One of Vancouver’s tallest buildings, the 10-story 805 Broadway building, earned its LEED Gold certification in May while it searches for a new tenant for its renovated ground-floor retail space.
Esther Cho Liu Named President of LSW Architects
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VANCOUVER, Wash., Feb. 16, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Esther Cho Liu has been named President of
LSW Architects. The Washington-based firm announced Liu s appointment at the company s first quarterly kickoff meeting of 2021, which brought the company together via Zoom.
Liu, a Principal at LSW since 2018, brings nearly three decades of experience in urban architecture to the firm, where she heads up mixed-use and housing projects. Her leadership and people-first mindset have been instrumental in helping LSW and its growing team thrive through the challenges presented during 2020. Esther is a natural leader at LSW, who the team wholly trusts and respects, said LSW CEO, Casey Wyckoff.
Clark County Business Briefing
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People in Business
The Columbia River Economic Development Council elected new members to serve on its board of directors at its annual investor celebration hosted virtually on Jan. 28. The new board then elected its officers and private-sector executive committee members. The board of director officers are: Lisa Lowe, Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, chair; Mei Wu, Speak Technologies, vice chair; Casey Wyckoff, LSW Architects, immediate past chair; Alan Garcia, NW Natural, secretary; and Lisa Dow, Columbia Bank, treasurer. To see the full list of those elected, visit credc.org/board-of-directors.
Gov. Jay Inslee’s board and commission appointments for January included four individuals from Vancouver. Sean McCormick will served on the Rehabilitation Council for the Blind; Lois Cook will serve on the Health Care Cost Transparency Board; Chimere Figaire-Correa will serve on the Massage Examining Board; and Diana Perez will serve on the Parks and
Columbia Play Project wants to help Clark County kids engage through imagination, experiences
Published: January 10, 2021, 6:00am
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The old saying of “all work and no play” doesn’t apply to this group.
They are all working so that kids will be able to play. And they said their work doesn’t seem like work at all.
“What I love about this endeavor is that it’s a lot of fun,” said Columbia Play Project vice chair Casey Wyckoff. “It doesn’t feel like work.”
Now is when the work really gets going. The newly formed nonprofit Columbia Play Project wants to create a program that will help get kids ages 12 and younger engaged through play, imagination and experiences.