Multifamily Housing in Hood River: Site Planning for a...
Hood River is growing fast and the land supply is tight. We break down what multifamily site planning actually requires in Hood River — terrain, UGB...
Hood River's urban growth boundary is tight and the buildable ground inside it is already steep. Multifamily here usually means cutting into a hillside, threading a driveway through a setback, and convincing the City that your stormwater plan works on fractured basalt.
Density and Site Coverage
Multifamily site planning starts with the density calculation. How many units can the zoning allow? What's the maximum lot coverage? How much open space is required? These numbers set the upper bound on what the architect can design, and they cascade directly into the civil engineer's scope: more units means more parking, more impervious surface, more stormwater treatment, more utility demand, and more grading complexity.
On typical Hood River infill sites -- quarter-acre to half-acre parcels in established neighborhoods -- Oregon's inclusionary housing provisions (ORS 197.309) and the city's own affordable housing overlay can shape the project density and unit mix. From the civil engineer's perspective, additional units add load to every system: water, sewer, storm, electrical, and parking -- all constrained by Hood River's compact infrastructure grid and steep terrain.
Parking and Access
Parking is the most space-intensive element of a multifamily site plan. At 1.5 spaces per unit — a common suburban requirement — a 60-unit project needs 90 parking spaces. At 300 square feet per space (including drive aisle share), that's 27,000 square feet of paving: nearly two-thirds of an acre dedicated entirely to car storage. On a tight site, parking often dictates the building footprint more than the architecture does.
Hood River's zoning code establishes parking ratios for multifamily development. Oregon's Climate-Friendly Areas rules are reshaping parking requirements statewide, and smaller cities like Hood River are beginning to adopt reduced-parking overlays near transit and downtown areas. Even with reduced parking, some spaces are still typically provided, and each one needs to meet dimensional, accessibility, and EV readiness requirements under the Oregon Structural Specialty Code and ADA.
Stormwater on Tight Sites
Stormwater compliance on a multifamily infill site in Hood River is one of the most challenging aspects of the civil design. The City of Hood River's public works standards require onsite stormwater management for new development, and Oregon DEQ's 1200-C construction stormwater permit applies to sites disturbing one acre or more. The impervious area ratio on infill sites is often 75-90%, and finding room for stormwater treatment facilities that receive runoff by gravity and don't conflict with foundation setbacks or utility corridors requires careful coordination with the architect and landscape architect from day one.
Flow-through planters along building frontages are a common solution on constrained multifamily sites. They treat runoff from the adjacent roof and sidewalk, occupy linear space that would otherwise be landscape buffer, and can be integrated into the architectural aesthetic. The civil engineer designs the planter dimensions, media depth, underdrain system, and overflow connection; the landscape architect selects the plants and surface treatment.
Utility Coordination
A 60-unit multifamily building needs domestic water, fire service, sanitary sewer, storm drain, gas, electrical, and telecom. Each utility has its own lateral from the street, its own meter or point of connection, and its own set of design standards. On a 40-foot-wide street frontage, fitting all of these laterals without violating the minimum horizontal separation requirements between utilities is a spatial puzzle that the civil engineer solves on the composite utility plan.
The Bottom Line
Every project has its own constraints — site geometry, soil conditions, agency jurisdiction, schedule pressure. What doesn't change is the physics: water flows downhill, utilities need clearance, and code requirements aren't negotiable. The projects that go smoothly are the ones where the civil engineer is involved early enough to shape the site plan around these realities rather than retrofitting solutions after the architecture is locked.
At Calichi Design Group, we've built our practice around getting these details right the first time. Our team has permitted projects in dozens of jurisdictions across the West Coast and Pacific, and we know which agencies want what, which reviewers flag what, and which shortcuts actually cost more time than they save.
If you're starting a project and want to avoid the most common civil engineering pitfalls, reach out for a conversation. We'll give you an honest assessment of what your site needs and a fixed-fee proposal — usually within a week.
Reco Prianto, PE
Licensed PE in seven states. 25 years of site civil and dry utility design.
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