Credit: Shannon Kidd
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Shannon Kidd

City Council voted yesterday to let a developer build a 16-story apartment complex in the middle of Old Town Chinatown, potentially shifting the city’s standard on height limits downtown.

The decision, ushered in by Mayor Ted Wheeler, sets the maximum height of a proposed building in Old Town to 160 feet (or, 16 stories), far beyond the 100 foot limit currently imposed by the Chinatown Historic District. While the settled on height is still shorter than the building developer’s initial request of 200 feet, some still believe the new tower will threaten the historic designation of the Chinatown Historic Districtโ€”and irreversibly alter the downtown neighborhood’s feel.

The vote may be seen as a signal to developers that the city can, and will, bend to developer pressure within Portland’s historic districts.

The property in question sits between Northwest 4th and 5th, and is currently being used as a parking lot. Guardian proposed to turn it into a mixed-use building, which will include 324 apartments. It was initially unclear if the developer would make any of these apartments affordable for low-income Portlanders.

That changed yesterday, when Commissioner Nick Fish introduced and passed an amendment that requires Guardian to use an affordable housing “bonus”โ€”a tool that allows developers to increase heights in exchange for affordable housing unitsโ€”to achieve any extra height beyond 125 feet. This means that 20 to 25 percent of the added square footage must be be affordable housing.

The city council vote clashes with the Historic Landmarks Commission vote to deny the height increase, which argued that even 125 feet is too tall for the Chinatown Historic District. One advocate, Katelyn Weber of Restore Oregon, said at a prior council meeting, โ€œAt 125 feet, Block 33 will overshadow historic buildings. At 160 feet, it will swallow them whole.โ€

Wheeler originally proposed the building reach 160 feet on the west side of the block, but was persuaded by Comissioner Dan Saltzman that 200 feet may work. The two voted to approve Saltzman’s 200-foot cap amendment, but they were unable to secure a third vote for that heightโ€”double the maximum height limits of the surrounding blocks. Instead, the 160-foot cap passed by a margin of 4-1, with Fritz, the dissenting vote, calling the decision a prime example of “spot zoning.”

The commissioners’ rare decision to overturn a Historic Landmarks Commission vote could seriously impact the HLC’s power over city development decisions in the futureโ€”and sets a clear example for future developers to point to when asking the city for special regulatory treatment.

3 replies on “Sixteen-Story Building Coming to Old Town Chinatown”

  1. Good. Build it. And when can we get Fritz out of office? I can’t remember the last time she’s done anything positive, and these latest series of NIMBY anti-development votes and positions she has taken make her a completely lost cause.

  2. The only โ€œhistoricโ€ atmosphere I feel in Old Town Chinatown is โ€œsleazeโ€.
    A total No Go Zone after dark. This is the beginning of population pressure
    pushing development (gentrification – Oh the Horror!) into the area. Just wait
    for the Post Office redevelopment to get started. The vagrants and their
    services could be moved out ahead of time (Wapato anyone?) to speed the
    process but not likely. All sorts of fighting, wailing, rending of clothes, and
    pulling of hair will take place before they are pushed out, but they will be
    pushed out. Maybe in 10 to 15 years the area will be decent.

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