Seattle freeway ideas still alive despite vote
- Share via
OLYMPIA, WASH. — A day after Seattle voters trounced both options for replacing the quake-damaged Alaskan Way Viaduct, Gov. Chris Gregoire and local leaders announced Wednesday a new effort to negotiate a compromise.
A tunnel option passionately sought by city leaders apparently is off the table, although the governor said it was premature to rule anything out. A surface option -- a street-level road combined with dramatically heavier use of transit -- was expected to gain new traction.
While talks are underway, time and money won’t be lost, Gregoire said, because the state will press ahead with $900 million worth of work on the waterfront that any of the replacement ideas would need.
Construction should start this summer, although the main double-decker mile of freeway won’t be pulled down for five more years, the governor said.
Seattle voters on Tuesday rejected a proposal to rebuild the aging viaduct and were even more adamantly opposed to the tunnel option pushed by Mayor Greg Nickels.
The rebuild option, with a price tag of $2.8 billion, failed 56% to 44%, and the $3.4-billion tunnel was defeated 70% to 30%, according to vote totals released Wednesday.
Gregoire, Nickels, King County Executive Ron Sims and key legislators huddled at the Capitol after the “no-no” vote -- and came out smiling and pledging to work together on a new approach.
Such a deal has eluded the city and state ever since the Nisqually earthquake damaged the viaduct in 2001.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.