Big Turnout for CAST's office warming party!

Thank you to all our friends and colleagues that came out last night to help us celebrate our new office space!  Standing room only!  Now if only one of us had thought to snap a picture when the crowd was actually there.... cast's office

Since we haven't decided what to do with the big wall that separates the desks from the conference/copy space, we took all the recycled moving boxes, cut them down on the table saw, then glued them up, thus recycling them again.   Perfect for the party!

the boxes leaking light into the copy room

the randomly stacked boxes viewed from the desks

Phinney Ridge Home Fair

2011 Phinney Ridge Home Fair Join CAST and 89 other exhibitors at the Phinney Ridge Home Fair!  Always a good time to pick the experts' brains about whatever home improvement issue you may be having.  Plus, there is a special emphasis on green companies and services, including landscaping, solar tech, 'passive house' (super insulated/energy efficient construction--not 'passive solar')

See you there!

CAST architecture has moved!

IMG_3421 After 10 years in our Leary and 6th location, CAST architecture has completed our move to a brighter, larger space at 115 N. 36th Street in Fremont  (98103), overlooking the Canal.   Our phone number is staying the same, but we've been having a few snags with the new phone service and should have it worked out today.

Happy New Year!

IMG_3466

NewsMatt HutchinsComment
Sunset Substation Park to be published in Sunset Magazine, AIA Forum Magazine

Sunset Substation Park will be included in an article on pocket parks in Sunset Magazine in February, and in a themed issues of AIA Seattle's magazine, Forum, on the 'Renewable City.' Hopefully this extra publicity will bolster the idea that creating public parks out of surplus, city-owned, urban land is an obvious solution to increasing the sustainability and long-term livability of our neighborhoods.

NewsMatt HutchinsComment
The Stranger's Dominic Holden Covers Seattle's Multi Family code update...

multifamily-updateIllustration by James Yamasaki for The Stranger "On December 13, the Seattle City Council passed new rules for buildings in high-density residential neighborhoods. The decree has drawn predictable criticism from some activists, who complain the new rules will change the city's character, but in fact the gripes of these activists hit on exactly what's great about the new rules: They allow more housing." -Dominic Holden for The Stranger

Read more at the Stranger: Ditching Town Houses

NewsTim HammerComment
Multi-family code passes 9-0

A triumph for the 'Seattle Way'--years of contentious hearings, studies, tweaks resolve into ultimately a unanimous decision.  There is a certain super-tanker inertia about the city process that eventually prevails but it does it take a quite a while to steer the ship of state toward higher goals. Big thanks to Councilmember Sally Clark, the DPD staff, and CORA supermen:  Brandon Nicholson, Bradley Khouri, and David Neiman.

New Multi-family code: vote on Monday?

L3-max-front-NE-2The new Multifamily Code is scheduled to come up for a vote before Council on Monday.  After years of process, hearings, and work shaping the outcomes, the new code will have some new attributes geared toward more flexibility in heights, parking, setbacks, and density.  It disincentivizes the '6 pack' townhomes everyone dislikes and gives out bonuses for green building, designs that hid parking and give a better streetscape.

For those of us who participated in the sausage-making legislative process over the years, it is great to see that it will finally come up for a vote.  If you want to see the vote, and who wouldn't, it will be at City Hall at 2pm Monday.