Broadway Corridor twin towers explained

Broadway Corridor Twin Towers
Status:Proposed
Building Type:Office, hotel, residential and retail
Location:Pearl District, Portland, Oregon
Location Country:United States
Height:2960NaN0
Floor Count:95[1]
Architecture Firm:William/Kaven Architecture
Kaven + Co.
Unit Count:-->

The Broadway Corridor twin towers complex[2] was a proposed mixed-use skyscraper complex in the Pearl District of Portland, Oregon. Multi-disciplinary architecture firm William Kaven Architecture proposed the complex as a potential part of the Broadway Corridor redevelopment project. The twin-towered skyscrapers would reach 970feet in height and would have become the tallest building in Oregon, the tallest twin towers in the Western Hemisphere and fifth-tallest in the world. A significant obstacle to the proposal was that current zoning at the site limits building heights to 400feet. The proposal was not among the list of three finalists chosen by Prosper Portland (formerly known as the Portland Development Commission) in March 2018.[3]

Background

In 2016, the Portland Development Commission commissioned the redevelopment of the Broadway Corridor in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon.[4] Included in the Broadway Corridor is the 14-acre USPS Portland Main Post Office site, bordered by Northwest 9th Avenue, Northwest Hoyt Street, Northwest Broadway and Northwest Lovejoy Street, which the city bought for $90 million dollars in 2016.[4] The Broadway Corridor also includes Union Station. Portland-based architectural firm William Kaven Architecture, helmed by brothers Daniel Kaven and Trevor William Lewis, proposed a twin-towered skyscraper complex to replace the to-be-demolished postal building, potentially including a new high-speed rail system hub.[5] The complex features two neomodern glass skyscrapers that would have reached a height of 970 feet and been connected by a sky-bridge that would be 680 feet high, featuring an observation deck and botanical garden.[6] A significant obstacle to the proposal was that current zoning at the site limits building heights to just 400 feet, and the city council would have had to approve a major change to that element of the zoning for the proposal to be able to move forward.[7]

If built, the skyscrapers would have become the tallest buildings in Oregon, surpassing the Wells Fargo Center. In addition, it would have become the fourth tallest buildings in the western United States (after the Wilshire Grand Center, Salesforce Tower and U.S. Bank Tower), as well as the tallest by roof height, and the tallest twin towers in the Western Hemisphere. The architecture firm that designed the proposed towers hoped that it could become the proposed second headquarters of Amazon and stated that "[t]he towers are large enough to serve as a headquarters for a Fortune 100 company". The complex would have featured 5e6sqft of space.[5] [8] However, Portland was not included in Amazon's shortlist of candidate cities for its planned second headquarters, announced in January 2018.[9]

In March 2018, Prosper Portland (the Portland Development Commission) revealed its selections for the three finalist candidates for redevelopment of the Post Office site, and William/Kaven Architecture's twin towers proposal had been eliminated.[3] As a result, there was no need for the city council to consider the question of whether to approve the more-than-doubling of the maximum building height limit that the Twin Towers proposal would have required if pursued as proposed.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Pacheco. Antonio. Portland shoots for the region's tallest buildings with twin towers proposal. 31 December 2017. Archpaper.cpm. 15 November 2017. 1 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180101194203/https://archpaper.com/2017/11/portland-twin-95-story-towers/. live.
  2. The proposed building complex did not have an official name – it has been described as the "twin towers" or "Portland twin towers".
  3. News: Monahan. Rachel. Record-Breaking Towers Didn't Make the Short List for the Post Office Site. Here's Who Did.. Willamette Week. March 9, 2018. March 13, 2018.
  4. News: Rudd. Michelle. Doing It Differently: Portland's Plan to Redevelop the U.S. Post Office Site and Broadway Corridor. 23 December 2017. Ahead of Schedule. 13 October 2017.
  5. News: Cogley. Bridget. William Kaven proposes Portland's tallest skyscrapers at US Postal Office site. 23 December 2017. Dezeen. 15 November 2017.
  6. News: Two-tower high rise planned for site of former downtown Portland post office. FOX 12. 14 November 2017.
  7. News: Monahan. Rachel. Two Towers Nearly Twice the Height of Big Pink? A Portland Architect Has Submitted an Application For Record-Breaking Skyscrapers. Willamette Week. February 13, 2018. March 3, 2018.
  8. News: Marum. Anna. Skyscrapers for post office site? Portland firm's extravagant pitch. 23 December 2017. The Oregonian. 14 November 2017.
  9. News: Day . Matt . January 18, 2018 . Amazon names 20 finalists in search for HQ2 . . March 3, 2018 . January 18, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180118160631/https://www.seattletimes.com/business/amazon/amazon-names-20-finalists-in-search-for-second-headquarters/ . live .