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View Full Version : 'The Fields' Portland begins process for next Pearl park



MarkDaMan
Mar 26, 2007, 4:05 PM
http://www.djc-or.com/APTImages/djc_29176.jpg
Daily Journal of Commerce Photo

Next Pearl park’s got potential
Daily Journal of Commerce
by Alison Ryan
03/26/2007

The grass is green. Other than that, the future site of the third Pearl District park doesn't have an awful lot going for it right now. Cement trucks and heavy machinery sidle daily through the Northwest 11th Avenue site, which acts now as a staging area for the Encore condominium project. Across Northwest Naito Parkway, the faded hulk of the former Centennial Mills looms.

But soon enough, the site's grass will be even greener.

The city of Portland has pushed the process for The Fields, as the to-be-designed park is called, to the starting line by issuing a request for proposals for design and construction services. Potential respondents got an early glimpse of the site, and the project in context, during a pre-submittal meeting last Friday. And the city's hopes for what could be, said George Lozovoy, Parks and Recreation project manager, are high.

"Parks has a high level of expectation," Lozovoy said, "for high quality, high-level design."

The vision of the future park, captured in a 2002 framework study by Peter Walker and Partners Landscape Architecture, has its gaze trained on pure recreation. The Walker-designed Jamison Square's shallow waters and smooth bocce-perfect spaces are the neighborhood's community gathering space. The urban wetland and grass shelves of Tanner Springs, designed by Dreiseitl/Waterscapes and Greenworks P.C., offer room for contemplation. But The Fields, as the community's third and biggest park, will be the Pearl's place for working up a sweat: ball-tossing, tag-playing and fetch-making.

And the Portland Development Commission anticipates that eventually there will be children around to make the most of the three-acre site. Affordable, family-size rental housing is planned for Station Place Lot 5, said Steven Shain, a PDC development manager, and a request for proposals for the development is anticipated to go out in April.

"There will be a host of children through here," he said.

In fact, nearly everything that the potential team members saw on Friday will soon change. The Encore is going up, and the steps of its ground-level townhouse units are designed to cascade down into the park; the building's main entry will also face the park. In fact, Leslie Cliffe of BOORA Architects told the potential responders, the park is at the forefront of design.

"(The Encore) is really designed to engage the park directly, and to be an element within the park," she said.

Centennial Mills, too, will emerge as something different. The PDC plans to issue a nationwide request for qualifications this week, Shain said, for creative redevelopment of the site. Though a framework for the site lists possible ideas, such as a museum or a "working" waterfront of river-related industry and activity, part of the process will be bringing a variety of ideas to the table. The RFQ, Shain said, will likely lead to seven teams being selected for an initial interview, which will lead to the selection of three finalists.

Industry interest in the $3 million Fields project is big. Last Friday's non-mandatory meeting drew a crowd of about 30. As of Friday, 134 people had downloaded the RFP from the city's website.

Public interest in planning the park is expected to be big, too. A citizen advisory committee is being formed. The RFP puts "meaningful community involvement in the design process" as a key objective. And the community activity that surrounded the design of Tanner Springs, Lozovoy said, is a good model.

"Greenworks and Dreiseitl set the bar really high, as far as public participation goes," he said.

Proposals are due April 12, with a shortlist expected by April 17. The city hopes a yet-to-be picked selection committee will recommend a finalist by the end of April. And construction is anticipated to begin in May 2008, with estimated completion by November 2008.
http://www.djc-or.com/viewStory.cfm?recid=29176&userID=1

JoshYent
Mar 26, 2007, 7:18 PM
nice!

mcbaby
Mar 26, 2007, 7:44 PM
a ball park would be very nice for that neighborhood.

pdx2m2
Mar 26, 2007, 10:11 PM
I think the final program will be determined after neighborhood meetings...my impression is that the program includes unstructured fields..open lawn area although not necessarily baseball or soccer fields...the park could also include dogs, community gardens, play areas..will be fun to finally see it develop. The major issue for the park design is whether and how the fields connects to Cent. Mill across Naito. The Pete Walker Master Plan calls for the boardwalk to be elevated through the park and land at an upper floor in the Cent. Mill project. As I understand it this scope is part of the Fields Concept Design although may not be funded. It's hard to see how Cent. Mill can work without a pedestrian connection back to the Park and Pearl.

zilfondel
Mar 26, 2007, 11:37 PM
So would families. Interestingly, I just read that Manhattan is seeing a massive boom in little kiddies - all the rich young couples started having kids, yet haven't moved to the burbs yet.

I wonder when the tipping point of an attractive urban environment will be to make more families want to move there... or if it already has but there just isn't any units big enough for them?

===============

The major issue for the park design is whether and how the fields connects to Cent. Mill across Naito. The Pete Walker Master Plan calls for the boardwalk to be elevated through the park and land at an upper floor in the Cent. Mill project... It's hard to see how Cent. Mill can work without a pedestrian connection back to the Park and Pearl.

Yea, it will definitely need some sort of bridge to run over the train tracks & Naito Parkway... otherwise the little kiddies will become roadkill. :(

I would also like to see them get some more boats down at the Centennial Mills - maybe a sailboat rehab & construction dock - that would be pretty cool.

I also hope this new park doesn't have those stupid off-the-shelf playground kits you find popping up all over the place, with the same colors, the same ladders, etc... particularly when you can be innovative!

http://www.metropolismag.com/cda/story.php?artid=2389

http://www.metropolismag.com/webimages/2389/BedfordTrees.jpg

CouvScott
Mar 26, 2007, 11:42 PM
It's hard to see how Cent. Mill can work without a pedestrian connection back to the Park and Pearl.

Maybe they should try something like this that is under construction in Vancouver...

http://i40.photobucket.com/albums/e214/couvttocs/Vancouverlandbridge.jpg

Aya Murase
Mar 29, 2007, 4:50 PM
Regarding the Metropolis article mentioned in a previous post, I feel that I must clarify that the design of Murase Plaza Memorial Park in Wilsonville was conceived entirely by the late Robert Murase. It pains me that the author and/or source of this article could be so misinformed of this fact.

MarkDaMan
Nov 1, 2007, 3:20 PM
Centennial Mills’ neighbor a Fields of dreams
Proposed adjacent park isn’t close to development, but plans still call for a Willamette River bridge
Daily Journal of Commerce
POSTED: 05:00 AM PST Thursday, November 1, 2007
BY TYLER GRAF

The long-awaited redevelopment of the historic Centennial Mills is eliciting elation but also anxiety over how it’s restored and how it changes the northern edge of the Pearl District. And key to its success is development of The Fields – a complementary park adjacent to the Centennial Mills site – plans for which have been incubating for several years.

The two projects – Centennial Mills and The Fields – are separate. But it’s nonetheless essential, said Pearl District advocate Patricia Gardner, to design the park around the new development.

For the time, however, development on the park has slowed to a crawl. Before progressing too far with park development, the architectural firms contracted to design The Fields must first wait for Centennial Mills to move forward. That will take months, as development proposals from three competing companies aren’t due to the Portland Development Commission until February or March.

The Fields’ main feature will be a bridge, linking the park to whatever is developed at Centennial Mills. And the park’s bridge, George Lozovoy of Portland Parks and Recreation said, must work in conjunction with any future development.

“The real gist of this is we need to coordinate a beginning and ending point for our bridge,” Lozovoy said. “Our plan has the ability to have several beginning and ending points, but we need to wait to move ahead.”

Two landscape architecture firms – one local, one from out of town – are steering the park’s design. San Francisco-based Cheryl Barton, who specializes in urban design and site planning, is working closely with the three out-of-town development teams, providing tours of the Centennial Mills development site, for example. Portland firm Koch Landscape Architecture is working closely with the neighborhood, playing host to public workshops alongside the Pearl District Neighborhood Association.

So what features will the 1.5-acre park have? Expect attractions for dogs and children. But skateboarders shouldn’t hold their breath waiting for red-carpet treatment.

A survey of Pearl District residents last spring found absolute support for innocuous and entirely park-like features: trees, seating and drinking fountains. The poll turned up tempered support for group areas and off-leash dog areas, and absolutely no support for a skating area.

The neighborhood association says it wants to engender a family-friendly atmosphere that is, in the words of an anonymous public responder, not a “welcoming place for the homeless.”

“We had a very successful design workshop that defined what programs the park would have,” landscape architect Steven Koch said.

The park also represents an affirmation of green, environmental development. When the three potential developers met the public last week, developer Kevin Daniels of Seattle-based Nitze-Stagen said a continued commitment to sustainability and green spaces is necessary.

“We’re all into LEED standards, but you guys are way ahead of the rest of the country,” Daniels said. “But what’s next?”

Koch and Barton’s designs for The Fields include an “urban dog park,” an area for children, a promenade and extended green spaces for activities.

The cost? At this premature juncture, Koch says, it’s still too early to say.
http://www.djcoregon.com/articleDetail.htm/2007/11/01/Centennial-Mills-neighbor-a-Fields-of-dreams-Proposed-adjacent-park-isnt-close-to-development-but-pl