Message from the AIAO President

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Amy Vohs, AIA
AIAO President

EVP/CEO Search Update

Hello everyone, I wanted to touch base with you on our search for a new Executive Vice President/CEO for AIA Oregon. As you may be aware, Curt Wilson has been our EVP/CEO for the last year and a half in an interim capacity. He remained in the role long enough to allow us enough time to find a permanent replacement.  In the fall of 2020 we created an EVP/CEO search task force with representation from all sections and a variety of architects at different levels in their careers to get a well-rounded selection committee.

In December, we announced the posting on various national job websites and received over 90 applicants which took us three weeks to review and narrow down to about 20.  In January the task force reviewed the selection down again to about 14 applicants. We then extended an invitation to this group to provide a video responding to specific questions we had about AIA Oregon and a little background on each person.  Of the 14 applicants, eight responded with videos the task force later reviewed. From these videos we narrowed the selection down to three individuals who were invited to interview via Zoom.  

The final three applicants had extensive experience in working with non-profits and would have brought a very unique approach to working with AIA Oregon. The task force recommended one individual to the board on March 19, 2021 to begin negotiations with one candidate who has specific experience with other chapters within AIA.  We look forward to introducing you to the new EVP/CEO next week as negotiations conclude.  A preliminary schedule is to have the new EVP/CEO in place by the end of April with some overlap with Curt Wilson assisting with the transition through the beginning of May. 

We are very excited about the future leadership of AIA Oregon and have had some really exciting discussions on moving this chapter forward. We will miss all of the wonderful organizational skills and passion that Curt has brought to the organization. I know he is eager to get back into the practice of architecture. Please look for the announcement in next week’s Thursday at 3.

Message from the AIAO Executive Vice-President

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Curt Wilson, AIA
AIA Oregon EVP

Portland CFA Status

We’ve had a long winter indoors (and with Zoom) and I’m happy for Spring and getting outdoors more.  Late March for my wife and I is the beginning of the mowing season on our property west of Eugene, which is oddly exciting this year.

The focus of this message is on the status of our lease for our main office in Portland, the Center for Architecture.  Our lease, the original lease signed in 2006, expires at the end of this year on December 31, and we have had been unable to negotiate a suitable lease extension with the building owner.  I apprised the AIA Oregon Board of Directors of this on at the March 19, 2021 board meeting, and we are preparing to move forward.

How’d we get here?  AIA Portland took control of the space in 2006 as the future Center for Architecture in Portland.  Other larger city chapters were also creating spaces that not only served as the operational headquarters for their AIA chapter with meetings, social events and educational programming, and space to support programming for architecture, design education and advocacy intended for the public at large.  Planning and design of the CFA occurred in 2007 and 2008, which was impacted by the Great Recession, and construction was completed in 2009.  The CFA was a vibrant place with a classroom, gallery space, meeting room, and staff offices in the heart of the Pearl District.  AIA Portland was a generous host for AIA Oregon (the former state council) meetings, which I attended regularly.  I also made many trips from Eugene for the Friday Education (FRED) series.  I love the space and was excited to work there when I took over as EVP/CEO in July 2019.

From my perspective as EVP, I saw a different side of the CFA.  The ceiling throughout our 5,000 sf space was damaged during an unusual weather event in February 2017 and the dispute with the building owner over responsibility remains unresolved.  The lease terms place AIA Oregon at risk for repairs to the building systems and other repairs that I feel is excessive for a tenant.  In addition, the costs of occupancy, including rent, tenant improvement loan payments, utilities, insurance, etc. were approximately one third of our 2020 operational expenses.  While we are addressing the needs of the CFA, we need to consider the context of our transition to a single state chapter, and the need to equitably service members across the state.

In 2020, AIA Oregon President Amy Vohs and I convened a Facilities Task Force.  Bill Hart, AIA and I co-chair the facilities task force, and the participants include board leaders, representatives from all sections, and members from the AIA Portland Section.  Click HERE to read the 11/11/2020 Message from Bill Hart about the purpose of the Facilities Task Force.

The Task Force was asked to evaluate the CFA in Portland and the Octagon in Eugene, to discuss our spatial needs to support engagement, education, design advocacy, and operations across the state, to consider revenue/expense considerations, and to make a recommendation to the Board regarding our future occupancy in the CFA.  Keep in mind that this occurred during the work-from-home environment of the pandemic when the CFA was last open in late March 2020.

The Task Force summary report to the Board presented at the December 2020 board meeting includes:

  1. Our facilities planning should be based on physical presence in all sections and should reinforce the single state chapter-local section model.

  2. The operational budget should incorporate equitable funding for the space in all sections.

  3. Our long-term commitment to space should be nimble.

  4. The CFA is the central location for operations, socializing, advocacy, and education. These functions are vital to our organization, but do not need to happen in the same location.

  5. Our presence in all sections should be associated with cultural institutions that support design, architecture, and community.  A university campus is located in each section center.

  6. The main office for AIA Oregon should remain in Portland, and be conveniently located to as many members as possible.

The task force recommended that AIA Oregon not exercise the 5-year extension in the current lease, but instead negotiate new terms with the building owner for a shorter duration, and shift more of the responsibility for the repair and maintenance of building systems to the building owner.  The Board agreed at the December 1, 2020 board meeting, and a letter was sent to the owner later in the month.

Efforts through our commercial broker to negotiate new terms with the building owner have not been successful, and the Facilities Task Force recommended to the Board to terminate negotiations and to focus efforts on finding a future home.  This discussion occurred at the March 19, 2021 board meeting and we are moving forward accordingly. 

As we move forward, we are organizing our related efforts into three tracks.

Track 1:  Find a new space for AIA Oregon.  This will be a Facilties Task Force lead effort.

Track 2:  Address the lease-required repairs to the CFA before the end of the lease.  This will be an EVP lead effort.

Track 3:  Prepare to vacate the CFA by the end of the year.  This will be a staff lead effort.

As we search for new space, we want input from as many members and partners as possible.  As we all quickly pivoted to a new way to work and engage in response to Covid, the Facilities Task Force believes that we’ll engage, learn, advocate, and support our communities in new ways, and our commitment to physical and digital space should reflect this.  We need your help.  We need more perspectives guiding our decisions.

If you are interested in participating on the Facilities Task Force, or have comments to share, please contact me at cwilson@aiaoregon.org.  In addition, we expect to provide updates through Thursdays@Three articles, and discussion sessions through the Thursday Roundtable venue.

We are working with Doug Carter, our broker with Norris Stevens, for advice on the Portland real estate market and to scout out potential space for us.  Our initial direction to Doug is:

  • Look for 3,000 to 5,000 sf of space.

  • Focus on locations in areas of Portland near concentrations of members.

  • Consider locations near architecture schools and/or other cultural institutions in Portland.

  • Focus on transit corridors.

As we plan for the remainder of the year and the transition to our new EVP/CEO, I strongly recommend that we find ways to celebrate the Center for Architecture at 403 NW 11th in the Pearl District.  I’m generally sad that one of my last significant tasks of my tenure is to report to you that we will not remain in the space, but I’m confident that it is the best long-term decision for our chapter.  If you have comments, concerns, or want to understand more details involved in the decisions that got us to this point, please reach out to me at the email address listed above.

Message from an AIO Board At-Large Director

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Katherine Austin, AIA
AIAO At-Large Director

Hello, I’m Kathy Austin, and I’m your newest At-Large Member of the Board. I was licensed in 1991 in California after graduating from UCLA in 1986 with an M Arch. I’m currently licensed in Oregon after moving here six years ago to Bend. Though I moved here from CA I was born in Maryland and raised primarily in Alexandria VA. I have a BFA and MFA in painting from Boston University.

I have a long history with AIA, having joined in 1991. I served 5 years on the Housing Knowledge Community at National and then 3 more years on the Board Knowledge Committee. I am a past President of the Redwood Empire Chapter and served on the California Board representing my Chapter. This past Grassroots was my 10th. So I’m a bit of an AIA nerd, if you will. One of the main reasons I’ve been a long-time AIA member is for its advocacy for our profession.

Advocacy and its impact on our profession is a significant part of my being. I am currently on the Bend Section’s Leadership and have been on the City of Bend’s Affordable Housing Advisory Committee for four years. Bend members may recall that I helped put on a couple of programs on Affordable Housing as that has been my focus since starting my own practice in 1995.

In addition to my AIA involvement, I’ve been a Planning Commissioner, City Councilor and former Mayor of the small town of Sebastopol in California. I understand deeply the connection between our state and local laws pertaining to land use and its impact on our profession. I am part of a stakeholder group in Bend re-writing our zoning code to meet HB2001 to allow for the missing middle housing we so greatly need. I know what is coming to all of our cities in Oregon and would like to help where possible as a resource to our members. Additionally, I sit on the board of Housing for All - a Central Oregon group dedicated to all issues around housing affordability. We advocate locally and support State Legislation that impacts Housing.

So yes, I do have a practice, but as I get older I’m in a position to work more part-time. My most recent work is in that missing middle type of housing. I work on live/work, cottage clusters, town homes, mixed-use and small lot subdivisions. I’ve designed homeless shelters, multi-family affordable housing, self-help build homes, senior housing and Habitat for Humanity homes, all at a higher density. My nickname in CA was Dr. Density.

On the State Board I have advocated to start a Housing and Community Development Committee patterned after the National Knowledge Community. We have had one informal meeting for those interested. I hope to grow interest in the group and help advocate for issues on Housing for our members. I am also the liaison for the Committee on Local Affairs and lead that group in Bend. I believe there will be times for crossover between those two committees and with the Legislative Affairs Committee. Synergy is our friend.

I’d like to see more involvement from our membership in Advocacy for our profession. I hope that I can serve as a resource to our membership in that regard. If you are interested in joining our Housing and Community Development Committee or forming a Committee on Local Affairs please get in touch with me directly or through Kathy Wendland. Our voices are respected by our elected officials; we are recognized as experts in our field. You shouldn’t be so busy with work that you don’t look up and examine how you can impact our entire built environment with your Advocacy. I hope you will join me in that effort.

Katherine Austin, AIA, Architect