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| 4/19/26 New Judkins Park Station and Mercer Island Station platform |
Preamble:
For the first decade-plus of my career, I worked for the Municipality of Metro Seattle, which used to manage and operate the Seattle transit system. As tunnels were being burrowed for buses through the main downtown thoroughfare, disrupting traffic and businesses for years, most of the marketing was about how the new transitway would eventually be used for the region’s as-yet-to-be-built light rail system. This work wasn’t just for ourselves; our children and grandchildren would ride the light rail! (Much potential there for public relations copywriters like myself.)
That was in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s. The 2020s, when all of it was slated to be completed, seemed like a very long way off. I’ll be sitting in my rocker by then, I grumbled, envisioning my 21st century self. Meanwhile, my current tax dollars were already paying for that wonderful light rail system that I would be too old to use. (Even if I wrote it myself, the copywriting wasn’t enough to convince this grumbling taxpayer that it would all be worthwhile “someday.”)
Four decades later, I’m happy and grateful that I have lived long enough to enjoy that dream-like future (and I no longer begrudge my tax dollars). The light rail has been my most convenient form of public transportation for several years now.
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| My lunch at Dough Zone at Redmond Towne Center and Downtown Redmond Station |
From my perspective, though, the pinnacle of the light rail system was the connection that opened only last month: After multiple, lengthy delays, each putting me one step closer to my rocker, the link between Seattle and the Eastside across Lake Washington was finally completed!
(Delays notwithstanding, this cross-lake link is an engineering marvel: It’s the first train in the world to operate on a floating bridge, which was, itself, the first in the world in 1940.)
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| Art at Downtown Redmond Station |
All of that was just preamble (or maybe just amble). Today’s blog story is much shorter:
Kate, Jane, Ellie and I rode the new light rail connection all the way from Seattle to Redmond Towne Center last Sunday. Our mission was to scout the best stations for sketching potential and related amenities for a future USk outing. For me, it was also a satisfying sense of closure: Four decades of the promised future finally becoming the present.
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| Art and water feature at Bellevue Downtown Station |
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| Bellevue Downtown Station |
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| Art at Downtown Redmond Station |
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| Jane, Ellie, Tina and Kate riding the historic rails! |







yoooo did you see the bicolors teased in today’s caran d’ache mailing list email?
ReplyDeleteYes, I did! But if the past couple of bicolor releases are the trend, I'll pass!
Deleteafter some research, it looks like both the new paul smith bicolors and the alpine frost set are Swisscolor, not Prismalo. they both have the smaller 2.8mm lead listed in their specs, whereas Prismalo is 2.95mm.
DeleteThey also don’t have the “highly pigmented” wording in their descriptions that prismalo and supracolor pencils/sets have.
The first three bicolor sets were definitely Prismalo and listed as such on the swiss french version of their site.
Wow, good sleuthing! What a disappointment... CdA seems to be on a downhill slide. :-( After that big sendup, I thought the new Paul Smith bicolor was going to be a whole new thing.
DeleteI did end up buying it bc I knew FOMO would drive me crazy and the tin is very attractive (and I also saw a meme that said "go ahead and buy that $20 tube of paint; there are people spending money on cocaine") but depending on pigment quality this might be the last one for me. I'm also worried there will be too many color repeats from previous sets.
Delete(I also remember looking up the Tiffany collab pencil tin from 2022 and being disappointed that they were also 2.8mm cores. seriously??)
DeleteI do like the tin (though I like the first striped one even better), but I have resisted so far! (Though I certainly empathize with FOMO :-0 ) Looking at the images, I see several colors that I think will be duplicates. You can let me know how they are!
DeleteWow - to be a part of something so big and far-off in completion, to watch it happen over the years and now to actually enjoy it - must be exceedingly gratifying. I've done a touch of marketing of public projects to the taxpayer myself and getting them on board is not easy! (pardon the pun . . .).
ReplyDeleteYup, it's been a long haul! And definitely gratifying to live to see the day! :-)
DeletePlanning and bringing projects like these to fruition sometimes really takes a long time, but the results are often amazing. I'm glad you got to enjoy the results.
ReplyDeleteSometimes they drag on so long that they seem like they will never be finished!
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