11-14-2011 Presentation: MuralsI
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City of Woodburn
*Murals considered signs and regulated by the
Woodburn Development Ordinance
•A sign permit is required to establish a mural (sign)
*The size of murals (signs):
*Commercial wall signs are limited to 4 -9%
of fagade
*Residential wall signs limited to 20 -32 sq ft
*Murals are established and maintained by the
property owner
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Woodburn
Silverton
Standards — developed prior to current
Oregon Law
Silverton
The Silverton Mural Society (a private, nonprofit corporation)
— executes agreements with building owners for the establishment and
maintenance of the murals
—The City of Silverton provides limited funding to the Mural Society
Silverton does not regulate murals
Most of the murals were established before the sign code was
enacted
... .. ... Silverton
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Portland
• Administrative Permit
— Ownership remains private
— Subject to objective standards (size and location)
— Oregon law prohibits regulating signs based on
content
— Murals only regulated through size and location
Portland
Portland requires an administrative "Original Art Mural" permit
from the Bureau of Development Services
—The applicant must hold an advisory public meeting in the neighborhood,
with mailed notice to the neighborhood association and posted notice on
the property
—The mural must remain in place for at least five years
Murals without an Original Art Mural Permit are considered signs
Murals remain private property - no easement is required
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Salem
The Salem Public Art Commission receives public murals
easement
—holds a public hearing on the proposed public mural, with mailed notice
to the neighborhood association
—The mural must remain in place for at least seven years
The property owner must convey a public mural easement to the
City
The property owner must agree to donate the public mural to the
City's public art collection
Lake Oswego
Lake Oswego has a Selection Committee appointed to review
proposed public art (sculpture, etc.)
The City dedicates 1Y2% of public project costs to a Public Art
Trust Fund
The City owns public art acquired by the Trust Fund
Wilsonville
In Wilsonville, there is a mix of public and privately owned
sculptures
All sculptures are visible from public streets and pathways
The City owns several sculptures and maintains seven 'art pads'
for sculptures
Beaverton
Beaverton has a Public Art Mural Program administered by the
Beaverton Arts Commission
Public Art is exempt from the sign code
Murals may
be in public
rights -of -way or private property under
the
terms of
easements
granted
to
the
City
of
Beaverton
The City dedicates 1% of public project costs to acquire Public
Art
Public art is acquired in the name of the City. Easements for
public art on private property are granted to the City
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An Approach to the Issue
Community interest in allowing murals
*Two basic approaches to allowing murals
*Private — special sign provisions (size —not content)
*Public - easement /outright
*Appoint group to evaluate and recommend subsequent
steps
*Recommend empowering an existing body to approve
and /or acquire murals
*Funding sources, staffing, ownership, and maintenance
of the art need to be resolved
Next Steps
• City Council Direction
— Workshop meetings
— Community input
— Public hearings