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Sandwiched between mountains and water, this college town is blessed with a heck of a front and back yard, one of the state’s top cities for outdoor enthusiasts.

The city itself? Well, a lot of outsiders tend to treat it more as a rest stop after swishing down Mount Baker or riding the mountain-biking mecca Galbraith Mountain.

But Bellingham has been working to revitalize its downtown and draw more tourists, especially now that the 2010 Winter Olympics will start soon in Vancouver, B.C.

Bellingham can point to about $30 million in new downtown cultural projects: $18 million for a new art museum, $9 million to refurbish the historic Mount Baker Theatre, and $3.2 million in public and private money for a new independent art-house cinema.

Those projects, along with plans to add more public art and wider sidewalks, make up the heart of the “Cultural District” in downtown.

Like many cities across the country, Bellingham has made building an ambitious art museum a priority. In this recession, though, about a dozen cities have suspended, abandoned or scaled back those plans, such as the Parrish Art Museum in Southhampton, N.Y., and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at the University of California.

Bellingham, however, completed its architectural showcase, Lightcatcher, an art museum featuring a 180-foot-long translucent facade that reflects sunlight. It opened in November.

To community and business leaders, Lightcatcher signals that Bellingham wants to be known as more than just a midsize city (70,000) with a big playground for hikers and bikers.

“Bellingham has grown up,” said Patricia Leach, executive director of Whatcom Museum.

Nearby, the Mount Baker Theatre has completed two major renovations to handle 300 annual shows instead of the heretofore-customary 65.

Recently, Seattle Theatre Group, which organizes shows at the Paramount Theatre and the Moore Theatre in Seattle, has started hosting shows in the 83-year-old theater. Comedian Paula Poundstone is booked for February.

As early as next summer, downtown will also have a two-screen independent art-house cinema, Pickford Film Center, which will sell beer and wine.

Pickford already runs a modest art house. But it has sold out enough shows that the nonprofit has purchased a three-story, century-old building nearby for the purpose of relocating and expanding. So far, fundraising has brought in $2.7 million of the $3.2 million needed to complete renovation.

These cultural projects are intended to inject some life into a downtown that has been reeling from a common urban problem: the exodus of chain department stores and small businesses. But with Western Washington University about two miles south of downtown, many community leaders believe they have the audience for their cultural offerings.

“I think downtown is developing into the cultural center for Whatcom County. Western (Washington University) is a great audience for that — the students, professors, visiting professors, alumni. We have a great community,” said Kirsten Walker, executive director of the Downtown Bellingham Partnership.

Bellingham also believes it has inherent geographical advantages as a major Interstate 5 population center about equal 90-minute drives from Vancouver and Seattle. The city and Whatcom County have kicked up promotional campaigns to get Olympic spectators to visit.

Bellingham certainly isn’t unknown as a tourist destination. But out-of-towners usually know the city for its trendy, historic Fairhaven District, the grand Victorian homes nearby and the scenic Chuckanut Drive on the south side of town.

Community and business leaders hope Lightcatcher and other downtown developments can lure those same tourists to drive the 10 minutes to downtown.

Lightcatcher, which will borrow artwork from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., for some exhibits, allows the city to reshuffle its museum lineup. The Old City Hall, formerly the city’s art and history museum, will now be strictly dedicated to the past. Next door, the Syre Education Center will focus on natural history and Native American culture, and house classrooms for student projects and field trips. Those two museums will reopen in mid-January after renovations.

The town’s popular children’s museum has moved into a wing of the Lightcatcher, called Family Interactive Gallery (FIG), with animation dioramas, 3-D images and art games.

Nearby sit two of the region’s geekiest museums: the American Museum of Radio and Electricity (AMRE) and a science museum, Mindport.

As if there was any doubt, AMRE staffer Tana Granack jumped, giggled and hugged the museum’s historian recently upon hearing that his museum made the book, “The Geek Atlas: 128 Places Where Science and Technology Come Alive.”

AMRE owns one of the first light bulbs Thomas Edison made in 1879 and thousands of old radios, rare music boxes, antique phonographs and telephones. To the untrained eye, the room looks like your grandfather’s basement.

The museum only comes alive when Granack or one of the radio geeks lead a tour or tell stories behind those antiques.

Around the corner is the little science museum Mindport, similar in theme to Oregon Museum of Science and Industry in Portland or Exploratorium in San Francisco, only much more modest. The two-room museum, more like an art-gallery space, features science projects and games that showcase theories such as how ecosystems or laws of physics work.

For a break in between, stop by Mallard Ice Cream and Boundary Bay Brewery & Bistro, two must-stops for downtown first timers. Mallard makes the ambitious and exotic gourmet ice cream (pinot noir flavor, for example) you usually find in major metropolises. Even during the dead of winter, the shop draws lots of customers. During summer, the line can get long, especially when all the weekend warriors come to town.

Boundary Bay is one of the region’s best breweries, and its IPA, a light hop with nice floral notes, is arguably the most popular beer in town.

A fancier sit-down is Nimbus, a Northwest-cuisine restaurant located on the 14th floor of a downtown building overlooking Bellingham Bay and the city. It offers sophisticated cocktails and multicourse dinners.

But Bellingham is known more for cheap eats and beer, the familiar trappings of a college town.

Two summers ago, Chuckanut Brewery & Kitchen opened, snatching up a few brewery awards. It’s located near a Bellingham institution, the hipster Old Town Cafe, where your eggs Benedict over homemade biscuits comes with live music, usually a guitar player in the morning.

There’s the popular Super Mario’s Salvadoran taco truck and Pel’ Meni, a Russian dumpling joint that stays open until 2:30 a.m. for the bar-hopping crowd. The best of the cheap grub is probably Casa Que Pasa’s potato burrito, stuffed with mounds of deep-fried potato skin and seasoned potato bits and slathered with a garlicky sauce. It’s practically impossible to chat with locals and students and not hear them wax poetic about this “legendary potato burrito.” It tastes like the Spanish tapas, patatas bravas, wrapped in a flour tortilla.

The taco truck, the dumpling joint and Casa Que Pasa may all be more in tune with Bellingham’s college kids, mountain bikers and snowboarders than with high-spending, Olympics-bound tourists. But anybody can appreciate a good potato burrito.

The details

WHERE: About 90 minutes north of Seattle, take Exit 253 from Interstate 5 and head west on Lakeway Drive into downtown Bellingham. To visit the new Lightcatcher art museum, 250 Flora St., angle right onto Holly Street, then Prospect Street, then go right one block on Flora Street. Other downtown attractions are nearby.

VISITOR PACKAGE: A good hotel-and-museum package deal is “Bellingham Escapes” ($299 midweek, $399 weekends), which covers much of the city’s cultural activities including two tickets to the Lightcatcher and a two-night stay for two at the fancy Hotel Bellwether by the waterfront, plus dining and entertainment passes. The package also includes two tickets to the American Museum of Radio and Electricity, Pickford Film Center and a monthly jazz festival (January-November). You also get a $50 gift card for fine dining at Nimbus restaurant, a $25 gift certificate to Chuckanut Brewery & Kitchen and $20 in “downtown dollars” that you can use as currency in many downtown businesses including Boundary Bay Brewery & Bistro and Mallard Ice Cream. Details: or 360-392-3182.

RESTAURANTS

Nimbus, 119 N. Commercial St.; 360-676-1307 or

Boundary Bay Brewery & Bistro, 1107 Railroad Ave.; 360-647-5593 or

Chuckanut Brewery & Kitchen, 601 W. Holly St.; 360-752-3377 or

Super Mario’s taco truck, 1422 N Forest St.; 360-920-4330 or

Pel’ Meni, 1211 N. State St.; 360-715-8324

Casa Que Pasa, 1415 Railroad Ave.; 360-756-8226

Old Town Cafe, 316 W. Holly St.; 360-671-4431

Mallard Ice Cream, 1323 Railroad Ave.; 360-734-3884 or

SIGHTS OF INTEREST

American Museum of Radio and Electricity, 1312 Bay St.; 360-738-3886 or

Pickford Film Center, 1416 Cornwall Ave. (current location until summer); 360-647-1300 or

Whatcom Museum, a three-building complex. One ticket gets you into all three museums, all within a block of each other. Lightcatcher art museum, 250 Flora St.; Old City Hall, a history museum, 121 Prospect St.; and Syre Education Center, 201 Prospect St. 360 778-8930

Mindport science museum, 210 W. Holly; 360-647-5614 or

Mount Baker Theatre, 104 N. Commercial St.; 360-734-6080 or

The Upfront Theatre, 1208 Bay St., an improv theater started by TV comedian Ryan Stiles; 360-733-8855 or

TRAVELER’S TIP

Other highlights include the south side of Bellingham, especially the historic Fairhaven District with mom-and-pop stores and art studios, and scenic Chuckanut Drive. See .

MORE INFORMATION

Learn more about downtown activities and events at . Also: Bellingham Whatcom County Tourism,

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