The Olympia brewery in Tumwater was running an advertising
campaign that ascribed the beer’s quality to “the artesians,” portrayed as
helpful gnomes or devas.
One artesian well was in front of the old Mark & Pak
grocery store; it was paved over when the store was remodeled for BayView. The
drinking fountain at the corner of 4th and Washington was artesian, and may be
still. The Spar advertised its pure artesian drinking water.
But the pipe that
jutted from the asphalt in the middle of the parking lot near 4th and Jefferson
was the best one to catch drinking water. With several gallon or five-gallon
jugs, you could get a day’s supply for a communal household in a few minutes.
The access in the parking lot was contested for years; water advocates wanted to see the whole site made into a park, while the owners had no interest in parting with a valuable piece of real estate. Urged on by advocates, the city eventually came to a deal with the parking lot owners and acquired a portion of the lot for the Olympia Artesian Well.
The access in the parking lot was contested for years; water advocates wanted to see the whole site made into a park, while the owners had no interest in parting with a valuable piece of real estate. Urged on by advocates, the city eventually came to a deal with the parking lot owners and acquired a portion of the lot for the Olympia Artesian Well.
This beautiful mosaic art was added recently. The water
flows at 10 gallons a minute, and it’s free. When I stopped by to take pictures
on a brilliant, cold January day, the dude filling his jar saw me with my
camera and asked, “Have you TASTED it?”
It’s delicious.
It’s delicious.
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