Much Ado About Mosier

Lean Green Development Scheme


By Tomi Owens, 1-04-07

 
 

The tiny town of Mosier lays five miles east of Hood River just across the border of Wasco County and within the Columbia Gorge National Scenic Area. Founded as a farming community in the mid-1800’s serving primarily as a train depot for Mosier Valley orchards the town is now under intense pressure to grow.

Local Media silence has finally been broken on Mosier Creek Place. Not by the HRNews or TDChronicle but by Columbia Gorge Magazine, a lifestyle glossy distributed throughout the Northwest. In a sugary article titled “Pace-setting Innovation and Style” CGM certainly puts the development project’s best foot forward—way, way forward.

Mosier Creek Place, a 34 unit townhouse development that stretches conspicuously alongside Hwy. 84, is lauded as a “high performance,” sustainable, and green building project, part of the nations “LEED for Homes” pilot project. By covering the roofs (all south-sloping) with solar panels, adding extra insulation and Energy-star appliances, and incorporating recycled building materials Seattle developer Peter Erickson has done his utmost to “go green” with his first Gorge undertaking. But green doesn’t mean cheap—the price tag for a two bedroom (1,537 sq ft) unit run between $349,000 and $385,000.

While the prices are not outrageous for the area—they seem steep for a modest condo that sits only a few hundred yards from a busy freeway and more or less on a heavily utilized commercial railroad.

Situated on a narrow, 5 acre strip of land between the Columbia Historic Highway and Hwy. 84, and within the town of Mosier's urban growth boundry, Mosier Creek Place is not subject to Scenic Act building restrictions. According to the Columbia Gorge Magazine article architects “made a conscious effort to minimize impact of the two-story townhomes’ exterior design by replicating the natural repetitive patterns that are found in the land formations that surround them.” Perhaps, more than anything else, it is the repetition that has earn Mosier Creek Place local nicknames such as “the Tenements,” “the Chicken Coops,” and the odds on favorite to stick “The Great Wall of Mosier.” A “crisp, modern look” is fine and even welcome—but the monotonous, nearly unbroken edifice has rankled Gorge residents’ sense of aesthetics from the beginning of construction. It seems likely that these condos will become occasional crashpads for the wealthy windsport elite who divide their time between Hood River, Baja and Maui.

But, despite its trendy-Green price tag, noisy location, and drone-like exterior, no one can fault the view from Mosier Creek Place. The town of Mosier sits on a wide, graceful bend on the Columbia. To the west sheer basalt cliffs frame summer sunsets in the Gorge. And across the river the grassy-green upsweeping hills of the Syncline are blessedly un-maimed by any land development. Yet.

Frankly, I can’t imagine anyone fighting harder to preserve those beautiful, unspoiled hills than the residents of Mosier Creek Place. After all, today’s Suckers are tomorrows NIMBYs.



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