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Making the greatest place: 2040 Growth Concept

Planning and stewardship    Regional vision and policy    Making the greatest place

This region is admired across the nation for its innovative approach to planning for the future. Our enviable quality of life can be attributed in no small measure to our stubborn belief in the importance of thinking ahead.

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View the calendar of events and activities related to updating the region's long-range plan. Go

One example of this foresight was the Metro Council’s adoption of the 2040 Growth Concept, a long-range plan designed with the participation of thousands of Oregonians in the 1990s. This innovative blueprint for the future, intended to guide growth and development for the next 50 years, is based on a set of shared values that continue to resonate throughout the region: thriving neighborhoods and communities, abundant economic opportunity, clean air and water, protecting streams and rivers, preserving farms and forestland, access to nature, and a sense of place. These are the reasons people love to live here.

A vision for the future

Policies in the region’s long-range plan encourage:

  • safe and stable neighborhoods for families
  • compact development, which uses both land and money more efficiently
  • a healthy economy that generates jobs and business opportunities
  • protection of farms, forests, rivers, streams and natural areas
  • a balanced transportation system to move people and goods
  • housing for people of all incomes in every community.

Challenge and opportunity

Since the adoption of the long-range plan in 1995, the region’s population has increased by 200,000 residents. More people, especially young adults, are moving to the region because it is a great place to live, work and play. This rapid growth brings jobs and opportunity, but it also creates new challenges. Our challenge is to serve as good stewards of the region and to build a foundation for fair, responsible growth.

We’re growing faster than anyone expected. New forecasts show that within the next 25 years, about a million more people will live in the five-county Portland metropolitan region. In addition, time has exposed some of the shortcomings in the implementation of the region’s long-range plan, as well as tensions and trade-offs between different objectives. We must make difficult choices if we want our neighborhoods and communities to continue to thrive.

Updating the region's long-range plan

During the next two years, the Metro Council will be working closely with individuals and groups throughout the region to take actions that will shape our future, including:

  • deciding which areas should be designated as urban and rural reserves
  • stimulating innovative development of housing and jobs in regional and town centers, transit corridors, and new communities
  • further reforming the growth management process so we can achieve our aspirations for developing great communities.

The Metro Council is moving forward on four tracks:

Investments

New ideas and new resources are needed to manage expected population and job growth in a way that protects our quality of life. In addition to maintaining our existing public facilities and services, we need to do a better job of turning our long-range plans into vibrant and well-designed main streets, downtowns, corridors, and employment/industrial areas, both in our existing communities and in new urban areas at the region’s edge. Strategic public expenditures can stimulate the private investments needed to build complete and dynamic communities.

Urban and rural reserves

Legislation passed in 2007 offers our fast-growing region new tools that will allow us to efficiently accommodate future residents while also preserving farmland, forest land, and natural resources over the long term. Regional partners will be working together to decide what lands should and should not be urbanized in the coming decades. This should provide both more flexibility and more predictability to the growth management process and reduce the level of controversy associated with urban growth boundary expansion decisions.

Performance-based growth management

Before we bring land from urban reserves into the urban growth boundary, we should demonstrate that we’re effectively implementing our long-range plans for development within the existing boundary. We’ll work with our partners to develop criteria to ensure that our decisions support the region’s goals and expectations for high-quality development.

Transportation

ODOT, TriMet, the Port of Portland, and the cities and counties of the region are working with Metro to update the Regional Transportation Plan (RTP) and to implement a long-range transportation strategy that will keep our economy strong and our communities livable.

Need assistance?

Metro land-use planning
503-797-1562
2040@oregonmetro.gov

Files and related materials

Download a reader-friendly description of the 2040 Growth Concept and a PDF of the concept map.

Files that are downloadable from this page

To view PDF files, download free Adobe Reader. To translate PDF files into text to assist visually-impaired users, visit Access.Adobe.com.

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2040 Growth Concept at a glance

Read about the ten urban design types identified in the 2040 Growth Concept as the "building blocks" of the regional strategy for managing growth.

Urban and rural reserves

Metro and Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington counties are leading a regional effort to designate urban and rural reserves to accommodate future growth and protect valuable farmland, forest land and natural areas that define the character of this region.

2035 Regional Transportation Plan update

Learn about the region's plans for connecting and completing a multi-modal transportation system from now through 2035. Find out when and how community and business stakeholders help shape these plans.

High Capacity Transit System Plan

Learn about the program to guide regional high capacity transit capital investments by evaluating and prioritizing transportation corridors for potential new projects and extensions to existing lines.

Regional Infrastructure Analysis

As the region’s population grows, one of the challenges to successful implementation of the 2040 Growth Concept is the development and maintenance of critical infrastructure necessary to build and enhance great communities.

Community Investment Toolkit

The Community Investment Toolkit provides information to local governments, nonprofit organizations, developers and community leaders about best practices for creating and enhancing vibrant urban communities.

Urban growth boundary

Metro manages the region's urban growth boundary which separates urban land from rural land.

Regional Framework Plan

Learn about the regional framework plan that unites all of Metro's adopted land-use planning policies and requirements.

Urban Growth Management Functional Plan

The functional plan provides tools that help meet goals in the 2040 Growth Concept, Metro's long-range growth management plan.

Public opinion research on population growth and land use

As part of the Metro Council's effort to understand the underlying values and beliefs of the people in the region, Metro commissioned extensive public opinion research.

Regional planning

New guidelines for urban and rural reserves

Thanks to the collaborative efforts of partners in the agriculture and development industries and in local governments throughout the region, the Oregon Legislature passed two landmark bills in 2007 that... provide more predictability about how and where development will occur – and will not occur – over the next 40 to 50 years. As a result, our region now has an unprecedented opportunity to put our plans for livability into action.

Regional planning

2060 population and employment forecast

Read a public review draft of the summary of Metro's projection of population and employment ranges for the seven counties surrounding Portland over the next 40 – 50 years. Download the PDF

By the Numbers

500
Number of new residents that the metro region gains on an average week. About a million more people will be living here by 2030. Learn about planning for population growth

Metro pick

Community Investment Toolkit: Financial Incentives guide available now

The financial incentives guide, the first of a three- volume series, highlights local success stories and demonstrates how innovative policy and financing tools are achieving results around the region. To get a copy of the guide, call Susan Patterson Sale at 503-797-1735.

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Metro
600 NE Grand Ave.
Portland, OR 97232-2736
503-797-1700
503-797-1804 TDD
503-797-1797 fax