Going up

New projects push the sustainability envelope.


OHSU Center for Health and Healing

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Location: South Waterfront, Portland   
LEED target: platinum
Timeline: completion — fall 2006   Cost: $145.4 million
Project team: GBD Architects, Peterson Kolberg & Associates, Estime Group, Hoffman Construction, Gerding/Edlen Development
Green features: The center is a 16-story, 400,000-square-foot building that will house myriad medical operations. It is the first to be built in the OHSU Commons, a four-block area in the South Waterfront. Sustainable features include: a first-floor radiation slab that stores as much heat as a 3,000-gallon storage tank; 100% of rainwater used to flush public fixtures; a bio-reactor that treats up to 30,000 gallons of waste a day independently of the city sewer system.


The Casey

Location: Pearl District, Portland           
LEED target: platinum   
Timeline: completion ­— August 2007           
Cost: $58 million                   
Project team: GBD Architects, Hoffman Construction, Gerding/Edlen Development
Green features: Sixteen stories tall, the Casey includes 61 luxury condos and ground-floor retail. Sustainability items include: water source heat pumps, energy recovery ventilators; solar installation on the roof for power generation; an ecoroof to reduce storm water drainage; low-flow plumbing fixtures; and use of materials with short harvest cycles.


The Metropolitan

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Location: Pearl District, Portland           
LEED target:
silver
Timeline: occupancy in  2007                         
Cost: undisclosed
Project team: Boora Architects, Hoyt Street Properties, Andersen Construction
Green features: A 19-story tower with 121 condo units, plus retail, that will include high-performance energy-efficient mechanical systems and glazing systems, storm water retention for landscape irrigation, the incorporation of durable, low-maintenance materials and the use of natural ventilation for improved air quality.

 

 

 

 

 

 


12th and Washington

Location: downtown Portland’s west end       
LEED target: gold       
Timeline: completion — 2008
Cost: $181 million                   
Project team: ZGF Architects, Hoffman Construction, Gerding/Edlen Development
Green features: A 31-story mixed-used project, including a 154-room hotel, office space, retail and rental units with green aspects such as locally manufactured materials with recycled content, high-efficiency glazing, low-emitting materials, and water efficient fixtures, appliances and landscaping.


Oregon Research Institute

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Location: downtown Eugene      
LEED target: platinum
Timeline: construction begins fall 2006   
Cost: $24 million
Project team: Soderstrom Architects, Solarc Architects, Gerding/Edlen Development, Skanska Construction
Green features: The new headquarters for ORI is a 100,000-square-foot office building that will include: natural passive ventilation, ground source heat pump; high-performance building envelope; solar thermal high-efficiency hot water generation; daylight harvesting and light shifting; photovoltaic panels located on sun screens for power; zero VOC emitting interior materials; waterless urinals and dual flush toilets; green roof; recycled construction waste; recycled gray water; captured and recycled rainwater; prevention of night sky pollution.


Watershed Senior Housing

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Location: Hillsdale neighborhood, Portland
LEED target:  silver
Timeline: construction — fall 2006   
Cost: $24 million
Project team: Housing Development Corporation, William Wilson Architects, Walsh Construction
Green features: This project consists of 51 units of affordable housing, commercial/office space and community space. Sustainable features include: rainwater collection to be used for a toilet flushing system; high-efficiency building envelope constructed with insulated concrete forms; and native landscaping to store and treat storm water to help maintain water quality in the Stephens Creek and Fanno Creek watersheds.


The Meriweather

Location: South Waterfront, Portland       
LEED target: silver or gold       
Timeline: completion — mid-2006
Cost: $82.5 million               
Project team: Busby & Assoc. Architects, GBD Architects, Graham Eberle Norman & Assoc.; Hoffman Construction, Gerding/Edlen Development, Williams & Dame Development
Green features: This first residential project in the South Waterfront District consists of two towers of 21 and 24 stories. There are 17 street-level townhouses, 245 units and ground-floor retail. Green features include: storm water management; ecoroofs; nontoxic finishes; wheatboard cabinetry; low-flow plumbing; and energy systems aimed at making it 35% more efficient than codes require.


221 Molalla

{safe_alt_text}Location: Oregon City           
LEED target: silver
Timeline: completion — November 2006   
Cost: $6 million
Project team: Ryan Miyahira, Ankrom Moison Associated Architects, Redside Development, Fortis Construction Company
Green features: The project is a remodel of 35,000 square feet of retail and office space.  There will be native landscaping, bioswales and storm water filters, low-flow plumbing, above-code insulation and other items aimed at reducing energy costs 38% and use of  recycled building materials throughout.

Current Issue | MAY 08


Around the State

Q&A with new state labor chief
When Gov. Ted Kulongoski tapped Brad Avakian to be the state’s labor commissioner, the former Democratic senator and one-time civil rights lawyer says he had one thought.

Startups: The beat goes on in Portland
The downturn, big or small, is here. The gloomy economic pronouncements are being made. And for a lot of tech startups in Silicon Forest, things couldn’t be better.

CH2M Hill wins $5.25 billion contract on Panama Canal
An engineering firm that started as a collaboration between an Oregon State University professor and three of his former students has won the contract of a lifetime: to manage the $5.25 billion redevelopment of the Panama Canal.

Finding treasure in The Dalles
What started out as a vast demolition project has turned into an impromptu treasure hunt. Not gold coins or lost royal jewels, but instead precious metals from what was considered mostly scrap and junk.

Graphic: Portland construction costs low compared to other cities

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Biz Life

Using retreats to advance your team
Collaboration is essential in the workplace, but the office isn’t always the best environment in which to develop rapport. Corporate team-building activities and retreats can help by getting employees to interact outside the cubicle to improve their performance on the job.

More executives turning to private jets
So you’re on the brink of closing a lucrative deal, but while standing in line at the airport the terminal intercom announces that your flight has been delayed, again.

Easy, low-cost ways to keep employees healthier
Let’s be honest, there is only so much an ergonomically friendly office chair can do to promote health.

Next: The wood bike
Remember the iconic scene in E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial where Elliott and his alien friend fly through the air on a bike, silhouetted by the moon?

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Statewide ranking of commercial real estate firms

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From The Editor

Spring, Botox in the air
When the weather turns sunny it puts us in the mood to freshen up.

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Feedback

Online survey: Readers share their economic mood

Value of state’s prisons deserves broader view

Dispute between victims group and Pew Center

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