The $200 million project has been 37 years in the making.
EVERETT, Wash. — Everett Public Works employees jokingly refer to it as the “home of the zombie apocalypse.”
Inside the cavernous, concrete tomb on the Everett waterfront, a desolate, deserted piece of history comes to life again.
“What goes through my mind is the ability to reuse this infrastructure and create something new,” said Public Works Engineer Zach Brown. “We’re creating a new life out of it.”
That new life comes from part of the old Kimberly Clark paper mill.
Shuttered in 2012 and purchased by the city, the
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