Building is booming across Bend, and a couple of big projects are in the works for the Bend Central District—tagged by the City of Bend as a place for urban renewal.
Sunlight Solar
Sunlight Solar, which currently occupies a small warehouse and office building behind
Sparrow Bakery on Southeast Scott Street, is in the 120-day review period for its proposed new building on Northeast Hawthorne Avenue, between First and Second Streets.
click to enlarge City of Bend eplans
A rendering of Les Schwab's proposed building on Third Street.
The building, according to information from the City of Bend Planning Division, would contain a 13,154-square foot office and warehouse—and has plans for a second future tenant space. Sunlight Solar submitted its application on Feb. 6 of this year and was deemed complete by the City on the same day. Its 120-day review period ends on June 6, and barring any complications or opposition, should be approved after this date.
Although the area is considered a multi-use zoning district, Sunlight Solar’s new home would also sit in the Bend Central District—which has different planning characteristics and subdivisions. Sunlight Solar would occupy the 1st/2nd Street Subdistrict, which is intended to provide a mix of office, higher density residential, live/work and small-scale retail uses, while still allowing for existing light industrial and manufacturing uses in the area, according to the City.
Because the size of the proposed building is less than 20,000 square feet, it meets the City’s requirements for warehousing, retail sales and service and office space in the BCD. Larger buildings would require a conditional use permit and could end up in a lengthy decision-making process.
Les Schwab
Les Schwab—Central Oregon’s tire giant—is looking to move its Franklin Avenue location south on Third Street to occupy the block between Third and Fourth Streets and Northeast Clay Avenue and Northeast Burnside Avenue.
According to information from the City’s Planning Department, the new building would be more than 20,000 square feet. The property would house a 4,000 square foot service building as well.
However, the proposed location for Les Schwab’s building also sits in the BCD overlay. According to information from the City, the Bend Central District-South Multimodal Mixed-Use Area doesn’t allow for auto-dependent uses at this time.
For the tire company to get the go ahead to build its new location, it would require a text amendment to the existing BCD-South MMA code.
The proposed new Les Schwab location would take up an entire city block that is currently occupied by Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Hardy's Burgers & Ice Cream, Sangie Hair Spa, Bend Truck Toyz, Vintage Moon Antiques, Cascade Telecommunications, a single-family residence and an abandoned building, according to information from the City.
In its pre-application paperwork, Les Schwab wrote that it believes the City Council will determine that the use is permitted on the subject property. In the City’s pre-application paperwork it wrote, “however, as part of a text amendment to allow auto-dependent uses, there may be other development standards added to mitigate auto-dependent uses in the South MMA.”
According to Karen Swenson, the planner assigned to the project, the City is in the completeness-check phase with the submitted plans. After the application is complete, there will be a public hearing date scheduled, then the submitted text amendment will come before the City Council to discuss, probably sometime this summer.