Quote:
Originally Posted by Agent Orange
How do you explain Portland then? Although it's subjective, I much prefer Portland's infill architecture to Denver's and nowadays the two cities are about equal in terms of housing costs. Also, PDX's corporate presence is even worse than Denver's
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Portland has a condo market, we don't. Just about every building I think you're referring to are condo's. The apartment buildings out that way are largely the same basic stuff we're seeing here. That's true of Seattle too FWIW, I should have taken a picture from my hotel room. Capitol Hill in Seattle is a sea of 5-story EIFS buildings just like ours.
I 100% believe that within one year of the state actually fixing the condo defect issue (which at this point may never happen) we'd see 4-5 Portland style buildings out of the ground.
There are actually lots of lessons we can learn from Portland. The importance of fixed rail in terms of stimulating desnse urban growth. What's happened along their streetcar line is remarkable. What they do with food trucks and pods should be straight up copied, and could be done with one simple change at the city council level (Austin is seeing this as well). I've been in touch with my council person for years on that subject, they have no intention of making it easier to operate food trucks here. Which sucks, it's great for neighborhood development.