This short clip by Neighborhood Films http://neighborhoodfilms.net/ expresses perfectly the fusion in Portland of its food culture and urban garden culture. All about Besaws restaurant.
I love Neighborhood Films' work.
Plus I love the inclusion of one my favorite songs: Wildwood Flower.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Rainy Portland Trip Postcard
A nice and mellow Portland postcard by Robbie Conaway
: "Our trip to The Pacific Northwest where we went hiking and camping in Mt. Hood and Green River Canyon, explored Cape Lookout Trail, ate at the delicious local food carts, barbecued in the rain, fished for Dungeness Crab in Netarts Bay, and drank at the local wineries."
Music by Bon Iver. Here's how it feels to be in rainy Portland.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Summer Most Popular Moving Time
Summer months are the most popular time to relocate. Try
to move before May or after August, or you might find movers and trucks booked
out. Good thing is, Portland's summers tend to be dry and sunny and Californiate in nature, so there's rarely worry about moving in the rain.
When looking for a moving company, look into a company's ratings and history.
Complete the statement of customer
responsibilities and inventory forms provided : the stuff you leave off the list is usually the first to go missing. (wink!)
Review more than one estimate; as they can vary widely.
Always find out what the company will do with your stuff in case it can't be
delivered at the right time: How much would storage cost? Do they arrange it?
For more tips: check www.ProtectYourMove.gov
Monday, August 27, 2012
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Oregon New Home Building Rises
Oregon's homeownership rate has fallen from 69% to 65%,
reports Elliot Njus of The Oregonian, coming back into balance with rental
housing.
Construction of new apartments has started to climb in Oregon. In 2011, almost
2000 apartments within 80 buildings were given permits to build: that's half
the normal pre-housing crisis figure, but has been enough to keep the
construction industry above water, leading to some more jobs opening up in those companies
that didn't go under.
Permits for new home-builds are also rising, compared to
a year ago.
Oregon home-for-Sale inventory has fallen, which is expected to lead to
rising house prices.
These are modest climbs and improvements, however, compared to the mid-2000's, yet these changes are grounds for optimism.
Friday, August 24, 2012
Postcard to Portland
Here's a sweet 4 minute postcard of Portland, produced by Sockeye Creative. Music by Portland performers MarchFourth.
Summer afternoons I can hear MarchFourth practice by the eastside waterfront...
Overview of Oregon's High Tech Industry
Want a reason to move to Portland? Want to find a job in Oregon's tech sector? While employment hasn't gone back to it's pre-recession levels, there is still quite a lot happening in Oregon's high tech sector.
Mike Rogoway of The Oregonian newspaper says Oregon's high tech sector is alive, growing, up and running, but still struggling.
- Oregon tech job numbers are nearly back to their 1997 levels (57,000 as of April 2012) but still way below their spike of 72,800 in 2001.
- Venture capital money is close to being back up to 2007 levels at 238.86 million (2011 stats)
Several publicly-traded tech companies live in
Portland's suburbs. FEI Co, in Hillsboro, is an electron microscope
manufacturer with both record revenues and stock prices. Its tools are key in
Intel's labs, and it's expanding into biotech and academic research.
Mentor Graphics Corp. just passed its $1 billion in
sales last year. A locally started Oregon company, it employs 1000 people in
Wilsonville.
Hillsboro's TriQuint Semiconductor's revenues are going
up since it bagged a contract that has every new iPhone using a TriQuint
amplifier. However, its limited manufacturing capacity has frustrated larger
contracts from being filled, letting investors down.
Other companies that occupy a niche: LatticeSemiconductor, and RadiSys Corp.
Many small but promising, privately held start ups are
doing business near each other in Portland's Pearl District: Act-On Software,
Elemental Technologies, Jama Software, Janrain, Puppet Labs, ShopIgniter and
Urban Airship. (Mozilla is likewise planning to open a Portland office). Most do their part to help build the infrastructure of the
mobile internet, but don't act as large scale, Silicon Valley-like magnets.
A possibly more
influential and riskier venture: Simple (aka BankSimple) moved to Portland in
2011 and plans to improve the online interface capabilities of banking and
similar industries.
Oregon's fastest growing aspect of the tech industry is
outside Portland. Data centers (for Facebook and Amazon) have opened in
Prineville, Oregon. With their capital intensive facilities (they require
hundreds of top-quality computers), Oregon's lack of a sales tax has drawn them
here like bees to honey, besides providing an exemption from property tax on
equipment.
Find Mike Rogoway's original story: "Investment in Oregon tech companies heats up..."
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Alternative Energy is Happening
In 2002 Oregon voters accepted Senate Bill 1149,
enabling public utilities companies, like Portland's local PGE, to offer
renewable energy alternatives. (The senate bill made into law what PGE had
already initiated 4 years before: offering renewable energy to it's customers)
Guess what, a decade on, the program is #1 in the nation:
- Wind companies have invested 4 and a half billion in Oregon already
- Oregon ranked # 2 in the 2010 US Clean Energy leadership index.
- Growth in non-hydro renewable energy capacity has risen in Oregon 530% from ten years ago
- $143 million invested in commercial and private solar projects across the state
Which means, Oregon has avoided putting 3.1 billion pounds
of CO2 into the sky. Just another reason to love Oregon's green.
Find a list of all the local businesses who buy
renewable power from PGE at GreenPowerOregon.com
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Stats on Senior Homebuyers
The Market Enhancement Group recently interpreted the
latest data found in the US Census, and found that 5 million senior Americans plan to
sell or buy a home within the next 3 years.
Home ownership for people 65 and over is
high, higher than any other age group.
Many plan to pay with cash from equity built in long-owned
homes, and therefore won't need preapproval from a lender. Irrelevant to these senior buyers: worry about credit scores and down payment size.
More real estate findings:
- 31% of homeowners own their homes free and clear
- 68% of seniors own their homes free and clear, the rest will do so within the next 6 years
- 15% of senior homeowners plan to sell their home in the next 3 years to buy another home
- 94% of these plan to pay cash for their next home
- Only 1.6% of retirees are moving out of state after they sell their homes
- Florida used to be the main attraction with 1 in 4 retirees heading there, but that has dropped to 1 in 7 between 2005 and 2010.
- Seniors are staying put: many are staying near to where they worked, only moving an hour or two outside the city, leaving high priced inter urban areas for less expensive property and taxes
In Your Portland Neighborhood
When I was little, our family was the first in our
apartment building to get a color TV. All the kids came to crane their necks in
our front door to see Sesame Street in color. Yellow big bird, Ernie with his
orange and blue striped t-shirt, blue cookie monster. This was years before
Elmo.
I remember a song from that show: Who are the people in your
neighborhood? There's the postman, the grocer, the auto mechanic. Even as a
child, it gave me a feeling of peace and belonging to know that I lived in a
neighborhood where other people lived, who did their work, and kept my world
functioning.
Here in Portland's inner neighborhoods you'll find the
printer, the professor, the jewelry maker, the barista, the tattoo artist. The
singer, the saleswoman, the food cart guy. But truly, you'll never find them
and meet them if you don't live in a Portland neighborhood.
A neighborhood is where you regularly travel. You set
your footprint there and you belong to it. You are central to its workings, and
your interaction with all the other people is what makes it a place worth being
in. It's the place your memories are seeded and take root, creating your life.
A good neighborhood contains the lovely and practical things that
compose your environment: the big trees, the diverse kinds of homes, the range
of human expression in the shops and businesses people have individually
designed and run, in the specialties they cook for you to eat. Portland's full of great neighborhoods.
Pocket
neighborhoods in big cities are what make life grand, living there. When you
live in a true neighborhood, you are recognized and others recognize you for
belonging there. Belonging can be a rare thing in the world.
If you have what it takes to live in an exciting Portland neighborhood, you are already comfortable with diversity. That your neighbors
may not live or look like you is cool. You know how to navigate city life, and
you aren't afraid of it. It energizes, excites, and fires you up, at the same
time making you comfortably at home. The character of the homes reflects the
range of character of the people who live alongside each other.
You know who you are. Let me put you in a home in Portland that is
rooted in its neighborhood, and let the life of depth and richness begin.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Finding Home in Portland
Somebody asked me: If you could live in any city
in the world, where would you live?
I love these kinds of questions, any excuse to dream my
life...and began thinking of the most outrageous and interesting places where I
could imagine myself living. Mumbai, Lisbon, Amsterdam? I'm not sure.
Copenhagen? Definitely. What about closer to home: St. Paul, Raleigh, Austin,
Boulder? Maybe.
But, to my surprise, I realized I already am living in
the place that I most want to be: Portland, Oregon. There isn't any other city
I'd want to live in. I chose it on purpose and love my decision.
This blog will tell you why you want to live in
Portland, too.
And when you move here, I will help you find a home. Not just
somewhere to live, a place to crash, a house, the address at which you park
your stuff. But a home. Which means: a neighborhood, a community, a place to
truly put down roots.
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