“‘Quaytskin’ is a contemporary interpretation of a ‘welcome figure,’ a traditional marker of place and true land acknowledgement for the Chinook people who have called the villages along the Columbia River home for thousands of years,” said Chelsea Rooklyn, brand manager for Killian Pacific, the Portland-based real estate company that developed the park. “It offers the opportunity to revitalize a nearly forgotten art form that originated in this region, bringing attention to its earliest inhabitants while acting as a signal of goodwill to all those who call this place home.”
Killian Pacific partnered with the Port of Camas-Washougal to exchange land for the park.
The Port acquired property west of Ninebark while the land that Ninebark now occupies went to Killian Pacific, which agreed to create the new park as part of the agreement. Killian Pacific and Ninebark will manage the park for the next eight years, then turn over maintenance responsibilities to the the city of Washougal.
“Projects like this come together through collaboration and working together,” said Kevin Valk, owner of Holst Architecture, a Portland-based firm that designed the park. “We do a fair amount of public-private projects, but seeing the ability of the Port and the City to work together with a private partnership is unlike what I’ve seen before.”
Spencer agreed that the project came together as a result of “partnerships.”
“This is the epitome of what can happen when you’ve got the public sector partnering with the public sector and the public sector partnering with the private sector,” he added. “It’s just been a real joy to see everybody coming together.”
“There was a lot of back and forth between Killian Development and the Port as far as what this park would look like,” he added. “One (thing that) I did not want to see was the apartments smack up against the walkway. You don’t want the public in the back door of the apartments, and the public doesn’t really want the apartments staring down at them, so having a long park like this really does a great job of providing that buffer. It’s going to be a very active space for both the residents of the apartments and residents of the community.”