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KGW Poll: Location Shapes Residents Opinion on Growth
By Randy Neves and Doug Irving, KGW Staff
December 5, 2001
City planners are turning their attention to the
65 surface parking lots scattered throughout Portland, envisioning
apartments and offices instead of asphalt.
The parking lots consume precious downtown land,
city commissioner Charlie Hales said. By building on them, he said,
Portland could grow from within, rather than pushing its boundaries
outward.
“Take those parking lots and grow buildings on
them, instead of paving over farmland,” Hales suggested. “(That)
is something that people far from the downtown still ought to care
about.”
Many of the 65 surface lots in Portland’s city
center belong to a third generation of the Goodman family. Greg
Goodman has allowed a new office tower on one lot, and said he
wouldn’t mind doing it again.
“The problem with it is, in most cases, it doesn’t
make any economic sense whatsoever,” Goodman said.
Both sides are looking into using government
subsidies to sweeten the deal. The city already pitched in money to
the Brewery Blocks project to hide 1,300 planned parking spots below
ground.
Planners say almost anything is better than a
parking lot. Commercial office space would be fine, but planners are
especially keen on new downtown housing for all income levels, and
developments that provide jobs. Even a parking garage, they said, is
better than a surface lot.
Previous Stories:
-Location Shapes
Resident's Opinions on Growth
-Metro Area Headed
in the Right Direction
-Area Residents Worry
about the Economy
-Recession Complicates
Planning
-Editor's note
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