Tag: 7323 NE Glisan

Tool Building Readying for Tenants

The owners of the single-story Tool Building at 7131 NE Glisan Street are working behind the decoratively painted window coverings to create seven to eight divided spaces for future tenants. With the help of listing agent JJ Hewitt, they are seeking creative businesses for the space that will complement one another while serving the community with active frontage along a historic streetcar commercial district.

Rendering of a modern commercial building with large windows, featuring a sign reading 'TOOL', surrounded by a tree and pedestrians on the sidewalk.
Rendering of the Tool Building at 7131 NE Glisan St courtesy Bill Neburka EAO

Architect and one of the project owners, Bill Neburka, explained that he wants to pay tribute to the 1926-era building’s commercial laundry origins by supporting businesses that produce their products on-site. “I think that’s the only model for retail anymore, where the value add actually happens in the space,” said Neburka. He notes that stores that resell items made by others and sold to customers at a slight markup are often put out of business by their online competitors. He feels that this is contributing to the empty retail space across the city. “It’s a little bit of a hard nut to crack within that model, what is the ground floor habitation in a city anymore, because you walk anywhere and we’ve just got acres of empty storefront.” Instead, he thinks successful shops will have a modest showroom for customers but dedicate significant floor space to creating those products in the back.

An old industrial window with multiple glass panes, set in a weathered brick wall, showing signs of age and neglect.
Steel-casement windows

The Tool Building team has some experience with supporting tenants on this street. Since 2022, they have owned the commercial building two blocks east at 7323 NE Glisan Street, which extends the full width of the city block and has frontages on NE 73rd and 74th Avenues. Neburka says that space hosts a community of fabricators who often support one another and benefit from being in the same space. They hope to similarly find complementary tenants for the Tool Building and are taking a thoughtful approach to signing leases. “We want to find—not in a snobby way—the right group of people that elevate each other,” explained Neburka. “That’s one of the things we found up the street, having a bunch of fabricators [in one building]. It’s nice to have that community. It’s not borrowing a cup of sugar but borrowing a saw blade, bringing value out of those human connections.”

A modern workspace featuring wooden tables and shelves, with two people engaged in conversation. The room is brightly lit by hanging light fixtures and has large windows that let in natural light.
Rendering of the Tool Building unit courtesy Bill Neburka EAO

Despite the leasing success at their other locations, the Tool Building owners see value in having a more customer-facing activity at this site with a wider definition of “makers.” Tool Building co-owner Michael Quinn is also the primary owner of Sparrow Salon’s building at 7243 NE Glisan Street. That location hosts a longtime local business, which adds value on-site and brings the community into the space. The Tool Building team suspects that the same community-serving, gathering-space model could do well down the street. “We’re focusing on creating a nucleus for the neighborhood, I think that’s really where things are at now,” said Neburka. “I think that these buildings begin to become more than just themselves, more than just one space, a place where people can come and interact with people who are making their stuff or food, and it becomes a real collecting spot for our neighborhood.”

A weathered interior wall featuring an old metal door with a small window, surrounded by partially obscured glass windows, and exposed wooden framing and panels nearby.
Pre-restoration Steel-casement windows and door seen in rendering above

Inside the building, the space is still raw, with just a few stud-framed walls built to show divided space for prospective tenants. The design team wants to preserve much of the century-old building’s character. They will clean and repair the commercial steel-casement windows along the NE 72nd Avenue frontage that give the building its industrial character. They will then create new wood-framed storefront glazing in the existing openings facing NE Glisan Street, with a centrally located atrium containing an American with Disabilities Act (ADA)- compliant entry ramp. That covered opening will have direct access to two storefronts and a central hallway that leads to additional units and shared three-stall restroom facilities. The 7,139-square-foot building features several skylights, making internal spaces naturally bright during the day.

A floor plan diagram for the transformation of a building into a multi-tenant retail space, detailing various suites and exterior work areas.
Floor plan courtesy Evident Architecture Office (EAO)

The southwest corner was the historic laundry’s old mechanical room, and still features the ceiling-mounted line shaft power-driven rotating pulleys that provided mechanical power transmission to the commercial washers. The building owners think this space would be an ideal location for a food or bar service establishment. It has two skylights and a large roll-up door at the back that could open to a secluded outdoor seating area.

A modern interior space with wooden furniture and pendant lights, featuring several people interacting and a large window that allows natural light in, showcasing greenery outside.
Rendering of the Tool Building food or bar unit courtesy Bill Neburka EAO

The team has developed a tenancy vision for the space, but must carefully consider the impacts of Change of Use or Change of Occupancy. Those adjustments can trigger substantial Systems Development Charges (SDCs) to the property owner. Portland collects these fees to offset the impact a project may have on the City’s streets, water, storm runoff management, and sanitary sewer systems. They can also add funds for parks and recreation facilities. In 2025, the Portland City Council temporarily exempted newly created housing units from paying SDCs to encourage more construction in that market. However, that does not apply to commercial projects like the Tool Building, and any potential tenant who wants to use the space in a way that triggers SDC fees would need to pay rent at a rate sufficient to cover those charges.

Interior view of an empty industrial space with white brick walls, exposed ceiling beams, and large windows allowing natural light in.
Pre-restoration Tool Building food or bar unit seen in rendering above

Commercial property owners can not simply rent space to any tenant. They often need to consider the long-term viability of the business to fulfill its lease and whether it will significantly change the building’s use in a way that requires them to pay the city’s SDCs. Neburka said they recently had to reverse course due to such a fee. “We got hit when we changed the front space in the building up the street. We changed that to retail, and the development charges from PBOT (Portland Bureau of Transportation) were huge. It’s onerous, to the point we’re changing it back,” explained Neburka. “At the City… there is a thirst for money, and nobody’s getting the message that it doesn’t work. It literally doesn’t work.” In this case, SDC charges can create a situation where a prospective tenant’s business could drive up property expenses to the point that the leased rate is no longer affordable to the operator or the building owner has to forgo revenue. “The charge is enough that it would be our entire profit off a three-year lease, so at what point does it make any sense for us to do it?” Neburka said.

View of a metal rod with a rusty pulley and a cylindrical weight hanging from a ceiling structure with white beams and exposed brick wall.
Historic laundry ceiling-mounted line shaft power-driven rotating pulley

With that recent change in occupancy experience, the Tool Building team will favor certain business types but remains flexible and open to hearing from a variety of groups. “I think we’re interested in talking to anybody right now, especially fabrication, especially art-focused. I mean, it’s close to our heart, it’s what we see the building being part of, but we’d love to hear from anybody who wants a space to do something,” Neburka explained. “I think that the design is going to be a blue-collar building. We’re just trying to be smart about it, and we’re hoping that the way we approach it will be attractive to the community.”

View of an unfinished interior space with wooden framing and bare walls, showcasing open doorways and a concrete floor.

The team is working on building permits and bank financing for the project. Interested prospective tenants can contact JJ Hewitt with Cloud City Realty via email at jj@cloudcityrealty.com or by phone at 971-339-1456.

Exterior view of a modern building labeled 'TOOL Building', featuring large windows, wooden panels, and a person approaching the entrance.
Rendering of the Tool Building entry courtesy Bill Neburka EAO
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Sizzle Pie Co-Founder Invests on NE Glisan

Matthew Jacobson, co-founder of Sizzle Pie, purchased a multi-building property at 7323 NE Glisan Street in August 2022. Months later, Jacobson purchased a second property on the block at the corner of NE 74th Avenue and Glisan, currently serving as the construction office for a neighboring affordable housing project. Over the last few months, a new anchor tenant in the Glisan Street frontage has reshaped the prominent space to serve as their architecture firm’s regional office, while other trades-related businesses occupy the building spaces located between NE 74th Avenue and NE 73rd Avenue.

Jacobson purchased the properties with other investors through his whimsically named companies Jackie Glisan LLC and Buford T Justice LLC. In a December 2022 interview with Montavilla News, Jacobson explained that it was a general investment in the property outside his other restaurant ventures. The popular local chain Sizzle Pie sold to Sortis Holdings several years ago, and Jacobson now only works as an employee of the organization. He remains active in other investments, including Wayfinder brewery. However, outside of possible storage space for those businesses, he had no active plans to extend those businesses to this site. Instead, Jacobson has recently focused on supporting other growing businesses by dividing the space into smaller units, including a personal office for himself.

The site’s most visible transformations will support a new tenant moving into one of the NE Glisan Street storefronts. Evident Architecture Office (EAO) has offices in Portland and Cleveland, Ohio. Owner Bill Neburka spent many years as one of the principal Architects at Works Progress Architecture, where that firm designed several distinctive buildings, including the Blackbird building on E Burnside Street. Crews are slowly removing the industrial cladding on the NE Glisan Street building to reveal the classic painted brick facade.

Google Earth image with real estate listing illustrations

Jacobson said he has around 11 tenants in the “T” shaped building, including EAO. There are plumbers, contractors, and people who create props for film and television, all of whom share the commercial building. He is happy with the mix of creative people working from the space. Jacobson hopes the upgrades to the building will add to the transformation at this intersection driven by the affordable housing buildings under construction. “I’m really interested to see how the development across the street is going to impact things. I think generally it’s probably gonna be good,” said Jacobson.

Crews will continue working on the building through the summer as they customize tenants’ spaces. Jacobson indicated that he plans to keep this investment for a while with an eye on enhanced future uses. For now, it will serve as another commercial complex suitable for a variety of businesses looking for flexible space.


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Large Glisan Property for Sale

The owners of a three warehouse property in Montavilla have listed it for sale. The roughly “T” shaped property has entrances on NE 74th Ave, NE 73rd Ave, and NE Glisan Street. County records show this property last sold to its current owners less than a year ago, in November 2020.

Located at 521 NE 74th Ave, 530 NE 73rd Ave, and 7323 NE Glisan Street, each building has an address on different streets. The 14,622 square feet of warehouse space fills most of the 22,420 square-foot lot. Rose City Mustang leases 9,622 square feet of the northern two buildings. The NE Glisan Street building most recently housed TriTech Bikes and is currently vacant.

521 NE 74th Ave

Groups interested in purchasing this property should contact George Slevin with Kidder Mathews real estate at george.slevin@kidder.com or 503-313-5011

530 NE 73rd Ave

Bike Shop Move Signals Trouble on Glisan

After nearly three years on NE Glisan Street, TriTech Bikes moved out of Montavilla. A relentless series of break-ins, vandalization, and assaults pushed this business out of the neighborhood. Its departure could become the first in a wave of area shops relocating to better parts of Portland or closing down permanently.

TriTech Bikes owner Dylan Carrico-Rogers grew up around NE Glisan and wanted to be part of its revival. His shop, formerly located at 7323 NE Glisan Street, occupied a transitioning section of Glisan across from the Candlelight Restaurant and Lounge. Before the pandemic, despite challenges, the area was on its way to becoming a walkable business corridor. 

Within the last 18 months, Carrico-Rogers experience three break-ins, two nearby shootings, property destruction, and biohazardous waste all over the property. After losing $25,000 to theft, TriTech Bikes’ insurance premium increased by 150%, with the insurer threatening to terminate coverage if it happened again.

In a phone interview, Carrico-Rogers expressed how disappointed he is in the neighborhood support systems. According to Carrico-Rogers, he reached out to his landlord after each break-in but found them unsupportive and incapable of securing the building. The Portland police failed to patrol the area after months of sustained burglary and violence surrounding his shop. Even when an unlicensed and uninsured motorist totaled his vehicle parked out front, police officers let the person drive on due to insufficient resources.

Carrico-Rogers felt ignored by a local business association that he saw as focuses on Stark Street. By his assessment, the community is mishandling Portland’s problems and unwilling to voice a collective outcry for help.

He pointed to the community’s excessive empathy for the houseless as contributing to open drug use, public defecation, and increased larceny. He admits he reached a breaking point but cautions the neighborhood that he is not alone. 

According to Carrico-Rogers, other business owners he spoke to on NE Glisan, from NE 67th to 82nd Ave, are also looking to move. He explained that those who owned their buildings would keep the property but shutter the business. People working in the area see a future where NE Glisan is build up like inner SE Division Street. However, they know that transformation is five or ten years away. Carrico-Rogers explained that no business could survive what the area has become, waiting for things to improve.

TriTech Bikes new location at 2622 SE 25th Ave

Daily life has vastly improved for Carrico-Rogers and TriTech Bikes staff. They relocated to SE Clinton Street in a single-story shopfront located at 2622 SE 25th Ave, Suite A. Now positioned in an active commercial area closer to the city center, things are safer and calmer. Now they can focus on supporting customers and recovering the losses suffered over the last year and a half. 


UPDATE – The opinions of the subject interviewed in this story do not represent the perspective of Montavilla News.