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It was in 1995 that some ex-rowers who had heard about an abandoned boathouse showed up at a Marymoor Master Plan public meeting to ask if it could be opened as a community rowing facility. We caught them just a week or so before the boathouse was scheduled for demolition. Over the next year, as we were educated about the many challenges of the mission (such as a sewage treatment plant that needed to be removed and a pristine natural site that needed nurturing), we were also coached, supported and assisted into becoming a partner with King County Parks. It turned out that they had what we needed: the site, a little money, program expertise and many of the permits and processes. And we had what they needed: Volunteers, time, energy, a little more money and rowing expertise. To convert the old boathouse there was a work party that lasted an entire weekend. We pulled off what was left of the original roof and put a new roof on the boathouse. The boathouse was a mess, but basically empty. The racks on the north side of the boathouse were there, and some old racks in the middle that we later replaced. The oar rack at the east end of the boathouse was there, but it was smaller then. There was no water, phone, or electricity.
At first, the 5am class used a lot of flashlights to find their
way around. Later, Hod Fowler wired up the boathouse for electricity
but there was still no power running to the boathouse.
Instead, we used our own generator. So the first job in the
morning was to start up the generator. Much later, there was yet another work party to run the electricity
down from the road, along with water and phone.
So with a great deal of hard work, cooperation, and enthusiasm
on both sides, SRA and King County Parks have come together to create a
community asset and, hopefully, a model for future public/private citizen
partnerships which might enable many other activities almost as wonderful as
being in a long boat, moving fast over a flat lake on a clear morning.
Copyright 2004-2007 Sammamish Rowing Association
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