Edith Moulton Park

The 26-acre wonderland contained trails traveling around an old growth conifer forest, a meadow, and the salmon-bearing Juanita Creek. In leading master plan process, Otak engaged the community to deliver a park design that prioritizes accessibility in a family friendly environment that merges seamlessly with the area’s natural surroundings.

A Master Plan Process for an Accessible Park Design

When Edith Moulton donated her family’s farmstead to King County in the 1960s, she hoped for her home to become a park “for children to play in nature.”  Decades later, with the park bordered by families and an elementary school, the City of Kirkland sought to make Edith’s dream a reality. Through an engaging master plan process, the Kirkland community helped guide a family-friendly place that preserves and celebrates the former farmstead’s natural beauty. From upgrading existing trails to ADA standards to a 400-foot open-grate boardwalk along Juanita Creek, the community-inspired design emphasizes accessibility and sustainability. Other improvements include a popular off-leash dog trail, a picnic pavilion and restrooms, a climbing structure, and two pedestrian bridges over Juanita Creek.

44th & Belmont Apartments

The 44th and Belmont Apartments building adds multi-family housing to booming southeast Portland. The site’s split zone allowed our architects to design a unique four-story building that has three stories in front to conform with zone regulations.

Creative Multi-Family Design Solves Unique Zoning Challenges

Offering 63 units that range from three-bedroom units and two-story townhomes to studios and one-bedrooms, the building also has two live + work units with street-level storefronts. The building’s features include a rooftop community room with a deck, kitchen, special amenities, and views of downtown Portland. An interior courtyard – designed by Otak landscape architecture – includes a fire pit and flow-through planters. The design includes floor joists salvaged from historic homes that had previously been on the site. Despite unique zoning constraints during the permitting process with the City of Portland that technically consider the project two separate buildings, those challenges were overcome to build it as one structure.

Cooper’s View Park

A park master plan, construction documents development, and construction observation allowed for the development of a 2.5-acre parcel on a sloping site in the Drewf’s Farm Neighborhood above Fallen Leaf Lake in Camas, Washington.

A Park Master Plan for a Complex Site

Objectives included developing a neighborhood park plan with community input, seeking approval through the City’s design review process, and seeing the project through construction. In engaging the community, the Otak team gathered public comment on concerns and preferred amenities through neighborhood meetings and presented them to the Parks Commission for the land use review process. We also solved drainage issues from nearby properties and provided site analysis and site design, sustainable design, and cost estimating.