At recent Port of Olympia meetings the conversation has focused on how to make the waterfront “pay for itself”. Commissioners have talked about ensuring that redevelopment is “profit-based” and that land must be put to its “highest and best use.”
Those phrases sound responsible. But if we look around the state — and the nation — the communities that have truly prospered did so by thinking bigger. They invested in people, place, and public life.
What Real Economic Development Looks Like
Every successful waterfront redevelopment in Washington has combined public investment with civic purpose. Seattle’s new waterfront park and promenade transformed a noisy viaduct into a magnet for people, business, and tourism. Spokane reclaimed its riverfront and turned a once-industrial landscape into one of the most beloved civic spaces in the Northwest.
Neither of those cities demanded that the projects “turn a profit.” They saw them as engines of economic vitality — places that would attract new businesses, events, and visitors while improving quality of life for residents.
That is real economic development: creating value that multiplies through the community.
The Scissortail Park Model
Oklahoma City offers perhaps the most inspiring example. In the 1990s, the city faced stagnation and decline. Residents voted to invest in themselves through a one-cent temporary sales tax dedicated to capital improvements — the “MAPS” program (Metropolitan Area Projects). Its third phase, MAPS 3, funded eight major projects with roughly $777 million raised between 2010 and 2017, all debt-free.
The crown jewel is Scissortail Park: seventy acres of public space linking downtown to the Oklahoma River. The park features ornamental gardens, a lake, a playground, sports courts, fountains, a seasonal roller rink, a restaurant, and a performance lawn. It opened in 2019 with a three-day celebration and is now managed by a local foundation.
Scissortail Park didn’t just beautify downtown — it transformed the city’s economy. Surrounding neighborhoods have filled with new housing and small businesses. The convention center and arena next door now anchor a thriving entertainment district. Visitors and residents alike call it the city’s “front yard”.
What’s remarkable is that this wasn’t a speculative development or a private-sector windfall. It was a community’s decision to invest in shared space — and it worked.
Olympia’s Opportunity
Olympia’s waterfront could be our Scissortail Park. The land is already ours. The question is not whether it can make money, but what kind of prosperity we want to create.
Imagine a shoreline where families stroll from downtown to the Farmers Market and beyond; where children play beside restored tidal wetlands; where local musicians perform on summer evenings; where residents gather for markets, festivals, and civic events.
A waterfront park and cultural district could anchor new local businesses and year-round activity. It would expand the downtown economy and provide space for everyone, not just a few tenants behind fences or paywalls.
Preparing for the Future, Not the Past
Climate change adds urgency to this vision. Large parts of the Port peninsula are projected to be vulnerable to sea-level rise within two decades. Instead of doubling down on heavy infrastructure or speculative buildings that will later require expensive protection, Olympia could lead by design: integrating shoreline restoration, floodable open space, and nature-based resilience into a public waterfront plan.
This approach is not anti-economic — it’s future-proof. Parks, trails, and wetlands absorb water and draw people; they increase nearby property values and create sustainable, low-maintenance economic activity.
Aligning Values With Action
Port leaders often speak of promoting economic development and environmental stewardship. These are not opposing goals. They converge in projects like Scissortail Park, which demonstrate that thoughtful design can generate prosperity while protecting ecological systems.
A well-designed public waterfront can attract new investment, expand the tax base, and enhance quality of life — all while advancing climate resilience and social equity. That’s far more effective–and far more enduring–than a handful of short-term leases for warehouses or condos.
A Waterfront That Reflects Olympia
Olympia’s identity has always been rooted in its setting — the Sound, the forests, and the creative spirit of its people. The waterfront should reflect that character: accessible, green, artistic, and welcoming.
The Port of Olympia has the chance to lead a transformation that matches our values and our moment. The same public vision that gave us the Farmers Market, Percival Landing, and the Hands On Children’s Museum could now give us a world-class waterfront park — a civic space that pays dividends for generations.
The lesson from Oklahoma City is simple: when a community invests in itself, prosperity follows. When it limits its imagination to what can turn a quick profit, opportunity slips away.
Olympia’s future prosperity will not come from the “highest and best use” of real estate — it will come from the highest and best use of imagination.
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