Artesian Commons

Artesian Commons
Artesian Commons (1).jpg
Park entrance seen from 4th Avenue
TypeMunicipal (Olympia)
Location415 4th Ave SE
Olympia, Washington
Coordinates47°02′42″N 122°53′50″W / 47.0450°N 122.8972°W / 47.0450; -122.8972Coordinates: 47°02′42″N 122°53′50″W / 47.0450°N 122.8972°W / 47.0450; -122.8972
Area0.2 acres (810 m2)
CreatedMay, 2014
Operated byOlympia Parks Department
StatusClosed

Artesian Commons is a 0.2-acre (0.081 ha) park in downtown Olympia, Washington built in May 2014 around an artesian spring. It is described by the city as Olympia's first urban park (Sylvester Park in the Olympia Downtown Historic District is state-owned).[1]

Drinking water supply

People filling water containers at the artesian well

The free, public downtown artesian spring has long been used by Olympians for drinking water, along with other springs used to make beer brewed at Well 80 Artesian Brewing across the street from Artesian Commons;[2][3] and commercial kombucha at Magic Kombucha, and beer at McMenamins Spar Café and Fish Brewing Company, all nearby in the downtown area.[4][5] Artesian well water is tested by the city, along with the main city supplies at McAllister Wellfield (replacing McAllister Springs since the 2010s) and Allison Springs.[6][7] Lead levels at the artesian spring in 2015 were less than 0.001 mg/L (the EPA action level is 0.015).[7][8] A summer, 2016 survey of over 400 park users showed that the median user bottled between 4 and 6 gallons of their own water to take home, and was the only drinking water supply for 70% of the respondents.[9]

Controversy and closure

The park has been controversial because of a "steady stream of problems" including its high use by homeless people, drug dealing, violence and other criminal activity.[10][11] The trash generated by park users is three quarters that of a well-used 40-acre (16 ha) Olympia park, or 150 times greater on a per-acre basis.[9]

The park had a paid "well host", Garrett Cooper, an Army veteran, and a park ranger charged with enforcement.[12][9] In early 2016, the city applied some crime prevention through environmental design practices including fencing and lighting to deter unwanted behavior.[13]

A November, 2016 police surveillance video of a brawl in the park went viral and was reported in international media.[14]

In August, 2018, following four years of incidents including almost 1,400 calls for police at the park,[15] it was permanently closed. Although the park was closed, the Portland Loo and the artesian well remained accessible to the public. In closing the park, the city cited "violent incidents, verbal altercations, nuisance behaviors, and mental health emergencies".[16][17][18] The closure was met with a September protest involving occupation of the park, in which people were arrested for trespassing and for assaulting police.[19]

Art and folklore

The park's artesian well was decorated with public art murals by local artist Jennifer Kuhns.[4]

An urban legend states that if one drinks artesian water from one of the over 90 artesian springs in Olympia,[a] one will return to the city.[20]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Downtown Olympia alone has 96 artesian wells[2][3]

References

  1. ^ Artesian Well and Commons, Olympia Department of Parks, Arts and Recreation
  2. ^ a b Boone, Rolf (2018-02-16). "You've driven by Well 80 on Fourth Avenue for months. Now, it's about to get real". The Olympian. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  3. ^ a b Chew, Jeff (2018-03-21). "Olympia's Well 80 Artesian Brewing Co. opens with new brews, menus". iFIBER ONE News Radio. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  4. ^ a b Allison Williams (June 20, 2012), "In Olympia, It's Still the Water: Olympia is different—same as it ever was", Seattle Met
  5. ^ Karen Miller (June 20, 2016), "What's the deal with Olympia's Water?", South Sound Magazine
  6. ^ McAllister Wellfield, City of Olympia
  7. ^ a b Water quality report, City of Olympia
  8. ^ What Are the U.S. Standards for Lead Levels?, Environmental Health and Medicine Education, United States Centers for Disease Control, August 20, 2007
  9. ^ a b c Andy Hobbs (January 21, 2017), "It's more than the water: Artesian Commons has come a long way in downtown Olympia", The Olympian
  10. ^ James Lynch (December 29, 2014), Olympia police crack down on drug dealing in downtown park, KCPQ-TV Q13 News
  11. ^ Artesian well in Olympia seeing steady stream of problems, KCPQ-TV Q13 News, January 14, 2015
  12. ^ Andy Hobbs (September 19, 2016). "'Well host' and ranger watch over Olympia's Artesian Commons". The Olympian.
  13. ^ http://www.theolympian.com/news/local/article62535717.html
  14. ^ "Shocking moment a savage brawl breaks out at a park after a man sucker punches another before being attacked by a group of people", Daily Mail, UK, November 12, 2016
  15. ^ Violence, threats force Olympia to close Artesian Commons Park, Seattle: KOMO News, August 24, 2018
  16. ^ Artesian Commons Park Closed (press release), City of Olympia, August 24, 2018
  17. ^ Dori Monson (August 24, 2018), Olympia closes Artesian Commons Park to the public, but not to the drug-addicted vagrants?, Seattle: KIRO Radio/MyNothwest.com
  18. ^ Abby Spegman (August 24, 2018), "Olympia closes Artesian Commons Park indefinitely because of threats to staff", The Olympian
  19. ^ Rolf Boone (September 25, 2018), "Three Arrested in Protest at Olympia's Artesian Commons Park", The Chronicle, Centralia, Washington
  20. ^ Moltar02 (April 7, 2016), "Intro: Artesian Commons Park", Climate change in Olympia, Washington (blog), The Evergreen State College

External links


This page was last updated at 2019-11-09 19:10 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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