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Pamplin Media Group - 178 apartments to replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley?

178 apartments may replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building. A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor. Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city. Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the

Pamplin Media Group - Developer eyes Milwaukie bowling alley for 178-unit project

Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building. A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor. Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city. Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pamplin Media Group - 178 apartments may replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley

178 apartments may replace Milwaukie s shuttered bowling alley Pahlisch Commercial, a developer based in Bend, plans to raze the Kellogg Bowl building. A shuttered bowling alley in Milwaukie may become the site of a six-story residential building with 178 units, including a two-unit live/work units on the ground floor. Pahlisch Commercial, Inc., a real estate developer based in Bend, wants to raze the Kellogg Bowl building on the 1.94-acre piece of land at the northern end of Milwaukie s downtown district east of Southeast Main Street, according to land-use applications for the Henley Place apartment building submitted to the city. Kellogg Bowl owners Bill Oetken and Champ Husted, along with bowling alley General Manager Roxanne Oetken, wrote in December that they were broken hearted to have to announce the alley s permanent closure after a 58-year run. Saying it was a very difficult decision, they wrote that they could not endure state-mandated shutdowns during the

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