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Joshua McNichols

Reporter

About

As KUOW's Growth and Development reporter and co-host of KUOW's Booming podcast, Joshua's "growing pains" beat sits at the nexus of housing, transportation, urban planning, government and the economy. His favorite stories also include themes of history, technology, and climate change.

Joshua holds a B.A. in Architecture from the University of Washington. Public Radio is his second career; architecture was his first. He is proud of the many odd jobs he's held in his life, such as salmon fisher, author, bike courier, and bed-and-breakfast cook.

Location: Seattle

Languages Spoken: English

Pronouns: he/him

Professional Affiliations: The Society of Professional Journalists, Western Washington Chapter

Podcasts

Stories

  • caption: A ghost light illuminates the empty stage at the Lincoln Theater in Mount Vernon Washington.

    What the 'ghost light' in Mount Vernon's old theater reveals about shuttered venues

    With a troubled federal relief program for shuttered venues reopening Saturday, arts organizations are on the edge of their seat to see when they can get some of the 16 billion dollars in relief that’s been promised to them by the federal government. One of those organizations is an historic theater in Mount Vernon, Washington called the Lincoln. It’s the biggest entertainment venue in town. And like most theaters, its seats have sat empty for much of the past year.

  • caption: Caroline and Jeremy Leung from Seattle take photos of each other at TulipTown tulip farm near Mount Vernon, Washington in April, 2021.

    Mount Vernon looks to tulip tourists for rescue from pandemic slump

    Like most downtowns, businesses in downtown Mt. Vernon, Washington have struggled through the pandemic. But as things start to open up, all eyes in that town are on the tulip fields blooming nearby. The big question is whether visitors to those farms can help businesses in Mt. Vernon recover.

  • caption: Bryan Ohno and his grandkids

    Pottery and grandbabies: A pandemic story

    Around the beginning of the pandemic, Bryan Ohno closed the Seattle art gallery he’d been running for 17 years and radically simplified his life to focus on family and his love of making art. A year later, he looks back on how it changed him.

  • caption: Brendan Nelson is president of the Hilltop Action Coalition

    Tacoma’s Hilltop has hope for an equitable recovery

    Businesses in Tacoma's Hilltop neighborhood are trying to recover from the pandemic. And economic recovery looks certain, with the light rail coming next year and big housing projects on the way. But how does recovery happen in a way that doesn’t push out existing residents and businesses?

  • caption: Pamela Banks, Interim Director for Office of Economic Development, is playing an important role in helping chart the city's path to economic recovery

    This woman traveled thousands of miles to help rescue Seattle’s economy

    The American Rescue Plan – all that stimulus money coming from the federal government — will give nearly a quarter billion dollars to Seattle. How will the city spend those dollars? Pamela Banks is looking at how that money could help businesses recover from the pandemic.

  • caption: The Bread of Life Mission at the corner of First and Main in Seattle

    Seattle's Main Street: stories of pandemic hardship and reinvention

    This has been a really hard year. But the pandemic is shifting, and now we’re poised to recover. At this moment, we’re just trying to figure out – how people are doing? And what’s their future look like? Today, we’re launching a series called The Main Street Project, where we get a sense of what life is like on a single street. Our series begins in Seattle.