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Video: MP4; File size: 285.6 MB; Duration: 1:56:46
Abstract
Second of an eight-part series of panel discussions, held October 6-November 15, 2022 and presented by Portland State University's College of Urban and Public Affairs, commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the City of Portland's 1972 Downtown Plan.
Biographical
Panelists:
Jennifer Dill, Professor, Toulan School of Urban Studies & Planning and Director of PSU’s Transportation Research and Education Center
Mary Oschwald, Researcher and Program Evaluator, PSU School of Social Work - Regional Research Institute
Sergio Palleroni, Director of the Center for Public Interest Design, Faculty in the PSU School of Architecture, and Co-founder of PSU’s Homelessness Research & Action Collaborative
Stephen Percy, President of Portland State University
Marisa Zapata, Associate Professor, Toulan School of Urban Studies & Planning and Director of PSU’s Homelessness Research & Action Collaborative
Moderated by Judith A. Ramaley, PSU President Emerita, PSU Board of Trustees member, and Distinguished Professor of Public Service in the Hatfield School of Government
Rights
This digital access copy is made available as streaming media for personal, educational, and non-commercial use within the parameters of "fair use" as defined under U.S. Copyright law. It cannot be reproduced, distributed, or screened for commercial purposes. For more information, please contact Special Collections at Portland State University Library at: specialcollections@pdx.edu.
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/38652
Publication Date
10-13-2022
Disciplines
Higher Education | Urban Studies and Planning
Recommended Citation
Dill, Jennifer; Oschwald, Mary; Palleroni, Sergio; Percy, Stephen; and Zapata, Marisa, "Community Engaged Research: Co-Creating Knowledge to Serve" (2022). The Downtown Plan and PSU as an Urban University. 2.
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/38652
Description
The year 2022 marked the 50th anniversary of the City of Portland's 1972 Downtown Plan, one of the most consequential plans in the city's history. It put in place a vision for a public, pedestrian-scaled, multipurpose, and vital downtown. Through the requirements adopted in the Downtown Plan and subsequent public and private investments stemming from it, Portland's core area became an international icon for central city recovery. That plan also formally identified Portland State University as the city's "urban university."
In February of this year, PhD candidate, Kimberly Nightingale, and Professor Emeritus, Ethan Seltzer, wrote a paper entitled Portland, Portland State, and the Urban University Idea that examines the history of the urban university idea in the U.S. and presents a working definition of what an urban university is today. It then examines the way that being an urban university has been baked into Portland State's identity from its very beginning, and concludes with some thoughts about where we might go from here.
In October and November 2022, PSU College of Urban and Public Affairs recognized the fiftieth anniversary of Portland's Downtown Plan with a series of six panel discussions that follow from Nightingale and Seltzer's paper, focusing on aspects of planning in downtown Portland and PSU's role as the city's urban university.
Professor Seltzer was interviewed on "Portland State and the Downtown Plan" for the September 27, 2022 episode of PDXPLORES.