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CityStories / City Profiles / Small Cities / Beaverton, Oregon

Smarter City

Population: 76,129


 

TriMet Max Blue Line, Beaverton, Oregon
Photo Credit: Dan Haneckow


Beaverton, Oregon

Map showing this city's location

July 2010 Update: Beaverton has been named a 2010 Smarter City for Energy. Read the article.

Beaverton, Oregon, lies just seven miles west of green leader Portland, and the TriMet MAX light rail system connects the two cities (and other nearby towns) to make it nearly one large community.

Set among abundant forests and streams, Beaverton formed around a wetland complex of beaver dams, and protecting these resources and wildlife habitat is a central concern to the city as it grows—which it has, by 15 percent since 2000 through construction and annexation.

Working with the storm sewer agency, Clean Water Services, and the Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation District, the city manages its wetlands and watersheds with stormwater practices including streamside buffers to prevent polluted runoff from entering waterways. The city uses "pervious" (or water permeable) concrete for the downtown sidewalks and areas with drainage issues, and is planning capital improvements of streams and restoration projects adjacent to streams. Beaverton offers incentives, such as increased height allowances, for habitat-friendly development, which it especially encourages for building in streambed corridors and the upland forests. Green building guidelines include the implementation of green roofs, alternative pavements and maintaining tree canopy. To document the many green initiatives underway in Beaverton, the city launched the website Sustainable Beaverton, which includes a map pinpointing many of the said projects throughout the city.

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Playbook for Green Buildings and Neighborhoods

The Playbook website provides local governments with guidance and resources to rapidly advance green buildings, neighborhoods and infrastructure. Strategic action in these sectors promotes economic development, builds healthier communities, strengthens energy independence, and supports climate protection.

Green Building: LEED for Neighborhood Development

The LEED for Neighborhood Development Rating System integrates the principles of smart growth, urbanism and green building into the first national system for neighborhood design. LEED certification provides independent, third-party verification that a development's location and design meet accepted high levels of environmentally responsible, sustainable development. Learn more.

Porous Paving

The EPA's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System site provides information about applicability, siting and design criteria.

Georgia's Department of Community Affairs has a page on best practices for porous paving.
Portland, Oregon's Bureau of Environmental Service pervious paving projects page.
City of Chicago's permeable paving site with many local examples.
San Francisco Parks Trust permeable landscape page.

Environmental Health Perspectives provides a good overview in "Paving Paradise: The Peril of Impermeable Surfaces."

NRDC's report Stormwater Strategies: Community Responses to Runoff Pollution considers a variety of responses implemented across the country.

Water Conservation

US Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation: with a mission to "manage, develop, and protect water and related resources in an environmentally and economically sound manner in the interest of the American public" the bureau provides information about water levels in reservoirs throughout the West, updates on dams, powerplants and related projects and a library of water reclamation materials.

Bureau of Reclamation WaterSMART program: Information on WaterSMART grants for water and energy conservation projects, basin studies with integrated management plans and water supply reviews and details on the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives in the Southwest.

In Hot Water: Water Management Strategies to Weather the Effects of Global Warming (NRDC report)

Water Efficiency Saves Energy (NRDC report)

Las Vegas Water District conservation pages

Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNVA) conservation and rebates

SNVA landscaping information

 

Beaverton Municipal Resources

Click here for a map of green projects underway in Beaverton.

Click here for information on the launch of Solar Beaverton, a pilot program providing solar incentives to 50 homeowners in Beaverton.

Sustainable Beaverton provides information on the city's most recent conservation initiatives.

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