Alberta Commons

This project is an urban retail shopping center consisting of approximately 20,000 square feet of gross leasable space on the MLK/Alberta commercial lot. The finished project includes Natural Grocers (a quality, affordable, organic grocery retail chain) as the anchor tenant and will provide affordable commercial space to local minority-owned businesses. Colas Construction, an African-American, family-owned business located in the neighborhood, was the general contractor for the project, and Majestic Realty was the developer.

Project Details

  • Project Completed

  • Prosper Portland’s role:
    land sale [?]
  • Financial Partner: Majestic Realty

  • LEED Silver Target [?]

  • Design & Construction:
    Colas Construction

Alberta Commons will boost economic activity in NE Portland by supporting surrounding local businesses and providing community benefits that were negotiated by a community-centered Project Working Group (PWG). The PWG process resulted in the formation of the Implementation, Monitoring and Accountability Committee (IMAC) which will ensure the delivery of the Community Benefits Agreement (CBA), providing oversight, reviewing the hiring plan, and engaging the target community with employment opportunities.

Prosper Portland’s Affordable Commercial Tenanting Program is available at Alberta Commons, offering a unique opportunity for small businesses, including those owned by people of color, to gain a foothold in the retail mix of the area, provide needed goods and services to the neighborhood and create lasting, beneficial relationships with the Northeast Portland community. The program encompasses lease priority to existing local businesses, particularly those owned by people of color; tenant improvement allowance and/or reduced rates; opportunity to build community among tenants; and connections to business-building resources. Available spaces range from 490 to 1207 square feet at $18/square foot.

Project Background

Beginning in 1997 Prosper Portland assembled nearly two full blocks between NE Alberta and NE Sumner and between Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. and Garfield, following the goals in the Albina Community Plan (ACP) to revive commerce on NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. by fostering the development of strong commercial nodes at key intersections.

The King Neighborhood Commercial Development Strategy (2000) envisioned a mix of neighborhood-scale commercial and retail uses for the assembled blocks. The strategy guided the development of the north block into two phases: I) the 36,000 sf Vanport Square commercial condominium project (16 independent commercial condominium units in two buildings) in 2008; and II) ten single family homes along Garfield, in 2012.

The MLK-South block is the second of the two blocks to be developed with an anchor retail tenant (preferably a grocer) that would attract more foot traffic to the area and advance the strategy’s vision.

About the site

  • 1.67 acres made up of seven adjacent vacant parcels (72,931 square feet), including 438 ft of frontage on NE MLK

  • One parcel with a residence (5,000 square feet, .11 acre) facing Garfield
  • Zoned Central Employment with Design Review Overlay (EXd)

  • An easement for an 8’ combo sewer runs north-south through the alley in the middle of the block

  • The 15’ alley serves three existing properties in the northwest corner of the block that will not be impacted by the development

  • The surrounding area is primarily residential to the west of the site with commercial concentrated on MLK

Business and Workforce Equity Performance Data

The Business and Workforce Equity data below is specific to this project. Additional data is available for all of our under construction and recently completed projects.

IMAC and Subcommittees

Responsible for hiring plan, supply chain, community space; oversight of construction workforce and coordinating between subcommittees.

  • Tony Jones, Metropolitan Contractor Improvement Partnership (MCIP), Chair of Construction
  • John Washington, North Northeast Business Association (NEBA), Chair of Public Art
  • Mohamed Yousuf, Horn of Africa
  • John Tyler, King Neighborhood residents
  • Andrew Colas and Marc-Daniel Domond, Colas Construction
  • Andrew McGough, Worksystems Inc (WSI), Executive Director
  • Stacey Hallal, Curious Comedy Theater
  • Nita Shah, Micro Enterprise Services of Oregon (MESO), Chair of Retail Tenanting
  • Frank Diadone/Jessica LaHue, Natural Grocers
  • Kimberly Branam, Prosper Portland

Responsible for finding and selecting local retail tenants and providing business support.

  • Nita Shah, MESO, Co-Chair
  • Tory Campbell, Prosper Portland, Co-Chair
  • Adam Milne, Old Town Pizza
  • Elizabeth Nardi, Neighbor
  • Ernest Harris, NNEBA
  • Jonath Colon, Hispanic Chamber
  • Chris Guinn, Vanport Square Business Owner
  • Jeanna Woolley, Black Investment Consortium for Economic Progress (BICEP)
  • Alex MacLean, Majestic Realty Co.

Responsible for workforce strategies that maximize opportunities for people of color.

  • Tony Jones, MCIP, Chair of Construction
  • Leigh Rappaport, King Neighborhood Association, POIC
  • Nate Mccoy, National Association of Minority Contractors (NAMCO)
  • James Posey, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
  • Pat Daniels, Constructing Hope
  • Andrew Colas and Marc-Daniel Dummond, Colas Construction

Responsible for selecting artists to design two public art installations for the Natural Grocers building.

  • John Washington, NNEBA, Co-chair
  • Susan Kuhn, Prosper Portland, Co-Chair
  • John Washington, NNEBA
  • Alem Gebrewhiot, Small Business Owner
  • Diana Moosman, MWA Architects
  • Rick Tiland, Tiland-Schmidt Architects
  • Peggy Kendellen, Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC)
  • Elijah Hasan, Artist
  • Hillary Pfeifer, Artist

Meetings

There are no meetings scheduled at this time
DOCUMENTS

Related Projects