Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
The Housing Authority of Portland (HAP) was created by the Portland City Council on December 11, 1941. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The city council created the agency in response to a massive influx of people who came to work at shipyards in the Portland area during World War II. [ 4 ]
The Harrison Tower Apartments, West Tower, formerly the Portland Center Apartments II, is a building in downtown Portland, Oregon.Part of a three-building complex with a Mid-Century modernist design, the west building was the tallest in the city from its completion in 1965 until it was surpassed in 1969 by the Bank of California Tower.
In addition, the Portland Business Alliance sent a letter to city officials asking for removal or relocation of Right 2 Dream Too around December 2012. [ 4 ] In 2013, the encampment and Portland city officials developed tentative plans to move the homeless camp to a city-owned parking lot under the Broadway Bridge in Portland's Pearl District .
Rooming houses are better described as a "living arrangement" rather than a specially "built form" of housing; rooming houses involve people who are not related living together, often in an existing house, and sharing a kitchen, bathroom (in most cases), and a living room or dining room.
The COVID-19 pandemic, and associated economic downturn, housing shortages and housing price inflation, outpacing wage growth, and the end of government protections and assistance to counter the economic effects of COVID-19 -- along with the explosive growth in addictions to methamphetamine, opioids, and Fentanyl-- contributed to a sharp rise ...
Pages in category "Apartment buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Portland, Oregon" The following 58 pages are in this category, out of 58 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Yard is a 21-story, 206-foot (63 m)-tall apartment building built at the Burnside Bridgehead in Portland, Oregon's Kerns neighborhood, in the United States. [1] [2] It was designed by Skylab Architecture for Key Development Co. of Hood River and Guardian Real Estate Services of Portland. [3]