Archives for the ‘Portland’ Category

Is Seattle the odd man out?

Last week’s news was a bit of a shocker in the region, as Washington State went through its primary election. Voters seemed to be bludgeoning incumbents, from rural port commissioners through to mayors of significant municipalities. As Jeff Mapes put it, it was a bad day for incumbents. The biggest upset, however, was the defeat [...]

Positive lessons from industrial parks?

Industrial parks have fascinated me for a long time. They are largely an artifact of the 20th century, but with their arrangement of small-to-medium industrial buildings and extensive rail infrastructure, in many ways they were the last expression of 19th century economics, philosophically obsolete from the moment they were built. A visit to the average [...]

Rail transit: Two modes better than one?

Last week, the Metro Council endorsed the High Capacity Transit System Plan. This plan identifies a series of corridors throughout the region as the next logical routes for high capacity transit. Despite the fact that the plan does not specifically identify modes for each corridor, many of these routes are spoken of as potential MAX [...]

Facebook vs. the newspaper, or reversing the online journalism debate

The newspaper is dying. Here, in the Portland, Oregon region, our major daily paper — the Oregonian — has been cadaverously thinner and thinner by the day. Alternative biweekly Portland Tribune recently ceased publishing its Tuesday edition, boasting that their content could now be found on Fridays at the newsstand, and constantly on the web, [...]

The Seattle Bus Challenge

It began with, as usual, a Monday lunch. Dan, Portland blogger, avowed transit geek, and ideas guy, had a question: were transit systems in the northwest well developed enough that a person could ride from Portland to Seattle, purely by using local busses? No Greyhound, Gray line, Amtrak, or charter systems. True, public busses.
For a [...]

WES, at last

One-hundred and one years ago this month, the Oregon Electric Railway opened up between Salem and Portland. The OE offered itnerurban transit service to residents between the two cities, allowing people in rural areas the benefits of urban jobs and educations. More frequent commuter trains worked the line from Portland to Wilsonville, about a third [...]

Portland Streetcar Obamamania

Can we have a time-out on the whole streetcar expansion thing?
Recently, the Oregonian printed a story on the impending Portland Streetcar System Plan. What’s really interesting is to compare the system’s proposed map, (as shown here in a Big O rendering,) with historic maps of the Portland Traction system, such as this one from 1924. [...]

Questions for Sam

Recently, Portland City Commissioner (and Mayoral candidate) Sam Adams and County Commissioner Ted Wheeler have been promoting a new revenue plan to fund street maintenance. The fee would be a City of Portland fee, and the city has put up a website for the proposal:
“The Safe, Sound and Green Streets Proposal was conceived to address [...]

The Interstate Debacle

I’ve been watching with interest for the last month or so as the City of Portland’s proposal to rename Interstate Avenue became a political boondoggle. Although I have strong feelings on the matter, I’ve stayed out of commenting on it, largely because I am not a citizen of fair PDX, and since I don’t brook [...]

Trams! Trams! Trams!

Over at OregonLive, they are reporting about a new tram proposal, this time for Troutdale:
Milwaukie-based Mass Tram America hopes to build wind turbines and solar-panel structures from Troutdale to Mount Hood. They would be used as power and infrastructure for a tram system that would carry passengers and freight — ultimately nationwide.
The current Portland Aerial [...]