Second Harvest is expanding into an adjacent building, according to city permit data.

The building next to its current food distribution warehouse at 402 N. Perry St. is undergoing a $400,000 renovation, turning the 24,000-square-foot building into a warehouse focused on feeding hungry children.

The new center is called Wolff Family Child Hunger Solution Center.

Second Harvest’s Bite2Go program provides weekend food packs to more than 5,000 school children. Second Harvest estimates there are 25,000 hungry children in the region who are members of families living on the edge of poverty and could use the weekend meals.

The Spokane- and Tri-Cities-based nonprofit is the largest hunger-relief organization in Eastern Washington and North Idaho. Last year, it provided 30 million pounds of food to a network of 250 neighborhood food banks and meal centers, feeding more than 55,000 people a week.

The general contractor for the renovation is Construction Management & Forensics of Coeur d’Alene. Copeland Architecture & Construction of Spokane is the architect. – N.D.

Plans indicate bar

for Park View West

The Park View West residential development could be getting a new retail tenant.

1st Avenue Chelan LLC, whose principal is Scott Isaak, filed plans with the city to remodel retail space on the development’s lower floor for The Union Tavern, at 1309 W. First Ave.

Isaak did not respond to requests for comment.

Spokane Valley-based T.W. Clark Construction is the project contractor.

Two sets of brothers, Matt and Ryan Goodwin and Jordan and Joel Tampien of 4 Degrees Real Estate, are the developers of Park View West, a seven-story residential tower that includes 51 residential units with a rooftop deck and fitness center.

Matt Goodwin and Jordan Tampien are co-owners of the Boiler Room on Spokane’s North Side and Backyard Public House in the West Central neighborhood. Goodwin also co-owns Press, Fast Eddie’s Bar and Grill, Remedy and Volstead Act. – A.E.