CELEBRATING
December 2021 Volume 20 | Issue 12
YEARS
Funding cut kills The Nineteen, luxe Kennewick project By Wendy Culverwell editor@tcjournal.biz
Energy
Richland improves metering efficiency, renewable energy use Page A15
Business Profile
Music store knows learning how to play makes life more fun Page A44
Real Estate & Construction
Developer plans to end north Richland’s coffee desert Page B1
NOTEWORTHY “The leisure traveler has been the main driver in our 2021 passenger numbers.” -Buck Taft, manager, Tri-Cities Airport.
Page A35
A Tri-City developer has shelved The Nineteen, a luxury office-and-apartment project planned for downtown Kennewick, after a key lender cut funding by more than two-thirds. Andrew Klein and Brian Griffith, operating as Klein Griffith Properties Group, said the project was “effectively killed” in October when the Hanford Area Economic Investment Fund Advisory Committee reduced its $1.1 million loan to $345,000, citing a “change in scope” for the project behind Washington Hardware. “The HAEIF Advisory Committee’s decision to renege on their loan commitment to our project effectively killed The Nineteen and has prevented it from moving forward. Their later than 11 o’clock decision to hold a special meeting, with notice that failed to meet even HAEIF’s bylaws, made recovery from their action nearly impossible, and we have suffered considerable loss and damages as a result,” Griffith said in a written statement in response to an inquiry by the Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business. Klein and Griffith intended to break ground in June 2021 after securing a $9.7 million agreement with New York-based ICON Realty Capital and the HAEIF loan. HAEIF’s money was the “linchpin,” Griffith said. Without it, the groundbreaking didn’t happen and the building permit expired. The developers could apply for a new permit, but the project would have to be redesigned to comply with new building codes adopted in the interim. The new codes and design fees would add too much cost to the project. Griffith described it as being “mothballed.” It could be revived in the future. In the interim, the building that was to be demolished to make way for The Nineteen will be rehabilitated and marketed to retail tenants. It has about five usable spaces. “Downtown Kennewick continues to see uTHE NINETEEN, Page A4
Photo by Wendy Culverwell Amelia Kittson and her father Gus Kittson stand inside KIE Supply Corp., which started in downtown Kennewick in 1955. It has expanded over the years to carry irrigation, plumbing, electrical, decorative lighting, bathroom fixtures and appliances. Amelia works alongside her dad to prepare for her future role as the next-generation leader of the company.
Longtime Kennewick company begins transition to third generation By Laura Kostad
for Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business
A third generation is poised to take over KIE Supply Corp., the iconic 67-year-old Kennewick business. KIE, established in 1955 by Augustan Kittson Sr., is a longtime supplier of irrigation, plumbing, electrical, lighting, appliance and bathroom fixtures for contractors and DIYers through stores in Kennewick, Hermiston, Sunnyside and elsewhere. Its gleaming fixtures sparkle on East Columbia Drive, near the cable bridge. KIE is currently helmed by Augustan
“Gus” Kittson Jr., 66. He launched a threeyear transition plan to turn it over to daughter, Amelia Kittson, 27, earlier this year by promoting her to vice president. Named the Most Likely to Succeed when he graduated from Kennewick High School in 1973, Gus said he never doubted he’d make a career in the family business. Amelia, who graduated from Southridge High School, said she felt the same pull. She decided to follow in her father’s footsteps while working there during her sophomore year at Washington State University. uKIE, Page A12
FCCI named top vit plant supplier after aligning with Bechtel By Wendy Culverwell editor@tcjournal.biz
A Richland company catering to U.S. Department of Energy contractors found success by aligning itself with the needs of one of the biggest operators at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation: Bechtel National Inc. Bechtel recognized Fluid Controls and Components Inc., or FCCI, with one of four 2020-21 Global Supplier Awards for its contributions to the Hanford Waste Treatment and Immobilization plant, known as the vit plant. The other recipients were Pacific Office Automation, Inland Asphalt Co. and Petersen Inc. The vit plant, with an installed cost of
$12 billion, will treat 53 million gallons of radioactive tank waste by encasing it in glass for long-term storage. The plant will be the world’s largest radiological chemical processing facility. The honor recognizes FCCI for its expertise in certifying that valves, piping and related components used at the project meet nuclear standards and for sourcing 108,000 pounds of “frit,” a mixture of chemicals that Bechtel will use when it heats up the plant’s high-temperature melters this winter. The melters are where waste will mix with glass-forming materials and is at the uFCCI, Page A20
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