Monday, August 29, 2022

Good News at (Old) Concordia U.

 



 There is good news for a former 24-acre small college campus tucked in the middle of a residential neighborhood in Northeast Portland.  By next summer, students should be taking classes again in what used to be Concordia University.

 The campus has been closed for more than two years after the conservative Missouri Synod of the Lutheran Church decided to shut down the 1200-student university ostensibly because of its creation of a center to provide assistance to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students.  (Don’t ask if Jesus approved.)

 The future of the campus and its many buildings became a big question mark in the Concordia neighborhood.  The land is zoned as a "campus" under Portlands's land-use laws, which made potential  converstion to some other use difficult and costly to achieve.

Two years ago, Building on History recommended that it be resold to a larger institution – possibly Portland State University – as an adjunct campus.  While our suggestion seemed to go nowhere, the University of Oregon purchased the site earlier this summer for $47 million, according to county records.

 The purchase arose from a $425 million donation to the University of Oregon from Connie and Steve Ballmer to create the Ballmer Institute for Children’s Behavioral Health.  (Steve Ballmer is a former CEO of Microsoft.)  The institute will offer bachelor’s degrees and certificates for mid-career professionals upgrading their credentials.

 According to information presented to the Concordia Neighborhood Association, the institute hopes to address a national shortage of professionals engaged in mental health programs for children.  As many as 80 percent of American students needed mental health care are unable to get it, according to the institute’s proponents.

 The first 200 students are expected to arrive on campus by summer and fall of 2023, along with 20 faculty members.  The university also has left the door open to other programs potentially using parts of the “new” campus. 

 The sale closes the history books on Concordia, which began in 1905 as a Lutheran-related private high school.  It expanded to a junior college in 1950 and to an accredited four-year university in 1977, dropping the high school along the way.

 


While new ownership is good news for the campus and the neighborhood, it does not answer what happens to the old Concordia athletic facilities.  In the early 2000s, Concordia removed 30 nearby houses it had acquired over many years to build attractive all-weather fields for soccer and baseball.  The university also has tennis courts and a gymnasium in good condition that seats about 1100 for basketball.

 All these facilities are in good condition – or at least were when Concordia University closed.  They should not be left idle.  If the University of Oregon doesn’t intend to use them, perhaps it could structure a deal with the Portland Bureau of Parks and Recreation.  Ball fields are at a premium in the neighborhood, and these should be put to good public use.

 -----Fred Leeson

Join Building on History’s mailing list by writing “add me” to fredleeson@hotmail.com

 

 

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