28th May2010

New Digs

by Jason King

After working in offices for the past 13 years, the thought of working at home was both welcome and somewhat disturbing.  Knowing my ability to diverge from the task at hand, and coupled with a veritable ‘zoo’ of furry co-workers, the time has been indeed lovely.  Alas, our 600 s.f. house is quite cozy without the addition of an office, so after  a couple of months of hanging out in the living room office, I’ve finally found a home away from home in a spacious and wonderful warehouse space in the Central Eastside Industrial District – located at 1315 SE 9th Avenue (map).

image via DESIGN DEPARTMENT

The space is home to some awesome creative types Ben Hufford and Eric Black -  known as DESIGN DEPARTMENT which “…was founded in 2008 as a collective design approach. We believe that design encompasses all projects from t-shirts to master plans.  While there are firms that specialize in particular types of project, we design special projects.  Our approach is rooted in making. Our shop is an unconventional mix of high technology computing and hands’ on prototyping and construction.”

They also will help me with my ping-pong skills.

image via DESIGN DEPARTMENT

The focus on collaboration in a loose creative space, along with the ability to develop some prototypes fits into the research side of TERRA.fluxus – as it will give the space to develop some prototypes of a number of products that are currently in process.

image via DESIGN DEPARTMENT

Part of the space consists of a storefront gallery painted with the very visible ADX -  (which is currently the Olinka Broadfoot Gallery operated by my fabulous friend Kelley Roy from Sassafras Consulting) – which makes for a wonderful entrance to the studio space.

image via DESIGN DEPARTMENT

Starting next week – feel free to swing by and check out the space.  More details to follow.

26th May2010

Holding Pattern | Urban Void Matrix

by Jason King

A quick ‘competition’ of sort from Seattle fit nicely into some current thinking around the concept of uses for vacant properties (aka urban voids).  In this case, the focus is on ‘stalled’ building sites that are left partially finished due to economic or other factors.  The gist of the call for idea from the Holding Patterns ‘brief’ distributed by Seattle DPD:

“Have you noticed how many lots have been left empty or partially developed due to the stalled economy? These vacant project sites are all around us. Unattractive and unbecoming of our city, we pass by them every day: empty holes, barren plains of gravel, voids in the city fabric. How can we convert these eyesores to opportunities?

The Seattle Design Commission wants your ideas for Holding Patterns, interim uses for stalled project sites. We are seeking your concepts to transform the following types of stalled project sites around the city:

  • holes in the ground
  • surface lots
  • ongoing construction above or below street level

Whether a concert space or a bumper car track, basketball hoops or a fleeting performance stage, from temporary to semi-permanent, wacky, practical or both, the Design Commission is welcoming any and all ideas. Artists, designers, non-profits, businesses, developers, students, astronauts, everyone is invited to contribute ideas. Interdisciplinary teams are encouraged.”

OUR PROPOSAL

Our team, consisting of Kelley Roy (Sassafras Consulting), Kelly Rodgers (Confluence Planning) and Jason King (TERRA.fluxus) approached this from the viewpoint of ‘A Modular Approach to Building the Sustainable City’ that looks at the three typologies of the site, hole, and frame within a matrix of food, community, ecology, and materials.  This proposal seeks to use these sites as a way to create a compelling development model that is sustainable, mobile, and integrated. This proposal frames community uses for vacant parcels, providing options for the different needs of the community as well as by type of parcel. It does not suggest that one amenity fits all neighborhoods and sites, thereby providing the flexibility for the community and efficiency for developer.

The idea is that instead of site-specific solutions, solutions have the ability to 1) Roll in-Roll Out (mobility), 2) Be Integrated with Buildings (application to final project) and 3) Productive landscapes (generating income and material for food and building)

Rather than focus on one solution, we decided to apply the matrix to each of the typologies for stalled building projects:  site, hole, and frame.  This gives a snapshot of possible applications to real world conditions, using a generic site configuration.  Each project site would be evaluated for the best mix of interim use that fits the final building project.

SITE: One idea of a building integration strategy is to use vacant building sites as land for producing building materials.  Afforestation can consist of growing products that are sustainably harvested over the years and then used in the building construction.  In this case, groves of bamboo, fast growing trees, industrial fibers like hemp, and sheepswool can be ‘grown’ on the land with an eventual end use within the building cladding, insulation, carpet, and finish work.  Buildings literally grow from the site.

FRAME: using the partially constructed armature of a stalled building structure, the idea is to create temporary three-dimensional habitat through portable hanging habitat gardens.  These habitat pods occupy site for beautification, climate modification, air quality improvement – then move to next site to continue to contribute to urban quality.  Modular planters can be transported easily and placed on a viable partial structure.  Street-level planters keep people out of the site for safety.  Rooftop planters on structural grids give the opportunity to add trees and other habitat elements.

HOLE: taking advantage of the negative space left behind through stalled excavation, gives us an opportunity to create places for community gathering for theater, concerts, and events – amphitheater evolves into a building-integrated arts space.  Tiers of seating are sunken into the excavation to create seating, oriented towards a stage and screen at the low point for an immersive experience.  Temporary planters protect steep edges and generous at-grade elements accommodate passers-by to draw in community.  Modular elements can be repurposed in building or moved to a different site after usage – and allow for a proof of concept that can translate into arts and performance space in the final building installation.

12th May2010

ASLA Sustainable PPN on Urban Agriculture

by Jason King

A recent post on the ASLA Sustainable Design and Development Blog by Deb Guenther recapped the great panel discussion and charrette.  The feature “Seattle has declared 2010 the Year of Urban Agriculture gives a snapshot of the speakers, including Jeff Hou, the chair of the UW landscape architecture department, along with Keith McPeters, a principal at Gustafson Guthrie Nichol in Seattle, and Guenther, a principal at Mithun.  The panel was moderated by Thaisa Way, the UW landscape architecture professor of history and also included student work integrating urban farming with housing redevelopment in Seattle.

An excerpt from the post:

“Jason’s presentation revealed Portland’s long-time commitment to urban farming along with a series of five principles: 1.  Utilize a hierarchy of urban spaces, 2.    Work through policy barriers, 3.  Reframe permaculture in a new lens, 4.    Maximize Efficiency per square foot, and 5. Develop orderly frames. I found his comprehensive list of the wide range of urban farming typologies to be immensely interesting as it captured the wide range of ways we are beginning to integrate a “new” , old land use into our cities.”

Another aspect of the presentation mentioned was an ongoing list of ‘urban agriculture typologies’ that was started within the Oregon Solutions Community Garden process last fall, and has continued through further exploration in Portland and beyond.  The various elements of what encompasses urban agriculture and food production is wide-ranging, and it was a treat to see these in action through the work of Mithun and the research from Hou, to heed the call for design excellence as laid out by McPeters, and to see it wrapped up in the student work.  I’m excited to see the results that came from the charrette the following day to generate ideas for a range of urban spaces infused with food production.

Thanks to Deb for the mention – Read the entire post here – and check out the other activities from the ASLA Sustainable Design & Development PPN here.

08th May2010

Urban Ecotones Published in Future Arquitecturas

by Jason King

The publication last year of Future Arquitecturas 19/20 Double Issue from 2009 featured the winners and selected projects from the Re-Invent Infrastructures Competition.  Urban Ecotones, the competition entry by Jason King (Principal of TERRA.fluxus) and Brett Milligan for the Metro Integrating Habitats competition, was a perfect fit for the competition (check out a brief of the Reinvent Infrastructures Competition here).  The project had previously been published in Metropolis and Landscape Architecture China – so the publication in another international Journal was a welcome addition.

Future Arquitecturas is published out of Madrid, so the issue is old news – but due to global snail mail – it took a bit of time for my copy of the publication to arrive (last week).  Brett and I submitted this as a project that fit many of the competition ideas including mobility, resource supply, waste, as ‘Hybrid Habitats’ acting as interrelated components of urban infrastructural systems.

A brief explanation of the project goals that were including in the text:

“Urban Ecotones” provides a contemporary vision for how modular economic development can regenerate, rather than destroy natural systems within an expanding city region.  Rather than seeing the thresholds at which commercial development meets natural systems as points of confrontation, they are approached as environments of unique richness – a synergy of diverse habitats akin to ecotones, spanning nested scales from site to region.  Urban ecotones are spaces for creative cross-programming that facilitate new regenerative urban processes, including: Parking (re)volution, Flow (re)direction and Waste (re)cycle.”

All images are courtesy of Future Arquitecturas Issue 19/20.   Project graphics and text copyright Jason King & Brett Milligan.

06th May2010

Jason King featured on LANDCAST

by Jason King
Bernard Tschumi, Downsview Park patterning illustration – image via Animal Architecture

Victoria, British Columbia-based Landscape Architect and blogger Christian Barnard was kind enough to include TERRA.fluxus Principal Jason King on episode #2 of his new series LANDCAST – a podcast format addressing ”the voice of contemporary landscape culture”.   The discussion was light and fun, and topics ranged from the origins of the firm name from James Corners seminal essay, to social media and landscape architecture, a dream tour of sustainable Portland sites, and the local food cart phenomenon – to name a few highlights.  Thanks Christian… it was a blast.

Hear the entire podcast here.

06th Apr2010

Designing for Urban Food

by Jason King

I’m happy to be part of a great event happening up in Seattle next week, exploring the role of design in urban agriculture.  Sponsored by the UW College of Built Environments, the first portion of the evening (6-9pm at Gould Hall) will include a number of landscape architecture and design professionals in a session ‘Exploring the Role of Design in the Urban Food Movement’.

“The panel will bring together Jason King, blog author and landscape architect from Portland, Deb Guenther from Mithun, and Keith McPeeters from GGN, with Jeff Hou (author of the recent book Greening Cities, Growing Communities, and chair of landscape architecture) as moderator. Introducing the panel presentation will be faculty members Branden Born, Ken Yocom, and Gundula Proksch who will discuss a crossdisciplinary studio on vertical farms in urban settings (specifically for a housing project in Seattle – Yesler Terrace).”

The panel is a kickoff to a charrette being held the following day to explore a range of urban typologies for food production.  Those up in Seattle should drop in Friday between 10am and 5:30 pm to participate or stop by the  Celebration and Close from 5:30pm – 7:00pm (both at Gould Hall) .  More info on the CBE website.

“The charrette will be organized around 10 categories of design constraints/opportunities (such as alley space, rooftop space, abandoned lot, etc.), to provide a structure for charrette participants and a means of indexing and organizing design ideas for use by the public. The design ideas will be available to the public via a CBE-hosted website and also displayed in Gould Court for a portion of the term. Momentum will hopefully call on further distillation and development of design ideas and additional sharing mechanisms will be developed once target audiences are clarified.”

10th Mar2010

On Food Carts: Urban Gastronomic Revolution

by Jason King

The gastronomical heritage of Portland is well known, with strong cult followings in beer, wine, coffee, spirits, urban agriculture, and local/organic food.  The choice of restaurants, farmer’s markets, community gardens, coffeehouses, brewpubs, and dive bars offers anything, literally, on the menu.  While always a fixture of urban life, street food is definitely becoming a more common way of delivering food to urban residents.  A rapidly expanding subset of this genre is the explosion of food carts – those mobile, self-contained, and thriving locally.

screenshot of Food Cart Portland website

One major resource in the search for the ultimate cart is the site Food Carts Portland, operated by the pseudonymous Dieselboi and Cuisine Bonne Femme – who offer reviews and other resources for the cart-based culinary revolution.  They also offer an ode to the cart in a short essay ‘Portland Hearts Food Carts’, which I’ve reprinted from their site here in full:

“Portland has a proliferation of Food Carts and they seem to be growing in numbers and locations. Some might call them lunch wagons, taco trucks or even snack shacks, but whatever you call them, they are truly a phenomenon in Portland. Set up in parking lots, sidewalks, and even parks (sometimes in large groups and sometimes solo), one might nosh on a fresh tortilla Baja fish taco one day, a rib-sticking bowl of traditional goulash the next, have a coffee and pastry for an afternoon snack, and then take home a giant Indian combo box for dinner.

Locals from various places and committed food-loving tourists from all over know that some of the best food to be had in any city from Bangkok to Baja is to be had at small street stands, carts, and other non-restaurant restaurants. New York City, for example, a city with some great street food, holds the annual “Vendy Awards” to express their love for mobile dining. There is even a website dedicated to street food around the world, although oddly, no U.S. cities are represented. In fact, many cities in the U.S. strictly limit or outlaw food carts completely, making Portland more akin to cities in Europe than in the U.S.

Food carts are also about supporting small, locally-owned businesses and small start-ups that might not have the capital or credit to open up their own full-fledged restaurants. That said, food carts are not restaurants! With limited hours, lack of indoor (and sometimes lack of any) seating, and small menus, they complement rather than compete with full-scale restaurants. Food carts help create a vibrant downtown and central city by bringing what planning geeks call a “social fabric on the street” which is great in cultural terms, but in economic terms also attracts other spenders, retail outlets, and restaurants and cafes. Food carts also often illustrate the delicious benefits to a growing ethnically diverse community, as many immigrants own and operate them and make and serve some pretty tasty ethnic specialties.

Plus, food carts can be a fantastic bargain for office workers, students, budget travelers, and anyone looking for a cheap, quick, but delicious bargain lunch.

Regardless, food carts are part of the culinary fabric of our wonderful city and dining in Portland wouldn’t be the same without them.”

A quick glance at the site (or any aggregation of two or more carts) will yield a range of ethnic, specialty & regional variations, and a range types of cuisine.  There is definitely a preponderance of Mexican and Thai represented (sometimes side-by-side), but it is easy to name a type of food and then likely match this to a cart or two.  We have legendary carts, unique carts, even carts owned by rock stars (in this case, former Shins drummer Jesse Sandoval’s Neuvo Mexico) and a Portland v. NYC street food/feud.  This is often the beauty, as the capital expenditure and life expectancy for a restaurant specializing in, say, regional Bavarian cuisine may be a tough go.  But, for a few thousand bucks, a cart can be up and running with minimal overhead.

SW 5th Cart Hub - image via California Planning & Development Report

The FCP site is a great resource, and links to a very simple and helpful map via designer Audrey Eschright, showing locations of many area carts.  Not sure the vintage of the info (there’s a few missing that I know of) but it seems reasonably up to date (also allowing folks to add and edit sites – which is key as there is a quick ebb and flow of carts moving – some purposely, on a moments notice).  The map links back to the FCP site for more info, reviews, menus, etc.  It’s in google maps – so it exports well into Google Earth for a bit more usability (GIS would be even better, so stay tuned).

I fiddled with the symbology a bit and located the carts with smaller yellow markers.  Concentrations of carts on a single site (aka Cart Hubs) have a larger orange marker.  You can see the density of these locations (specifically downtown and inner SE), and also the locations along typically commercial corridors.

A single cart is more than likely the sign of an opportunistic intervention (or a brave pioneer) in an under-served portion of the community.  These pepper the landscape throughout the City, and probably number in the 100′s city-wide, spreading from the core out to more remote locations.  The more concentrated Cart Hubs are a somewhat more recent and interesting phenomena that takes advantage of economy of scale and grouping to make a destination with a variety of choices.  These are typically located on the perimeter edge of a surface parking lot, where folks pay ‘rent’ in terms of monthly parking fees, plus the cost of a vendor license + regular health inspections.

There are four of these ‘hubs’ in Downtown, and a few more emerging across the river to the east.  The older downtown pockets have been around for a while serving downtown office workers, including a grouping in Pioneer Courthouse Square, a some other groupings throughout the inner city (some have been displaced through redevelopment of surface lots) .

A few popular locales in the Downtown core worth of attention:

SW Fifth, between Oak & Stark (along the Transit Mall)

SW Ninth+Tenth, between Washington & Alder

SW Fourth, between College and Hall (near Portland State)

The common denominator (aside from occupation of parking) is a heavy concentration of diners, typically serving during lunch hours.  Thus proximity to office workers and students (i.e. daytime denizens) seems like a recipe for success – particular for these masses of carts.  Many of these carts are only open during lunch for a couple of hours, while some have begun to stay open later to take on the dinner and even late-night crowds in specific areas.  One aspect worth looking at is the inherent competition (or maybe synergy) between bricks-and-mortar retail restaurants and the wheeled mobile varieties, as they seem able to co-exist within similar space.

That is not to say there isn’t some conflict, particularly a well publicized feud from 2002, that pitted a well-known local restaurant owner against food carts – citing specifically different rules governing carts versus restaurants unfairly tipping the competition.  Most folks laughed.  While both provide food – the draw is totally different and satisfies very different aspects of dining experience people look for.

One Eastside example, on 12th & Hawthorne in Southeast. is a slightly different breed.  On the corner of 12th and Hawthorne, this emerging ‘hub’ is located along a commercial strip, and located in a tough development corner adjacent to residential areas.  This merging point of residential and commercial seems to be a key locator to broaden the range of possible customers – in this case occupying a hole where there aren’t many food options.  The organic evolution of the site over time is interesting – and also representative of the neighborhood zeitgeist of Southeast Portland.

12th + Hawthorne Hub @ Night - image via Flickr / cafemama

A similar organically evolving site in a vacant lot is dubbed ‘Area 23′ on Alberta – and I’m sure a few more that will spring up literally overnight.  The new hybrid model of this type of development is the Food Hub at North Mississippi, which is one of the first to be developed specifically for food carts.  Via OregonLive“Business man Roger Goldingay spent months (not to mention $900,000 in real-estate costs) to shape a new vision for North Portland: converting a dilapidated building and an abandoned lot into a food-cart center, a community gathering place and an incubator for small artisan businesses focused on food or crafts.”

Prost on Mississippi , with the carts to the left - image via PDX Eater

The project switch, even though the site is located in an emerging neighborhood, was driven by the fact that the economic slowdown caused the site development of new mixed use buildings to stall – making an interim use for the site necessary.  The level of investment makes sense for these ephemeral uses, but perhaps it’s something a bit more long-lasting – offering a type of experience that is common around the world with vibrant street food identities.  The locations may change, but the variety of food will continually expand and evolve, and create another possible use for the various vacant lots around town – perhaps even coupling this with the urban agriculture movements for growing food, wine grapes, or hops for local beer or other consumables in the city.

A potential for a true urban gastronomic revolution.

[For an upcoming project, I'm doing some research on the evolutionary and urban design phenomenon around these locations and groupings of Food Carts in Portland.  A series of posts will outline this process, so check back for more updates as the project progresses.]

11th Feb2010

Thinking

by Jason King

I was pleasantly surprised that my blog Landscape+Urbanism showed up in a list by Kaid Benfield of NRDC featuring his ‘Urbanist bloggers that make me think’, which,  “… present issues through a different lens than my own, that are like-minded enough to garner my respect but different enough to challenge and expand my thinking.” Other blogs included in the varied and fabulous mammoth, the thoughtfully wonky Urbanophile, and a few others that I will have to add to my feeds.

The specific info on L+U from the post:

“Landscape + Urbanism: Speaking of Portland, that’s where landscape architect Jason King resides.  His site says it is about “landscape architecture, sustainable urbanism, vegetated architecture, urban agriculture, living walls, green roofs, ecological planning and landscape urbanism theory.”  I don’t go as far as Jason does in advocating all of these things, at least not in as many places, but in part that’s why I like this blog.  He makes the case, makes it much better than most, and illustrates it beautifully with photos and other images.  He also wonderfully deviates occasionally from the professional to offer perspective on books, music, food, and the like.”

02nd Dec2009

The Nature of Work

by Jason King

pinecreek6

(mount saint helens – photo by jason king)

Praxis emerges from multiple paths…

Some are inspired by the conceptual frameworks of landscape urbanism and infrastructure;

Many by the ideas of temporality, seasonality, weathering, and change;

Others for increased functionality, productivity, regeneration and sustenance;

All are grounded by the land and its people.

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