The Neighbors project was published weekly in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1996 to 2000. This page remains available for archival purposes only and the information it contains may be outdated. For more updated information, please visit our Webtowns section.
 
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Renton
Blue-collar city retains its character and spirit

By MARK HIGGINS Mail Author
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

David Loring and his business partner Gene Sens are betting $1 million that Renton, a blue-collar city known for its airliners and big-rig trucks, is ready for a European bakery, wine bar and public piazza.

Loring, a smooth-talking lawyer, and Sens, a local restaurateur, are converting a former auto showroom into a bakery and bistro in a downtown area some retailers abandoned years ago.

Loring says despite an occasional panic attack, he and Sens are certain Renton's renaissance is just around the corner.

"We are trying to change people's minds about the way things are in Renton," says Sens. "We want to have an active main street that is alive and that will be a hub."

Renton is a diamond in the rough, says former Gov. Mike Lowry, who moved there with his wife, Mary, in 1973. But if people think the city is backward or a backwater, they're wrong, he says.

"It's true Renton always has been a blue-collar city. But if there is a negative attitude about that, people have really gotten it wrong and are not familiar with the spirit that is here," Lowry says.

The strong loyal streak Renton residents feel took root 100 years ago when the city's sawmills, coal mines and brick factory produced the materials that built the region.

Renton's manufacturing base attracted hard-working, often poor immigrants from Belgium, China, Wales and Italy.

Some stayed, and today some of the downtown buildings are still owned by the Italian families who bought them three and four generations ago.

Continued:

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Previously:

Blue-collar city retains its character and spirit

The challenges facing an 'older city'

Dinner train put city on track toward revival

Billionaire's vision would top off renaissance

Breathing new life into downtown hasn't been easy

Jon Hahn: Lande Feed runs counter to modern hustle-bustle

Things to do while you're here

Scenes of Renton

Renton historical album

Renton by the numbers


Nearby communities:

Auburn

Burien

Kent

SeaTac

Southcenter

Tukwila

White Center

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