Return of the Occidental Tourist

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Yesterday Seattlest broke out of the office at noon, grabbed a Tats'trami and headed to Occidental Square. There's nothing like passing a short hour with a book and a gut bomb in a square... Actually, had a book along, but it was only cover for our real mission which was to watch all the little people go about their little lives and they happily obliged by showing up and staring back at us. What? Just eating a sandwich and reading over here. Nosy freak.

IMG_0908.jpgEarlier this week Seattlest got an email from the Project for Public Spaces who'd recently found a post of ours from last fall about the newly renovated Occidental Square, a renovation they had a hand in. They wondered if we had any updates to our first reactions. A bunch of trees were removed during the park's renovation--seventeen of them, exactly--which, in light of the P-I's article on Monday about the declining fortunes of the tree in Seattle, is pretty tragic. According to the article, Seattle's tree cover has declined from forty percent in 1970 to eighteen percent today. That's disputed (here, for example), but it's clear that the tree is under pressure in the city. It all adds up; all of the views that need to be sold, the storms that need to blow, the squares that need to be a little less roofed and dreary...

IMG_0911.jpgAnd Occidental Square is definitely less roofed and dreary than it used to be. Generally we're not in favor of the removal of urban trees, but it did help the square. Yesterday the sun came out just as we were arriving and it was leafy and bright at the same time. We had our book and the Tats'trami and when the couple at the table next to us started speaking Polish we thought for just a second that we might be back in the greatest square on the face of the Earth. But no. The square in Krakow was always, always, always filled to capacity. Always. At noon on a sunny Thursday--actually, the first day of summer--Occidental Park was thinly occupied. All of the tables were full, but there just aren't that many tables.

It's not really the square's fault, though. You can mess with the leafy to sunny ratio for ever, but you're not going to change the fact that the businesses that surround the square are designed to be used once a month. If there were a few boutiques that opened directly into Occidental Square and maybe another cafe or four there would be a reason for people to meander around on a lunch hour. As things stand, it still seems like a really nice square that most people haul ass through en route to catching the first pitch. We're going head back for some more lunches, though, and maybe we'll grab a few coworkers on the way next time. It should be the best spot in or near Downtown for people watching and we're going to start doing our part by showing up.

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I love the square a lot more now after the renovation and tree removal. It used to be a hangout for smelly bums (sorry, I'm not PC) and now the sunlight has banished them to darker corners of P-Square. Now... what to do about the that so called "public toilet" *cough-illicitdentofillegalactivity-cought*

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