SW Oregon Architect Emeritus
Architecture and urban design in Oregon's southern Willamette Valley
Sunday, March 8, 2026
A Shift in the Civic Landscape
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Hope Is . . .
- Hope is keeping the existing structure because it still has stories left to tell.
- Hope is protecting the one tree on the site that anchors memory and shade.
- Hope is refusing to overbuild the ground, letting the earth breathe.
- Hope is leaving traces of earlier lives visible because they speak truthfully.
- Hope is turning the building toward the sun and prevailing breeze rather than the surveyor’s grid.
- Hope is opening the building to natural ventilation when the season permits.
- Hope is holding the window where light and view demand it, even when the plan protests.
- Hope is redrawing the section until the space feels right in the body.
- Hope is crafting a stair generous enough that people choose to walk it.
- Hope is shaping the threshold so arrival becomes a quiet ceremony.
- Hope is designing pathways wide and smooth enough for wheelchairs, strollers, and slow walkers alike.
- Hope is placing handrails and tactile cues where intuition might falter.
- Hope is designing restrooms that welcome every body without apology.
- Hope is carving out a small, unprogrammed room for solitude or spontaneous gathering.
- Hope is shrinking the lobby to what welcomes, not what impresses.
- Hope is orienting rooms to foster connection, not isolation.
- Hope is selecting the material that patinas gracefully over decades, not the one that shines in renderings.
- Hope is drawing the joint that reveals how the wall is made, honestly.
- Hope is insisting on flashing done right, even if buried forever.
- Hope is choosing connections that forgive time and allow repair without destruction.
- Hope is detailing the back-of-house with the same care as the public face.
- Hope is resisting the cheap shortcut that burdens someone else later.
- Hope is designing the building so it can be maintained without heroics.
- Hope is building in modularity so the next generation can adapt without demolition.
- Hope is choosing acoustics that let voices carry gently, not harshly.
- Hope is integrating shade, water, and greenery to temper heat and lift the spirit.
- Hope is leaving space—literal and figurative—for unforeseen uses and future lives.
None of this solves the larger problems we’re facing. It isn’t meant to. These habits of mind point to a way of working that refuses to give in to the noise and the speed of the moment. Taken together, they form an open-ended litany—an accumulation of decisions that take the future seriously even when the future feels uncertain.
In uncertain times, that is work worth doing.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Eugene/Architecture/Alphabet: Z
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Paying Attention to Place
Certain places speak right away: a street that feels coherent the moment you step onto it, or a building whose presence seems fully resolved at first glance. Others ask for patience. Their character emerges through shifting light, seasonal changes, and the habits of daily life. I’ve learned to trust both kinds of encounters. Each reveals something different about how places actually work.
Cities depend on a legible fabric, the everyday buildings that give a place its rhythm and make its streets understandable. That fabric grows out of the ground it sits on; geography and topography often shape it outright, bending streets, breaking grids, and steering development in ways no plan can fully override. When the fabric holds together, even loosely, a city feels grounded. When it falls apart, everything around it struggles: landmarks lose their context, public spaces drift, and movement turns confusing. The fabric isn’t just background; it’s what lets a city make sense.
The rains of the Pacific Northwest test every exposed joint. Low winter light exposes the difference between a generous window and a half-hearted one. Moss softens edges whether it’s invited or not. Climate shows its effects early. Geography and history shape perception too: filtered light, volcanic soils, a layered cultural landscape. Every place has a character that precedes design and outlasts it, and buildings work better when they acknowledge that character rather than resist it.
What matters most is whether a building feels anchored to its purpose. Sometimes that shows up in small choices. Other times it’s broader: a space that gathers people naturally, a form that belongs to its setting, a presence that feels inevitable once you’ve lived with it for a while. The reasons vary, but that sense of rightness is hard to miss when you see and feel it.
Over time, my own thinking has settled around a few recurring ideas: the importance of a legible fabric; the pull of geography and history; the honesty of materials; and the authority of well-placed civic buildings. None of these insights is original. They echo through the work of others I’ve learned from along the way. They’ve simply grown clearer the longer I’ve watched them play out in real places.
If there’s an arc here, it’s the arc of looking closely. Buildings reveal themselves in their own time. Cities take longer still. After a lifetime working in and around them, and now watching from a different vantage point, I see my role less as a conclusion than as participation in a long conversation. The best any of us can do is pay attention, make careful choices, and add something worth keeping.









