Guest Column

Aside from a handful of multi-story buildings near downtown, Bend is sprawled. Whether you are talking residentially – Broken Top, Boyd Acres, Deschutes River Woods – or commercially – The Old Mill, Cascade Village Shopping Center – this town in notoriously flat. We are designing a community separated by miles, inaccessible due to excessive urban sprawl. It’s time we stop to think about how we got here, and the consequences of this type of growth.

I remember when my family moved here about 15 years ago. Although I was just a child, I knew this place was far different from my original home of Portland. Besides the obvious, such as less rain, more nature, and a small-town vibe, one of the characteristics that stuck out the most was the lack of apartment buildings, skyscrapers, or any concentrated shopping centers — such as malls.

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Harrison Sky Wiltse lives in Bend.

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(2) comments

cutedog

Thank you, Harrison, you speak the truth! Sprawl is inevitable with our current land use planners choosing outlying subdivisions (which need MORE roads and infrastructure, and pleases the billionaire developers) as status quo for a growing population. And we're not even mentioning water needs, etc. It's so frustrating to watch.

LP1

I agree with the author 100%. Cities around the country are encouraging landlords to monetize their air rights above existing buildings to create livable, sustainable, and walkable communities. City planning departments are also asking landlords to include privately-owned, public open spaces (POPOS) to offer green space and public art in a building’s upper floors. In Bend the views would be amazing! In cities, like San Francisco, the main encouragement came in the form of density bonuses from the city’s Planning Department. Bend is ready to pioneer this large city approach on a smaller scale demonstrating that moving human habitation up, and not out, is environmentally responsible for rural settings.

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