. The buildings are owned by Yakima County.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Despite a last-ditch effort by the city of Yakima's Historic Preservation Commission, the A Street buildings were demolished March 23, 2009. It was determined, after review, renovation of the nearly century-old buildings would be too expensive. The buildings are owned by Yakima County.
The A Street buildings in downtown Yakima were demolished March 23, 2009, despite an eleventh-hour effort by those who wanted to preserve the nearly century-old building. It took only a few hours to completely tear down the old building which has housed a variety of businesses including an undertaker, restaurant and print shop.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The A Street buildings in downtown Yakima were demolished March 23, 2009, despite an eleventh-hour effort by those who wanted to preserve the nearly century-old building. It took only a few hours to completely tear down the old building which has housed a variety of businesses including an undertaker, restaurant and print shop.
The northern side of the A Street buildings was demolished first on March 23, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The northern side of the A Street buildings was demolished first on March 23, 2009.
The sidewalk in front of the Second Street side of the buildings is closed forcing pedestrians to walk in the street. The A Street buildings, which also front on Second Street, were demolished March 23, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The sidewalk in front of the Second Street side of the buildings is closed forcing pedestrians to walk in the street. The A Street buildings, which also front on Second Street, were demolished March 23, 2009.
The century-old A St. buildings were demolished Monday, March 23, 2009 following an extensive review process in which it was determined the buildings were too expensive to renovate.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
The century-old A St. buildings were demolished Monday, March 23, 2009 following an extensive review process in which it was determined the buildings were too expensive to renovate.
In a March 3, 2009 photo, the the Yakima County-owned building at the northwest corner of 2nd Street and A Street in Yakima had been fenced off in preparation for its demolition March 23, 2009.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
In a March 3, 2009 photo, the the Yakima County-owned building at the northwest corner of 2nd Street and A Street in Yakima had been fenced off in preparation for its demolition March 23, 2009.
By early afternoon March 23, 2009, the A Street buildings had been almost completely demolished.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
By early afternoon March 23, 2009, the A Street buildings had been almost completely demolished.
Demolition of the A Street buildings was completed by mid-afternoon March 23, 2009. Plans for the soon-to-be vacant property have not yet been made but there are no plans for a building to be built there in the near future.
GORDON KING/Yakima Herald-Republic
Demolition of the A Street buildings was completed by mid-afternoon March 23, 2009. Plans for the soon-to-be vacant property have not yet been made but there are no plans for a building to be built there in the near future.

Watch some of the demolition work.