Susan’s Guide to Portland

Let us Help You Find a Home and a Neighborhood

Welcome to our website about the Portland, Oregon, metropolitan area. It’s our way of helping you become acquainted with the neighborhoods and communities of the Portland metro area and to inform you about the Portland area housing market. Your comments and suggestions about the website are always welcome. 

If you have questions or if you’re interested in buying or selling a home in the Portland area, contact us online or call us at (503) 497-2984 or (503) 816-8436.

Susan Marthens

Principal Real Estate Broker/CRS GRI

Oregon standard "tree" plate that has been issued since 1989. This blue-on-yellow baseplate was introduced in 1975 and was issued through 1987 - you still see the plate on a few Oregon vehicles today. Custom salmon plate. The extra proceeds from sales are used for the following: Litter Patrol Fund, Governors' Watershed Enhancement Board, and State parks. 1947 Oregon plate. Custom Crater Lake National Park Centennial plate - released in 2002. The extra proceeds are distributed to the Litter Patrol Fund and National Park Foundation.
 

Real Estate News

Windermere’s $250,000 kitchen

16 October 2014 — As any good Realtor knows, kitchens are always key. So it’s no real surprise that local real estate firm Windermere Stellar will pony up $250,000 for a new kitchen in Gresham. The kitchen will be part of the Friends of the Children’s new 8,500-square-foot facility being built in Gresham’s Rockwood neighborhood. FOTC is a nationwide organization that pairs vulnerable children with professional mentors from kindergarten through high school graduation. Windermere Stellar’s fund-raising campaign will involve various activities at the firm’s local branches, all of which raise funds for the Windermere Foundation. Brokers with the firm also contribute a percentage of their commissions to the foundation. Windermere’s commitment comes on the heels of the launch of FOTC’s capital campaign to raise $5 million for the program facility. To be built on land secured in partnership with the city of Gresham, the new building will feature Windermere’s teaching kitchen, a garden, comfortable spaces for one-on-one time, a media center and multipurpose rooms for group activities. The space will also be available for parent and family programs as well as other community groups.  Read more…

Strong September for Portland-area home sales even as market cools

14 October 2014 —The real estate market cooled across the Portland area in September in the beginning of a seasonal lull, but the month was strong compared with a year ago. The Regional Multiple Listing Service reported 2,378 homes sold across the Portland area during the month, an increase of 10.2 percent compared with a year earlier but down from 2,586 in August. Another 2,551 homes went under a sale contract — an increase of 15 percent from a year ago — in deals that will close in coming months. For pending sales, it was the strongest September since 2006. The market remains competitive, with demand for homes high and the supply for sale low. It would take about 3.1 months to sell all 7,438 homes listed for sale. Less than six months of supply is considered a seller’s market, and the Portland area hasn’t topped five months since March 2012.  Read more…

Oregon foreclosure auction rate spikes

17 October 2014 — Oregon’s real estate market has shown some strength this year, with increased sales and rising home prices. Yet the state is still working through a pile of foreclosures. Scheduled foreclosure auctions were up 85 percent in Oregon during the third quarter of this year compared to the same time period last year. According to the latest foreclosure numbers from RealtyTrac, Oregon was one of 22 states where foreclosure auctions spiked this quarter. Its 85 percent jump, along with North Carolina’s 85 percent, topped the list of those states. Others included New Jersey, Oklahoma and New York.  Read more…

News

Projects create ‘marsh magic’ at Fernhill Wetlands

17 October 2014 — In just two years, Clean Water Services turned a two-acre asphalt parking lot into a lush wetland that doubles as a wastewater-treatment facility. The magical marsh was on display last Saturday, when about 100 people attended the annual Birds & Brew festival at Fernhill Wetlands on Forest Grove’s southern edge. “We had huge, huge tours,” said Sheri Wantland, public involvement coordinator for CWS. “Lots of young kids, teenagers.” But the two-acre “Lower Treatment Wetlands” is just the first act, a model for what CWS officials hope to do with the more highly visible South Wetlands — 90 acres that were once home to three sewage lagoons, thousands of birds and hundreds of bird-watchers every year. That all stopped last May, when CWS drained the lagoons and began reshaping them. The earth-moving finished last Friday, just ahead of this week’s rains, which are the first step toward refilling the now heavily contoured basin. Workers will install heavy pipes and other hydraulic structures over the next few weeks.  Read more…

Oregon won’t get into Yale (or Harvard) with these grades

17 October 2014 — Oregon earns mostly Bs and Cs from green industry leaders for its commitment to tackling climate change. The state that casts itself as a sustainability leader hasn’t passed a clean fuels bill and is far behind California, British Columbia and Washington state in establishing a way to curb carbon emissions through taxes and fees. “You don’t want to be the outlier,” said Eve Callahan, spokeswoman for Umpqua Bank and a speaker for the 2014 GoGreen Conference for business leaders. She joined a panel of Portland business executives who opened the day-long conference with a call to Oregon’s private sector to join 237 businesses to sign the Oregon Climate Declaration.  Read more…

How much is energy efficiency worth in the Northwest?

17 October 2014 — If energy efficiency were a power plant, it would be the second-largest source of electricity in the Northwest after the federal hydropower system. In its annual report on the state of conservation, the Northwest Power & Conservation Council says the cumulative impact of energy efficiency efforts since the passage of the 1980 Northwest Power Act translates into 5,600 megawatts. For customers of Northwest utilities, that’s a savings of $3.5 billion per year. The alliance said 2013 efforts produced 268 average megawatts across the region, equal to the annual demand of 180,500 Northwest homes. The region exceeded the council’s goal for the year by eight average megawatts, continuing a winning streak that dates to 2005.  Read more…

OES research shows teens are adept at multitasking

17 October 2014 — Telling youths who are juggling multiple electronic devices to “focus on the task at hand” may not always be good advice, according to research presented by two Oregon Episcopal School students Oct. 11 at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference & Exhibition. Sarayu Caulfield and Alexandra Ulmer, seniors at Oregon Episcopal School in Southwest Portland, presented their study “Capacity Limits of Working Memory: The Impact of Media Multitasking on Cognitive Control in the Adolescent Mind” at the conference in San Diego. Contrary to popular belief that multitasking leads to poor performance, the young researchers found the opposite is true for adolescents who spend a lot of time switching between media devices and tasks. “Maybe practice really does make perfect,” Ulmer said. “In our current multimedia environment, there are people who are multitasking at an exceedingly high rate, and the reality is that they may have become really good at it,” Caulfield added. To study how media multitasking affects adolescents’ ability to process information, the young researchers recruited 196 girls and 207 boys ages 10-19.  Read more…

Oregon scores a “C” on women’s health report card

17 October 2014 — Oregon is ranked #26 in the country and received a final grade of C in the 2014 Women’s Health Report Card released today by Oregon Action and The Main Street Alliance of Oregon. The report card provides an important measure of the state’s record on women’s health as politicians court women voters ahead of the November elections and continue to debate how to combat persistent racial disparities in health. “All women deserve access to quality, affordable health care and family planning services,” Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici, said after reading an advanced copy of the report.  Read more…

Portland has a dream

16 October 2014 — This isn’t what Eugene Lang had in mind. Lang is the wealthy industrialist who stood up before a third-grade class at his East Harlem elementary school alma mater 31 years ago prepared to make a speech about the value of working hard and how everybody could get ahead in America. Stepping to the podium, Lang changed his speech. He told the students that he would guarantee college tuition for every one of them who graduated high school. Lang’s surprise announcement was blockbuster news at the time. Maybe not intentionally, Lang appeared to be saying to the families of those children whose lives had lacked hope and opportunity — put up or shut up. Lang gave those kids hope and, it appeared, opportunity. He also created a foundation — I Have A Dream — that today has chapters in 13 states, where money is raised, classes are adopted, and students are told they will have money for their college educations.  Read more…

GMO labeling in Oregon: Measure 92 turns state into ‘battleground for food culture’

16 October 2014 — Forces for and against mandatory labeling of genetically engineered foods sold in Oregon agree on almost nothing. Proponents say labeling is akin to a Freedom of Information Act when it comes to food choices. How, they ask, can the relatively inexpensive labeling of important food choices be bad for consumers and society? Opponents see the issue in starkly different terms. Not only will the measure burden farmers, manufacturers and consumers with far higher costs, they say, but it will stigmatize all Oregon agricultural products by creating a standard no other state must meet. If there is one slender thread on which both sides concur, it’s that the Nov. 4 fate of Measure 92 could play a pivotal role in how the contentious and politically costly issue plays out elsewhere across the United States. “What we do with this ballot measure will influence the whole country,” said Steven Strauss, a professor of forest biotechnology at Oregon State University who has taught about GMOs for the past decade and opposes the measure. “The nation is paying close attention to this.” David Bronner, whose Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps company is a major donor to the Yes on 92 campaign, agreed. “Oregon,” he said, “is absolutely a battle ground for food culture right now.”  Read more…

How the brewmaster from Portland’s Breakside makes America’s best IPA

16 October 2014 — This guy has Portland covered – in beer. Ben Edmunds is the brewmaster at Breakside Brewery, which operates a brewpub in North Portland and – miles to the south – a production brewery and taproom in Milwaukie. The company has enjoyed phenomenal 700 percent barley-and-hops fueled growth in a time when some doubted the City could support more breweries. Earlier this month, Breakside won two medals at the Great American Beer Festival (GABF) in Denver: a bronze in the American-style strong pale ale category for its Wanderlust IPA among 134 entries, and a gold for its flagship Breakside IPA for American-style India pale ale category among 279 entries (way more than any category).  Read more…

City’s growth plan hits the busy streets

16 October 2014 — Eighty-Second Avenue — known more for used-car lots and prostitutes than bicyclists and brewpubs — is not exactly a poster child for Portland’s vaunted land-use planning and quality of life. But Portland is now plotting where to house a quarter-million additional residents in the next 20 years, and city planners say 82nd Avenue must do its part. As planners redo the city’s comprehensive land-use plan for the first time in 35 years, they’re trying to channel the bulk of the growth into the central city and established business districts, neighborhood centers and commercial strips, including nearly 5,000 more apartments on 82nd Avenue. By doing that, planners hope to preserve the city’s residential neighborhoods much as they are, without jolting changes.  Read more…

Homes That Just Went on The Market in the City of Portland

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15820 Sw Windham Ter, Portland, OR 97224

Open House
Price: $399,000
Status: Active
MLS #: 14000361
Beds: 5
Baths: 2 full, 1 half
Living Area SqFt: 3,135
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Keller Williams Realty Portland Premiere
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624 Ne Simpson St, Portland, OR 97211

Price: $395,000
Status: Active
MLS #: 14142942
Beds: 3
Baths: 2
Living Area SqFt: 2,027
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Think Real Estate
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6271 Sw Terwilliger Blvd, Portland, OR 97239

Open House
Price: $387,500
Status: Active
MLS #: 14626273
Beds: 3
Baths: 3
Living Area SqFt: 2,332
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Lovell & Hall Real Estate Partners
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4630 Sw Pendleton St, Portland, OR 97221

Price: $339,000
Status: Active
MLS #: 14216314
Beds: 2
Baths: 2
Living Area SqFt: 2,127
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices NW Real Estate
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6814 N Haight Ave, Portland, OR 97217

Price: $309,000
Status: Active
MLS #: 14147604
Beds: 3
Baths: 1
Living Area SqFt: 2,522
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Medak Realty
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703 N Webster St, Portland, OR 97217

Price: $300,000
Status: Active
MLS #: 14669241
Beds: 4
Baths: 1 full, 1 half
Living Area SqFt: 1,568
Property Type: DETACHD
Listing Office Name: Keller Williams Realty Profes.
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Property listings 19 - 24 of 41 « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next »

rmls logoThe content relating to real estate for sale on this web site comes in part from the IDX program of the RMLS of Portland, Oregon. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than Windemere Stellar are marked with the RMLS logo, and detailed information about these properties includes the names of the listing brokers.

All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. This content last updated on October 17, 2014 11:37 pm. Some properties which appear for sale on this web site may subsequently have sold or may no longer be available.

The above information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

Data courtesy of the RMLS, Portland, Oregon. Last Updated October 17, 2014 11:37 pm.

Information

  • When “Days on Web” in a listing is two or larger it’s possible that the price has changed.
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