Dear Diary,
Today I visited eight parks. I only walked through the Wallingford Steps, but in each of the others there's a water fountain or (more usually) both a fountain and restrooms, and I took pictures of these with today's newspaper in each one.
I'm not going to spend the rest of the night uploading those pictures to Blogspot. I've just uploaded them all to my Google Drive account, and it appears that the following link enables anyone who wishes to see those photos to see them.
<https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1cfrNdJI9NVY3ux7OoGI7B8Vg3Klq3liT?usp=sharing>
Aside from not boring you and anyone who reads you with endless door shots, this has the great advantage that the date and time information that is the bulk of each photo's meta-information is preserved intact. On top of which, each photo has tonight as its last-modified date, and each photo has today's newspaper in it. I finally have redundantly dated photos for you, dear Diary, only I can't show them to you directly in your pages to accomplish that. Sorry!
Anyway, then, as of this afternoon and early evening, here's a summary of the results by function:
Water fountain running at Sunset Place, which is in Northwest. All the other parks I got to are in North, and no water fountain known to me was running in any of those. They are: Meridian Playground, Wallingford Playfield, Gas Works Park, B. F. Day Playground, Woodland Park and Green Lake Park.
Restrooms closed at Woodland Park (Citywide Athletics Building, which the Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation nicknames "Rio") and at Green Lake Park (Community Center, women's room only). Both closures had explanations posted, and were not simply the result of negligence. All the other restrooms I visited were open, including ones in Meridian Playground, Wallingford Playfield, Gas Works Park, Woodland Park and Green Lake Park.
Results by park:
Meridian Playground - restrooms open (as usual, except that they close in winter), water fountain hopelessly damaged in a way that suggests metal thievery, as it has been since I first saw it last year. I also decided to take notes on men's rooms on this series of hikes, and the men's room at Meridian has one toilet, one urinal, one sink, one dryer, and one soap dispenser. I tried at least one sink for each men's room this kind of note is attached to, found it not of the kind that mostly sprays users' clothes, and found any dryer mentioned working.
Street fountain on N 45th St near Wallingford Ave N - still not running, as it has been since late March; before that, as far as I knew, it ran throughout the pandemic, incuding winter. I took a picture, but either it didn't actually get taken, or I deleted it accidentally from my phone. (My phone's camera has recently eliminated a feature that helped me know whether it really took a picture, so I periodically have to go through deleting duplicate and triplicate photos.) When I take another photo of it, there'll be a folder at Google Drive for that photo.
Wallingford Playfield - restrooms open (as usual), water fountain recently repaired but still not running; last year it was hopelessly damaged. The men's room at Wallingford has the same things as the one at Meridian. I did not note, this time, at either of these parks, whether the toilet stalls had doors.
Gas Works Park - restrooms open (they're officially open 24 hours at least during the pandemic), water fountain not running; it still shows no sign of damage, but hasn't, as far as I know, run since the pandemic began. The men's room has two toilets without stall doors, one urinal, one sink, and one soap dispenser.
B. F. Day Playground - water fountain not running. It gave a trickle last spring and was running last autumn.
Sunset Place - water fountain running. It ran both last spring and last autumn.
Woodland Park - By region:
- Northwest - There's a single water fountain near the entrance to the park at Phinney Ave N and N 59th St. It's too damaged to use, as it has been since I found it last autumn, but the style of the damage suggests that it may have been disabled by parks staff rather than by metal thieves.
- Lawn bowling - A restroom building is right next to one of the lawn bowling greens near the park entrance at Aurora Ave N and West Green Lake Way N; its restrooms were limitedly open in winter, but last year were unpredictably 24 hours. The men's room has two toilets without stall doors, one urinal, one sink, no dryer, and one soap dispenser. One water fountain is under its eaves, within the usually locked bowling green; it wasn't running last autumn. Another is some distance away, near shelter 6; it ran last autumn, but isn't running now. Neither looks damaged.
- Pink Palace - Some way south of the lawn bowling restrooms this quite pink building is at the top of a hill. It has two water fountains attached to it which haven't run since the pandemic began and still don't; they don't look damaged. The restrooms have been open most nights I've been near them since the pandemic began. The men's room has two toilet stalls with doors, one urinal, two sinks, one dryer, and one soap dispenser.
- 50th - Northwest of Woodland Park Ave N and N 50th St there's a restroom building which has been open 24 hours somewhat less reliably than the Pink Palace. The men's room has two toilets without stall doors, one urinal, two sinks, one dryer, and would have a soap dispenser except that someone has stolen it. Right out front of the men's room is a really old-fashioned water fountain which hasn't run since the pandemic began, but has been disabled since at least last autumn in a way reminiscent of the northwest fountain. The same is true of a water fountain directly north of Woodland Park Ave N, which is of the same make as the northwest fountain and disabled in the same ways.
- Citywide Athletics Building (again, "Rio") - Two water fountains are on either side of the home plate of the big baseball diamond at the park's southeast corner. They have both been hopelessly disabled, probably by metal thieves and maybe by the same bunch as at Meridian Playground, since the pandemic began. North of the baseball diamond is the Citywide Athletics Building. It has restrooms that open to the outside, and are normally open in winter, but since January have been posted as closed due to vandalism, which forced the parks department to do some juggling.
- Cloverleaf - With the big baseball diamond as field #1, the four Leo Lassen Fields are #3-#6, vaguely resembling a four-leafed clover. A building with the address 5427 East Green Lake Way N in the middle of the cloverleaf holds two restrooms with doors that open to the outside. These normally close in winter, but this winter were open with limited hours. They were open today. The water fountain attached to the building gave a trickle last May, and ran last October - that's only two in the park, the other being near shelter 6 - but isn't running now. A girls' game was going on, resulting in a real crowd near this building, so I didn't take notes on the men's room, and thereafter stopped partly from forgetting, partly from rain.
Green Lake Park - By region; all restrooms can be open all year:
- Small Craft Center (nicknamed "Shellhouse" by the parks department), near the southern end of the lake. Most of last year, I think these restrooms were open 24 hours, but the people who work there were unhappy with the results, and as of winter, it closes, though later than most park restrooms. Two water fountains attached to two buildings ran last year (in spring as well as fall), but haven't been started yet this year.
- 64th St (nicknamed "65th St" by the parks department). These restrooms were usually open 24 hours last year, and are now the designated 24 hour restrooms of this park. I've never found a water fountain near them. On the way there I saw geese escorting their goslings:
- Community Center. The Green Lake Community Center and Evans Pool have been undergoing inscrutable construction work that got a lot more scrutable sometime between January and now with the erection of a sign that explains that they're doing "stabilization" work now, with the hope to buy time until mid-decade, to allow a more thorough planning of the replacement.The restrooms have been unpredictably open, but in recent visits ("Hikes 12 and 14" and today) the men's room has been open but not the women's. Today the men's room had both warm and cold water, but it's a good idea to make sure it at least has cold running water before using it. The water fountain trailward of the building ran last fall, but doesn't run now.
- Wading pool, at the north end of the park. These restrooms have usually been the official 24 hour restrooms of the park, and are still usually open 24 hours. Two water fountains attached to the building ran last fall, but not now; I didn't find the free-standing double fountain not far away then, so haven't observed it running.
- Theatre, the building known as the Bathhouse or Bath House Theater, the company inside it the Seattle Public Theater (parks department nickname "Bath House" or "Bathhouse"). I didn't find these restrooms open last May or October; they're supposed to open in summer for the theatre season, and by different people expected to open in winter too. I first found them open in January and had to eat some crow about it; they're open now too, which they definitely oughtn't normally be. So much as I complain about the parks department ignoring the pandemic in their decision-making, this is a notable exception. Anyway, there's a free-standing double fountain in front of the men's room, and two fountains attached in back of the women's room; I'm pretty sure all ran last October, but none run now.
And since I got that far only after 7 P.M. (closing times for the Bathhouse, Community Center and Shellhouse restrooms seem to be between 8 and 9 P.M.), it was too late to go on to the parks of Greenwood, so that's as far as I got in "N" today.
More about the hikes I'm now trying to plan tomorrow, dear Diary; it's been quiet time for a quarter hour again. Good night.
No comments:
Post a Comment