2024 ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE CENTER CANDIDATE SURVEY RESPONSES

Jamie Dunphy, city council candidate for District 1 of Portland, Oregon.

Jamie Dunphy City Council Candidate for District 1

Read Summary

LIVABILITY: Stewardship of Portland’s built environment is a key quality of life issue. The preservation and reuse of existing buildings is an important component of sustainable development and helps to maintain strong, livable communities.

Q1

Agree: [No comment]


ADAPTIVE REUSE: Do you think the conversion of empty or underused commercial buildings (e.g., offices or warehouses) into new uses can advance two important objectives:
a. alleviate Portland’s affordable housing shortage;
b. help to revitalize the city’s downtown.

Q2

Agree: [No comment]


SUSTAINABILITY & CLIMATE: Building reuse, instead of demolition and replacement, equates to taking thousands of cars off the road (EcoNorthwest Study). Promoting reuse should be an important component of achieving Portland’s sustainability goals.

Q3

Agree: [No comment]


FINANCIAL INCENTIVES: To make building conversion and reuse economically feasible, many believe we need better financial tools, such as a state rehabilitation tax credit – a tool used by 39 other states. Would you support making that a priority on the City’s legislative agenda?

Q4

Yes: [No comment]


DEVELOPMENT IMPACTS: We need more affordable housing. However, proposed zoning changes (e.g.significant increases to building height and scale) can incentivize demolition, displacement, gentrification, and erasure of cultural heritage. How concerned are you about these potential negative consequences?

Q5

Not concerned: [No comment]


PLANNING KNOWLEDGE: How familiar are you with Portland’s Comprehensive Plan, zoning codes, land use regulations, and current policies for historic properties?

Q6

Extremely familiar: I was Portland City Commissioner Nick Fish's lead advisor on the Comp Plan 2035.


INFILL DEVELOPMENT: In Portland’s historic areas, it’s important that new infill construction fit with surrounding context and retain the districts’ unique qualities and identity.

Q7

Neutral: [No comment]


CONSERVATION OF PORTLAND “MAIN STREETS”: Portland’s unique identity is due in large part to its many distinct and diverse neighborhoods and “streetcar-era main streets.” Many were the original main street when these areas were separate cities before being annexed into the larger City of Portland. Recent rezoning, increased height limits and no historic protections make these areas vulnerable to demolition. Would you support the creation of mini-Conservation Districts (typically 1 or more blocks) to help retain these iconic commercial main street centers?

(For Reference: Conservation Districts have greater flexibility than Historic Districts given that they still allow for growth and change but can support more context-sensitive development. New Conservation Districts would have demolition review for contributing resources, objective design standards, and the height limit of the zone).

Q8

No: Maybe? I'd like to have more specific examples of what this would look like, and how it would benefit East Portland. There are no historic main streets left in East Portland, and my priority will always be what is the best thing for East Portland neighbors. I have concerns about how a tool like this could be misused by wealthy property owners to prevent economic development, housing, or more intensive use of land in the city's inner core, and the downstream effects that would have on neighborhoods east of 82nd Avenue. This entire region needs housing, the inner city needs economic development and activation, and every single block-face that we make more expensive and more complicated to meet that need puts additional economic pressure on East Portland. My answer isn't "no". But I need to understand the bigger picture before supporting a proposal like this.


TOURISM: Historic buildings and public spaces are a significant economic asset as a major attraction for tourism. What priority should this be given when planning and setting policy?

Q9

Medium: [No comment]


BONUS: Tell us your favorite building, neighborhood, or place in Portland.

Q10

RESPONSE: The Day Theater on SE Foster and 52nd.