Orenco Station is a neighborhood of the city of Hillsboro, Oregon, United States. The planned urban town center was designed as a pedestrian-friendly, high-density community built in conjunction with TriMetâs Westside light rail. It was built on land formerly owned by the Oregon Nursery Company, land home around the turn of the 20th century to Orenco, a company town. During the Great Depression, the company went out of business, and much of the nursery land became vacant until re-development began in 1997. Orenco Station is near the intersection of NE Century Blvd. (formerly NW 231st/NW 229th Avenues) and Cornell Road, centered on the Orenco MAX Station.
History
Orenco Station - Hillsboro, Oregon - Video showing off the beautifully designed Orenco Station in Hillsboro, Oregon. Designed by Leeb Architects LLC.
The town of Orenco was named after the company, with OREgon Nursery COmpany becoming ORENCO. After the company closed, the town disincorporated in 1938. In 1993, construction on TriMetâs extension to its MAX Light Rail system began, and planning for new high-density neighborhoods along the line continued, including plans for Orenco Station. The area near the old town of Orenco was labeled a âTown Centerâ by Metro in its 2040 plan for the region.
Features
Orenco Station was developed on 209 acres (0.85Â km2) in the east-central area of Hillsboro. The master developer, Pacific Realty Associates (PacTrust), along with its residential partner Costa Pacific Homes, designed it to mimic older neighborhoods and be more pedestrian-friendly than traditional suburbs. Zoning ordinances were changed to allow narrower streets, side-yard easements, garages on alleys, and measures to allow live-work homes, among other changes. The development was a mixed-used neighborhood combining both retail and residential along the light rail line and in the middle of high-tech employers. Residential options include apartments, single-family dwellings, condominiums, and town homes. Orenco Station also contains a large park named Central Park located just north of the retail core, along with smaller parks spread throughout the development as a trade-off for smaller yards created by the smaller lot sizes in the development. Homes in the development are situated closer to the street than in traditional developments, and all were built with Category 5 cable installed in the dwellings.
During late spring through summer Orenco Station is host to a farmers' market, featuring produce, crafts, and music.
Significance
Orenco Station is a case study of transit-oriented and New Urbanist development in a suburban context. Bruce Podobnik, a sociologist at Lewis and Clark College, completed a study in 2002 that showed comparatively high levels of resident satisfaction and "social capital", or interaction between neighbors. Transit use was also relatively high in the studyâ"22% for commuting, versus about 6% in the region overall. Use of other modes of transportation such as walking and bicycle were also relatively high. Governing executive editor Alan Ehrenhalt called Orenco Station "perhaps the most interesting experiment in New Urbanist planning anywhere in the country."
The development has won awards such as âBest New Burbâ by Sunset magazine in 2005. Other awards include the Oregon Governor's Livability Award in 1998, the Best Masterplanned Community in America Award by the National Association of Home Builders in 1998, the Ahwahnee Award in 1999, and Transit Communities Livable Design Award awarded by AIA/ULI/FTA/STPP in 1999.
A new 57-unit apartment building that opened on June 29, 2015, is reported to be the largest passive-house apartment building in North America. The building is the first of three phases of a complex named "the Orchards at Orenco Station", on which construction began in June 2014. Construction of the second phase is expected to begin in July 2015.
See also
- Cornell Creek Park
References
External links
- Natural Resources Defense Council: Orenco Station
- TrendWest: Orenco Station
- New Urban News: Orenco Station residents like the higher-density life
- Planetizen: Making TODs Work - Lessons from Portland's Orenco Station
- Research Study: The Social and Environmental Achievements of New Urbanism - Evidence from Orenco Station