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Speaking of green-energy companies, Vistas Pearl headquarters is well underway.

This is now a shell, totally gutted:

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When was the last time any of you took a long trip down the gorge? I just came back from a trip that took me to Tri City via the Gorge. Have you seen the wind turbine "farm" on the Washington side of the gorge? It has to be around 40+ miles long. Then the Oregon side catches up about 3/4 of the way. It's amazing looking. I dig it. But what's it for?
 
When was the last time any of you took a long trip down the gorge? I just came back from a trip that took me to Tri City via the Gorge. Have you seen the wind turbine "farm" on the Washington side of the gorge? It has to be around 40+ miles long. Then the Oregon side catches up about 3/4 of the way. It's amazing looking. I dig it. But what's it for?

It's for generating electricity.

barfo
 
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"A century later, the harrowing flight of the survivors from Oregon was dramatized in a popular video game."
 
It's for generating electricity.

barfo

I remember driving through palm springs with my family when I was a kid. My brother was convinced that the turbines were causing all the wind.
 
Speaking of green-energy companies, Vistas Pearl headquarters is well underway.

This is now a shell, totally gutted:

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You're gettin slow Fez! That project has been in the works for a while :)

I actually just did a place study on that project.
 
Anus. For who?

For whoever buys it from the electric company. So far as I know, it is not dedicated to a particular use. The owner of the windfarm sells the juice to the power company, the power company sells it to whoever happens to be running their hairdryer in Los Angeles that morning. Most likely DaRizzle, if I had to guess.

barfo
 
You're gettin slow Fez! That project has been in the works for a while :)

I actually just did a place study on that project.

I'm a huge procrastinator sometimes! I still wish that Vistas built their HQ's down at SoWa. That area needs more diversity, every tower in that neighborhood is residential so far.
 
Speaking of SoWa, a new 18-story apartment building is up for review.

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Portland has the nation’s tightest apartment market, according to figures released this week by the U.S. Census Bureau.

With a vacancy rate of just four percent, Portland’s rental market is the lowest of 75 metropolitan areas tracked by the government.

LINK

The other project that has broke ground (SoWa):

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For whoever buys it from the electric company. So far as I know, it is not dedicated to a particular use. The owner of the windfarm sells the juice to the power company, the power company sells it to whoever happens to be running their hairdryer in Los Angeles that morning. Most likely DaRizzle, if I had to guess.

barfo

Not trying to derail the thread. But....

That is privately owned land? That wind farm goes on and on and on and on. It's incredible.
 
Not trying to derail the thread. But....

That is privately owned land? That wind farm goes on and on and on and on. It's incredible.

I don't know the specifics of that particular windfarm. But windfarms on the Oregon side, the wind power company pays individual farmers for the rights to put up windmills on their land. The land under the windfarm you are looking at may be owned by a number of different people/corporations, the wind power companies have separate contracts with each of them.

barfo
 
I'm a huge procrastinator sometimes! I still wish that Vistas built their HQ's down at SoWa. That area needs more diversity, every tower in that neighborhood is residential so far.

Vistas is struggling and will most likely never move into their new HQ.
 
It's Vestas, guys.

barfo
 
Vistas is struggling and will most likely never move into their new HQ.

Be curious what you are basing this on. Seems to me a company with revenues approaching $10 billion likely has the capital to finish the building.

barfo
 
A little birdie told me that PAW may finally start back up this summer or early fall.

After three years of being stalled this timeline is encouraging.

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A little birdie told me that PAW may finally start back up this summer or early fall.

After three years of being stalled this timeline is encouraging.

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But is he restarting with the original plan, or the truncated tower that was announced at the time of the shutdown?

barfo
 
But is he restarting with the original plan, or the truncated tower that was announced at the time of the shutdown?

barfo

The slightly shorter revised version.

It'll still be nearly 100' taller than the Fox Tower.
 
An addition is proposed for Schnitzer Center for the Performing Arts:

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(Pearl District) West Bearing building - TBD - To Be Demolished
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This one is named the “West Bearing” project after the small building on the location now. These are the first new market-rate apartments to be built in several years, a sign of optimism about the economy. The “West Bearing” project will provide 50 high-end apartments in a six story building with a “car stacker” system.(I want to see that!) Work should begin after demolition of the small building, and completion is expected within a year.

[video=youtube;BR21N3S97g4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR21N3S97g4[/video]​
 
Plans for the public markets moves forward
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The Multnomah County Board of Commissioners this morning approved starting talks to turn four blocks at the west end of the Morrison Bridge into an office high-rise and indoor public market similar to Seattle's Pike Place Market.

"Let the negotiations begin," declared County Chairman Jeff Cogen after the vote. Cogen called the plan a "win-win," in part because selling and developing the county-owned property, now used for parking, would bring it back onto tax rolls

LINK
 
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Copycats!

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US Bancorp Tower - Portland
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Tianlun Commercial Building, Dalian China
 
Summer tourism!

[video=youtube;B1B2_r6Azvg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1B2_r6Azvg&playnext=1&list=PLED5F58C9921F7799[/video]​
 
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What could have been. :sigh: The project is not dead, rather it's stalled indefinitely.

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The first two will be installed in Sacramento next month. They’ve been in [Research & Development] in The Netherlands for six years. It’s the most proven vertical axle turbine. Each one is rated for 3,000 kilowatts/year. The standard single-family house uses about 10 kilowatts. So three of these could take care of an entire house. The current concept features 230 [turbines]. Our goal is 300.

In the winter, there’s no covered area in Waterfront Park. This would be a public space covered with photovoltaic panels. Plus we’re going to put in 10 public restrooms that we’ll maintain. And we’re going to light the park for the city. So we would be the first park to have its power produced on site. We could power all the lights: They only use one megawatt/year. We’ll produce three megawatts. The rest would go to the city’s 2020 plan to achieve 20 percent sustainable energy by 2020. The reason to have it in the heart of the city is that you don’t give up the 20 to 40 percent of the power transmission lost from remote generation. We want a two-year outreach effort. We want to talk to all elected officials and all neighbors before we even design it. It has to be a transparent process. This would be truly net zero, generating all its power, harvesting all its water, dealing with all its waste on site. If we meet the criteria and do our outreach, people will get behind it, because it would be the vision of what Portland is.

It’s a big billboard for sustainability. It’s wind, solar. It’s dealing with our waste, harvesting water, even the cleanest way to park cars and harvest their energy when those cars are electric. OMSI and Ecotrust understand what we’re trying to do. They suggested it could be a testing ground for turbines and a certification facility.

Five percent of our gross: $500,000 to $1.5 million per year. That would be the most revenue the city gets from any property. Plus we’ll light the park, put in 10 restrooms, and provide a beautiful 30,000-square-foot canopy in Waterfront Park!
 
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