Lighting the
way to Soap Lake

Brent Blake
poses with a lava lamp at his home in Gig Harbor, Wash.
Blake and John Glassco want to create the world's largest
lava lamp in the small town of Soap Lake, Wash.
Photo by
CHERYL HATCH/Associated Press |
By LINDA ASHTON Associated Press
Giant lava lamp could mean
renewed attention for small resort town
SOAP LAKE, Wash. - Brent Blake and John Glassco want to light
the way to this little town in central Washington's coulee country
with the world's largest Lava lamp - a 60-foot monument to
glowing, undulating ooze.
But don't go pulling out the Iron Butterfly eight-tracks and
love beads just yet - this isn't a flashback to the 1960s.
"There's more to it than a Lava lamp. It's an economic
development issue," said Blake, a pony tailed architect and
designer who divides his time between Soap Lake and Gig Harbor on
Puget Sound.
The director of the Grant County Economic Development Council,
Terry Brewer, agrees.
"I think he's right on point there," Brewer said.
Soap Lake, population 1,275, is something of a rarity east of
the Cascade Range, a rural town without a grain elevator or a
railroad spur.
It exists as a sort of a faded "Wellville" with a
small, mineral-rich lake that once attracted hordes of
health-conscious travelers intent on taking the foamy, healing
waters and coating themselves with mud.
But the lake - about 150 miles east of Seattle and 110 miles
west of Spokane - isn't the draw it was a generation or two ago,
Brewer said.
"Soap Lake has had a shriveling economy for a number of
years," he said. "We need someone or something to create
the kind of activity or interest to get the little economic engine
spinning again."
Blake, 60, and friend Glassco, 54, an environmental services
consultant who lives here, came up with the idea on a whim, during
a late-night chat, and both insist they never owned Lava lamps in
their youth.
The design and the engineering are fluid right now, with lots
of sketches in a book and specs that are uncertain. As proposed,
the lamp would be 60 feet tall, with a diameter of 18 feet. The
top cap would have a searchlight that would shine vertically for
50 miles. A catwalk would surround the glass cylinder where it
meets the base to form an observation platform.
Blake said he has no cost estimate, but he'd like to have it
built in three years.
Blake has enlisted the help of the state Office of Community,
Trade and Economic Development to try to make his Lava lamp vision
real.
George Sharp, a tourism development account manager for CTED,
is there to help Blake explore the feasibility of and financing
options for the project, along with brainstorming ways to have it
make money.
"We don't want it to be just like the largest ball of
twine - where you come look and you're done," Sharp said.
Times are tough for businesses here. People on their way to
Grand Coulee Dam or Sun Lakes State Park don't see much reason for
stopping.
It's not for lack of trying. An intimate 144-seat theater is
under construction on Main Street for the local Masquers troupe
and other visiting performers. There's a Sun Lakes Photography
Festival.
Soap Lake took a shot at the Wild West theme years ago, but the
North Cascades town of Winthrop did it better. Two restaurants are
boarded up and for sale.
The lake itself and the high-desert sunshine remain the primary
attractions, from the start of fishing season in the spring
through hunting season in the fall. Both hotels, the rosy Inn at
Soap Lake and the rustic Notaras Lodge, have guest rooms where
visitors can choose between fresh water and lake water for their
baths.
Barney and Gerry Ballor, en route to Tacoma from Bay City,
Mich., stopped here briefly with their granddaughter's pug dog,
Blackberry, after reading about Soap Lake in a brochure in their
Moses Lake motel room.
"I'd like to come here in the summer and go
swimming," Gerry Ballor said.
And both agreed they would probably stop to see the world's
largest Lava lamp.
Sharp believes there are many ways to make a 60-foot-tall Lava
lamp a destination, with changing interpretive exhibitions on
everything from the geology of the area to natural healing
techniques to the history of the Lava lamp itself.
"We'd rather have attention for something like this than
no attention at all," Brewer said.
Ideally, Blake would like to see Soap Lake end up an eclectic,
artsy little community.
"There's so much potential here. It's frustrating to walk
down the street," Glassco said.
"It just makes you want to make something happen,"
Blake added.
The city has given its blessing.
"You have really started a wakeup call here and created
interest in the community with this idea," Mayor Ken Lee
wrote in a letter of support.
Even Chicago-based Haggerty Enterprises, which owns the rights
to the Lava brand motion lamp, seems to think it's a groovy plan.
"We would definitely work with them in any way we could to
maximize this," Vanessa Patrick told the Wenatchee World.
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