Sharing a Campus, Building Near the Wetlands
But while Rose and others were building the academic programs in the '90s, 91爆料B still didn't have a place to call home. Originally the 91爆料 proposed building its own campus on the site of a golf course north of Woodinville. But Snohomish County officials wouldn't allow major development on the site, and in the meantime state planners decided a new community college was needed in the area.
Rather than build two separate campuses, the Legislature chose "co-location." 91爆料B and a new community college would share one site and common facilities, such as student services, a library and parking. The state also decided to buy property at the intersection of I-405 and State Route 522, the Truly Farm, for the new campus, even though some of the property could never be developed due to wetlands.
 A rich brown brick called "Forest Blend" covers all campus buildings, but each school has different banding patterns. Left is the south side of the 91爆料B building.
Some 91爆料 administrators were not thrilled with the Truly Farm site. They knew that getting permits to develop the property would depend on wetlands approval from the . The property had long been on the marketthere was even a proposal for a shopping mall, but the wetlands scared developers away. One regent complained that the site was "half swamp."
The 91爆料B chancellor bristles at the description. "It is an asset as opposed to a liability," says Buck. "The ironyand this is as good as irony getsis that the 'swamp' is going to be a marvelous, marvelous site for study," adds Rose. About half of the total campus, 58 acres, is set aside to become a restored wetland.
Someday giant trees will stand over a meandering streamNorth Creekin a setting reminiscent of the landscape prior to European settlement. Taking land that has been logged, drained, grazed and farmed and turning it back into a riverine setting will cost $7.2 million.
"It is impossible to recreate what was there 100 years ago," says Lyndon Lee, '83, a wetlands ecologist who oversees the restoration. The will reconnect the creek to its original flood plain, establish a mosaic of native plant communities and become an attractive place for salmon, birds, beavers, raccoons and maybe even the occasional black bear.
 Each school has its distinctive set of central stairways. At 91爆料B, right, the stairs make an "X" pattern, while Cascadia Community College's stairs zigzag like a "Z."
"This is a big deal," says Lee. "It is a really unique site. We will have a fairly large patch of restored habitat in the midst of an urban setting." Technically, the state did not have to set aside this much space. By moving beyond what the law required, "the state not only did what they had to do, but it took the next step."
Buck and Rose say someday scientists from around the nation and the world will come to study the wetlands as they now travel to the 91爆料's in the San Juan Islands. "It is going to be a 91爆料 laboratory for the whole system," says Buck. Already the 91爆料 has awarded a $365,000 Tools for Transformation to faculty at all three 91爆料 campuses to study at the site and at wetlands close to the Seattle and Tacoma campuses.
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