Sgt. Jerome F. Sears U.S. Army Reserve Center: Difference between revisions
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The Sgt. Jerome F. Sears U.S. Army Reserve Center ("Sears Center") is a facility intended to serve as a west-side EOC for PBEM. However, it has never been prepared for that purpose and the building is not accessible to the public. | The Sgt. Jerome F. Sears U.S. Army Reserve Center ("Sears Center") is a facility intended to serve as a west-side EOC for PBEM. However, it has never been prepared for that purpose and the building is not accessible to the public at this time. It is included in the NETwiki because PBEM has used (and may again use) the facility for NET training. | ||
== Background == | |||
'''''The following background is paraphrased from a master plan completed at the behest of the City of Portland.<ref>Carleton Hart Architecture PC. (2013). ''SFC Jerome F. Sears Operations Center Master Plan''. City of Portland.</ref>''''' | |||
The U.S. Army Reserve Center (USAR Center) is located within the southwest Portland neighborhood of Multnomah. The site and buildings were developed by the U.S. Army Reserve at the end of the 1950s to serve as an operations and mobilization center for the south end of Portland. An almost identical facility was concurrently completed in North Portland, and named the 2nd Lt. Alfred Sharff Army Reserve Center. The South Portland facility was officially renamed the “Sergeant First Class Jerome F. Sears United States Army Reserve Center”. SFC Sears posthumously received the Distinguished Service Cross for acts of [https://valor.militarytimes.com/hero/7306 extraordinary heroism] during the Korean War. | |||
The site contains three principal buildings, along with one small outbuilding. The Reserve Center (constructed 1959) is the initial and principal building on the site, with its main entry facing Multnomah Blvd. This building was subsequently renamed the SFC Jerome F. Sears Hall. The Maintenance Shop (constructed 1959) sits near the north property line and within the fence enclosure. Adjacent to it is a three-sided cinderblock hazardous materials building. The Storage Building (constructed 2000) is located near the west properly line and adjacent to auditorium portion of Sears Hall. | |||
In the mid-2000s, the [https://www.acq.osd.mil/brac/ Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC)] decided that activities within the USAR Center could be consolidated elsewhere, and the property was to be surplused. A plan was developed to relocate the Reserve in September 2011, upon completion of a new complex in Clackamas. | |||
In 2006 the Portland Development Commission (now [https://prosperportland.us/ Prosper Portland]) put forth a call for proposals for redevelopment of the USAR Center site, opening the investigation of reuse opportunities. In 2008, Portland City Council proposed to convert the site into affordable housing. This use received uneven support from the Multnomah Neighborhood Association, and was ultimately rejected due to a lack of City funding. | |||
In August of 2011, the City submitted an application proposal to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the organization responsible for the surplus process. The application authors were the Portland Bureau of Transportation, the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management, and the Portland Water Bureau. This application was approved by FEMA as noted in a letter dated October 19, 2011, which recommended that the transfer language require the property to be used in perpetuity as an emergency management response facility, or revert back to the Federal government. | |||
Ownership of the property was formally transferred in 2012. In August the City engaged Carlton Hart Architecture to create a Master Plan to determine actions needed to convert the property into an auxiliary emergency operations center. |
Revision as of 16:10, 30 October 2023
The Sgt. Jerome F. Sears U.S. Army Reserve Center ("Sears Center") is a facility intended to serve as a west-side EOC for PBEM. However, it has never been prepared for that purpose and the building is not accessible to the public at this time. It is included in the NETwiki because PBEM has used (and may again use) the facility for NET training.
Background
The following background is paraphrased from a master plan completed at the behest of the City of Portland.[1]
The U.S. Army Reserve Center (USAR Center) is located within the southwest Portland neighborhood of Multnomah. The site and buildings were developed by the U.S. Army Reserve at the end of the 1950s to serve as an operations and mobilization center for the south end of Portland. An almost identical facility was concurrently completed in North Portland, and named the 2nd Lt. Alfred Sharff Army Reserve Center. The South Portland facility was officially renamed the “Sergeant First Class Jerome F. Sears United States Army Reserve Center”. SFC Sears posthumously received the Distinguished Service Cross for acts of extraordinary heroism during the Korean War.
The site contains three principal buildings, along with one small outbuilding. The Reserve Center (constructed 1959) is the initial and principal building on the site, with its main entry facing Multnomah Blvd. This building was subsequently renamed the SFC Jerome F. Sears Hall. The Maintenance Shop (constructed 1959) sits near the north property line and within the fence enclosure. Adjacent to it is a three-sided cinderblock hazardous materials building. The Storage Building (constructed 2000) is located near the west properly line and adjacent to auditorium portion of Sears Hall.
In the mid-2000s, the Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) decided that activities within the USAR Center could be consolidated elsewhere, and the property was to be surplused. A plan was developed to relocate the Reserve in September 2011, upon completion of a new complex in Clackamas.
In 2006 the Portland Development Commission (now Prosper Portland) put forth a call for proposals for redevelopment of the USAR Center site, opening the investigation of reuse opportunities. In 2008, Portland City Council proposed to convert the site into affordable housing. This use received uneven support from the Multnomah Neighborhood Association, and was ultimately rejected due to a lack of City funding.
In August of 2011, the City submitted an application proposal to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the organization responsible for the surplus process. The application authors were the Portland Bureau of Transportation, the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management, and the Portland Water Bureau. This application was approved by FEMA as noted in a letter dated October 19, 2011, which recommended that the transfer language require the property to be used in perpetuity as an emergency management response facility, or revert back to the Federal government.
Ownership of the property was formally transferred in 2012. In August the City engaged Carlton Hart Architecture to create a Master Plan to determine actions needed to convert the property into an auxiliary emergency operations center.
- ↑ Carleton Hart Architecture PC. (2013). SFC Jerome F. Sears Operations Center Master Plan. City of Portland.