178 apartments may replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley
Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building.
A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor.
Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city.
Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the
Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building.
A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor.
Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city.
Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic.
178 apartments may replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley
Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building.
A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor.
Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city.
Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the
Property Watch: A Dreamy 5-Bed Craftsman with a Volcano Next Door
Once owned by a former Portland Public Schools superintendent, the Mount Tabor home is on the market for the first time in 50 years.
By
Melissa Dalton
5/18/2021 at 12:30am
Editorâs Note: Welcome to Portland Monthly
âs new âProperty Watchâ column, where weâll take regular looks at interesting homes on the market in Portlandâs super-competitive real estate market (with periodic ventures to the burbs and points beyond, for good measure.) This week: A classic Craftsman with a backstory on the slopes of Mount Tabor. Have a property youâd like to suggest for this feature? Get in touch at [email protected]