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LUTC Minutes 2016-12-12

Eliot Neighborhood Association

Land Use Committee

Minutes for December 12th, 2016

DRAFT-not yet approved

 

  1. Neighborhood contact from project(s) on N Williams and N Fargo — (Currently People’s Pig, an abandoned house and bluehouse green house)
    1. The proposed project will be L-shaped, with the long leg fronting North Cook across from the new apartments at 115 Cook and abutting the new Century apartment building. The short leg will extend south along Williams to the Solterra site.  The L shape creates an interior courtyard.  The building as proposed will be six stories (5-over-1) as are other nearby projects.  Retail spaces will be on the ground floor and 70 housing units are planned with 30 underground parking spaces.  The top (sixth) floor is planned to have distinctive features so it will appeal as penthouse apartment space.  The committee was generally receptive to the proposal while Ken was present.  Afterwards concerns were voiced regarding elements of the sixth-floor design and material use.  
    2. Diagonally adjacent to boarded up house on N Fargo.  Proposal to turn this abandoned house into a 4-story building with ground floor almost entirely taken up to store 4 cars.  Allan mentioned that this seems like a waste of space although other LUTC folks seemed to think that all off-street parking is good regardless of how space-inefficient
    3. History of the site: The Parker’s are long-time black owners of this property, Ms. Parker is proceeding with development planning.  She also owns a house on the block fronting North Fargo and a site on NE Cook, where her new home is being constructed.  Her properties on this block are surrounded by other new apartment development proposals and she continues to be pressured by realtors and developers to sell out to white developers.  If this development proceeds, it will be the first major development by a black property owner in Eliot.  The architect for this project is Ken Moholt-Siebert, who used to live in NE Portland, but moved to California to take over a small family farm.  Nevertheless, he continues to work for clients in the area.  He is also working with the owner on her new residence and plans for development of her other lot in this block.
    4. The property is currently zoned Rx; however, Eliot requested it be downzoned to Rh.  That, and the fact surrounding properties are being developed to Rx density, spurred this large apartment proposal at this time.
  2. Discussion about #24 bus continuing to NW Portland and advocacy surrounding early implementation (Sherifa Roach)
    1. LUTC approved signing on to a letter which hasn’t been finalized yet supporting the extension of the #24 ASAP.
  3. Comp plan update – possible letter proposing to support Institutional zone plan (Allan)
    1. people were supportive of writing a letter re:Institutional zoning with the specifics that it would enable Emanual to build on land that they have been neglecting due to the restrictions in the IMP

Adjourned around 8:45pm

Portland’s Jazz Scene Yesterday and Today

Williams at Russell 1937
Paul’s Paradise, was around the corner at 19 N Russell Street—now a grass lot. Photo courtesy of Portland City Archives

In the early 1940s, Floyd Standifer could be found playing his trumpet to the hills. He would listen as the sound came echoing back. This was the way, in the farmlands outside of Gresham, he worked on perfecting his tone. However, he also learned a lot from Williams Avenue in Portland.

Continue reading Portland’s Jazz Scene Yesterday and Today

Kay Toran: Neighbor, Role Model and Leader

Kay Toran
Kay Toran, Eliot native and Volunteers Of America Oregon’s CEO and President

A family of 5 from Alabama decides to make their way to Oregon for a promising future and opportunity. Not such an unusual story for today but being an African American family in the 1940’s such a decision would be brave and fraught with worry about how the Pacific Northwest would treat them and also that it could be a long time before they see their extended family again. This is the beginning of the story of Kay Toran’s life which has been nothing short of an amazing. Growing up in Eliot, working for public and government agencies and finally finding her place in nonprofit organizations, Toran has been a neighbor, role model and leader for our community. The following is taken from an interview with Kay Toran and it is meant to help new as well as longtime residents learn a little more about our neighborhood and one of the families that has lived in Portland for 3 generations.

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A Whole Lot of Shaking Going On

Body QuirksWant to get back in shape but feeling out of place next to those super-fit twenty-something bodies happily preening in their color coordinated Lululemons? Maybe you’re in need of a workout that accommodates or helps you rehab an injury? Well, your answer lives right here in the neighborhood and it’s called BodyQuirks (BQ).

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LUTC Minutes 2016-11-14

Eliot Land Use and Transportation Committee
Minutes for November 14, 2016
Submitted by Vice-chair, Mike Warwick

7:15 pm Vice-chair Warwick called the meeting to order before a quorum was present in order to proceed with Emanuel Hospital’s annual review, as required by the Institutional Management Plan (IMP) it has with Eliot and Boise Neighborhood Associations.

Present: Mike, Montse, Phil, and Paul. Visitors from Emanuel were present as was one neighbor/resident.

Continue reading LUTC Minutes 2016-11-14

First Heart Valve Procedure in Oregon


legacyheartvalve01
On June 13, 2016, James Kyser, M.D., of the Pediatric Cardiology Center of Oregon, became the first and only pediatric cardiologist in the state to provide the Edwards SAPIEN XT transcatheter heart valve procedure for pulmonic valve replacement to pediatric patients. This procedure took place just two months after the FDA approval.

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Livability Team Adopt a Block

PickUpTrash
Keep the Neighborhood Clean!

Hi Eliot Neighbors!  My name is Lauren Mullen and I’m a member of the Eliot Livability Team.

Our neighborhood has linked with SOLVE to sponsor Neighborhood Litter Pick-Up events during the year. The last litter pickup was in October. We would like to build on that spirit of good stewardship by starting an Adopt-a-Block initiative. We want it to be simple and informal. Let me know if you are interested in keeping your block free of litter and the storm drains flowing and I’ll add your name to the list which will be published periodically.

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Garlington Center – An Innovative Model for Healthcare

Garlington Center Clinic

In September Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare’s Garlington Center, located in the Eliot neighborhood on NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd (between NE Morris and NE Monroe Streets), hosted an exciting community event celebrating the groundbreaking of a new integrated health and wellness clinic and a new 52-unit affordable housing apartment building. The new clinic will provide mental health, addiction treatment, primary care and wellness programs to low income community members. The new apartment building will be available to Cascadia clients, US Veterans and displaced North/Northeast Portland residents.

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Welcome to the Neighborhood?

N/NE Quadrant PlanThe future of Eliot was hotly debated during the NE Quadrant (NEQ) plan process with most of the NE neighborhood representatives opposing widening I-5, replacement of the overpasses with “lids,” and the Hancock overcrossing. The NEQ increased allowed building height and density along Broadway and in the area across Broadway from the Rose Quarter. City Planners believe the new lid and Hancock extension will “reconnect” Eliot to a new “Pearl District East” development across Broadway from the Rose Quarter and along Broadway on Eliot’s southern edge.

Continue reading Welcome to the Neighborhood?