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Portland skyline
Photo: Richard Luebke
Commonwealth Building (Pietro Belluschi, 1948)
Photo: Richard Luebke
Cast-iron storefronts in Old Town
Photo: Richard Luebke
Portlandia" above the entrance of the
Portland Building
Photo: Barry Sears
Pioneer Courthouse Square with
Jackson Tower (1912)
Photo: Barry Sears

Study Tour to Portland, Oregon
October 22-25, 2009

Think about Portland. Green, Livable, Sustainable, Great Public Transit: It’s a magnet for today’s urban traveler.

Far-sighted governors and mayors of the 1970s and 80s helped lay the groundwork. A 1973 state law created an “Urban Growth Boundary” – meant to protect farm and forest - in effect limiting sprawl and keeping downtown vital. An early move to light rail, now followed by a streetcar system and even the nation’s second urban aerial tram, has made Portland a public-transit star. The city’s planners will address us.

Portland had its own Daniel Burnham in A. E. Doyle, whose firm designed many of the elegant downtown towers from the early 20th-Century. His Benson hotel was modeled after Chicago’s Blackstone. Among the city’s noteworthy architecture: the Commonwealth Building (Doyle partner Pietro Belluschi, 1948) is the nation’s first truly “modern” office tower, beating Chicago by a decade. The first large-scale project in the post-modern style, the Portland Building (Michael Graves), became a sensation in 1982 on the covers of both Time and Newsweek.

In recent years, while other cities hired international stars for new construction, Portland excelled in adaptive re-use. Architect Brad Cloepfil made a national reputation for his firm, Allied Works, with the 1990 renovation of a 1910 paint warehouse into dramatic headquarters for the Wieden+Kennedy Company. A nearby theater complex, developed by Gerding/Edlen, began life in 1891 as the Portland Armory. It’s been granted a LEED-Platinum rating, highest category of the U.S. Green Building Council. The firms’ principals will interpret both projects for us.

A Portland city block is only two-hundred feet square, the smallest of any major American city. That means more light at street level and more corners for stores. People live close to downtown, where there’s a vibrant restaurant and craft-brew pub scene.

Local planners have a habit of turning parking lots into parks, even replacing a riverfront expressway with a swath of green. Architect firms shamelessly promote their Green credentials, landing business in other cities eager to imitate. One firm, Thomas Hacker Architects, has created a “Platinum Tour” and a “Planning Tour” for visiting professionals. They’ll share them with CAF travelers.

We’ll tour two outstanding gardens, Japanese and Classical Chinese, each considered the best of its kind in the U.S. And the Portland Art Museum will host us for a reception in its distinguished entrance wing, an early modernist Belluschi design from 1932. We expect this to be a memorable tour!

Price TBD

For more information contact Vickie Apostolopoulos at development(at)architecture.org or Barry Sears at Bsears(at)architecture.org.

Downloadable PDFs for:
Portland Study Tour Itinerary
Portland Pre-Trip Option
Portland Registration Form




View Photos from China 2007

View Photos from Rome 2006

View Photos from the Prague/Budapest Trip 2005


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