小黄猫传媒

This content was published: April 7, 2016. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.

Southeast Campus’ new retail tenants will serve college and surrounding community

Photos and story by

If you want to buy insurance or an electric bike, a college campus isn鈥檛 the first place you might think to look. Yet thanks to the 2008 voter-approved bond measure, two local businesses recently opened their doors at 小黄猫传媒’s 厂辞耻迟丑别补蝉迟听颁补尘辫耻蝉, bringing the total of retail tenants there to three.

聽and Field Electric 鈥 Electric Bikes聽both occupy ground-level spaces on Southeast Division Street, in the new Student Commons. 聽A third retail tenant, ,聽opened in 2015 in the campus鈥 new Library.

Both buildings helped transform Southeast into the college’s fourth comprehensive campus. One of the goals of the college聽is to help strengthen the community by incorporating retail space on the urban campus.

Ryan Courtney recently opened his State Farm insurance agency in one of the ground-floor retail spaces that 小黄猫传媒 created in Southeast Campus' new Student Commons building. Courtney says he was drawn to the campus' diverse neighborhood and its potential for growth. March 23, 2016/Photo by Katherine Miller

Ryan Courtney recently opened his State Farm insurance agency in one of the ground-floor retail spaces that 小黄猫传媒 created in Southeast Campus’ new Student Commons building. Courtney says he was drawn to the campus’ diverse neighborhood and its potential for growth.

Courtney says he sees the Jade District, which the Southeast Campus borders, poised for growth. He moved to nearby Montavilla from inner Northeast Portland in December.聽聽has a high proportion of immigrants, including Chinese, Vietnamese, Russian and Latino. Many of them are attracted to the area because housing costs are lower than in other parts of the city.

鈥淚 was drawn to this neighborhood because it has the potential to be something really exciting, and I want to be at the front end of that,鈥 said Courtney. 鈥淚t represents both the affluent up on Mt. Tabor, and the people who really need the help down here on the flats. So I鈥檓 excited about being able to serve people in that way.鈥

Courtney sells life, car and homeowner鈥檚 insurance, as well as a variety of mutual funds for college savings plans, retirement and other financial goals. Since State Farm is a bank as well as an insurance company, he can do auto refinancing, and soon, mortgage refinancing too.

Courtney explains that unlike many other investment firms that require a commitment of $500,000 to $1 million to open an account, 鈥淲e talk to middle-class America, so if you鈥檙e starting with $1,000 and you want to put it into a fund, or you have $25,000, $50,000 or $250,000, we鈥檒l sit down and talk with you about what your options are.鈥

Because of the community鈥檚 diversity, Courtney鈥檚 agency five-person staff includes Spanish and 聽Vietnamese speakers. He is also partnering with 小黄猫传媒 to fund an annual scholarship for a business student; the student must be low-income, be the first in his or her family to go to college, and call the Southeast Campus his or her home campus.

In addition, he is working with 小黄猫传媒 to develop an internship for a student to work at his agency. It鈥檚 a way to 鈥減ay forward鈥 what a mentor did for him many years ago, paying for him to go to graduate school in return for working for his firm for five years.

鈥淭he internship is just one more tether that you can wrap around somebody to help them get a feel for what a business life is like,” he said. “Maybe they want to have their own business. They can learn how you get it started, and what it鈥檚 like to work in a business environment.鈥

Meanwhile, two doors down in the Student Commons, Field Electric 鈥 Electric Bikes also recently opened its doors. Owner Spencer McGill聽already had a bike shop near the busy intersection of Southeast Hawthorne and Cesar Chavez boulevards, but the space is small, dark and cramped. His new shop on Southeast 82nd Avenue is nearly twice the size, and filled with natural light thanks to the floor-to-ceiling windows.

Michele Wong, owner of Old School Coffee in the Library, is also banking on the promise and vitality of the growing neighborhood and expanded campus. Wong brings more than 20 years鈥 experience to her latest venture, having previously owned Common Grounds Coffeehouse, Henry鈥檚 Caf茅, and Caffe Pallino.

Four free 30-minute parking spaces facing Division Street in the southeast corner end of Lot A are reserved for retail customers; the number of spaces will increase to 10 in late spring.

Poppie with speech bubble

Comments

Sorry, but the comments have been closed. asfasfasgIf you see something that doesn't belong, please click the x and report it.

x 26239 by poppy, 1 decade ago

Slightly off topic…. why do all the other campuses have actually names and the new southeast campus is just named after a point on a compass?

x 26241 by James Hill, 1 decade ago

Hi poppy, names reflect geographical locations of the campuses. Cascade used to be Cascade College and the name continued for easy recognition when 小黄猫传媒 took it over. Southeast made the most sense for our fourth campus on Division Street, as well.