Portland’s RoseVilla Senior Living Unveils the ROSE Port

Oregon Home Magazine highlights RoseVilla’s ROSE Port, the Pacific Northwest’s first solar-powered resilient hub in the senior living sector.

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Portland’s RoseVilla Senior Living Unveils the ROSE Port

Portland’s RoseVilla Senior Living Unveils the ROSE Port

RoseVilla Senior Living has unveiled the Pacific Northwest’s first solar-powered resilient hub in the senior living sector. The ROSE Port—short for Resilient Operations and Sustainable Energy —was formally dedicated on Nov. 13 and marks the completion of the first major infrastructure project in RoseVilla’s 25-year Resiliency Action Plan.

“The ROSE Port represents what it means to care deeply for our people and our planet,” said Glen Lewis, CEO of RoseVilla Senior Living. “By investing in resilient infrastructure, we’re prioritizing the health, safety, and well-being of our entire community. RoseVilla isn’t waiting to respond to climate-related emergencies; we’re preparing for them.”

A view from above: RoseVilla Senior Living’s ROSE Port – short for Resilient Operations and Sustainable Energy. A rooftop 17.82-kilowatt solar array and 30-kilowatt-hour battery and inverter system generate and store clean power, allowing Residents to charge cell phones and small devices when the grid is down. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography. 

RoseVilla Senior Living Residents attend the Nov. 13, 2025 Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony for the ROSE Port. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography.

Designed and built in partnership with Portland-based Green Hammer Design + Build, the ROSE Port is engineered to operate independently during extended outages caused by heat waves, ice storms, wildfires, or seismic events. Its key features include:

  • Earthquake-Resilient Design: Built to Risk Category 4 seismic standards to ensure the structure remains safe and immediately usable after major earthquakes. The water tank is installed separately from the main structure for added safety.
  • Energy Independence: A 17.82-kilowatt rooftop solar array paired with a 30-kilowatt-hour battery and inverter system generates and stores clean power. The battery can charge the cell phones of all Residents and Team Members (approximately 450) and power about 40 CPAP machines, walkie-talkies, and essential small devices during a grid outage.
  • Water Independence: A 3,100-gallon cistern captures, filters, and UV-purifies rainwater on site. In an emergency, it can provide about a gallon of drinking water per Resident for about 8 days.
  • Sustainable Materials: Built with mass timber (mass plywood panels), a renewable alternative to steel or concrete that reduces carbon footprint while protecting old-growth forests. Posts and beams use FSC-certified glued laminated lumber, and the concrete foundation was repurposed from the original on-site structure.
  • EV Charging Infrastructure: Four Level 1 chargers support zero-emission transportation.

RoseVilla Senior Living’s ROSE Port was designed and built in partnership with Green Hammer Design + Build. In attendance at the Nov. 13 Ribbon Cutting Ceremony, left to right: From Green Hammer Design + Build: Liz Orejel, Build Project Manager, Laura Squillace, LEED APl, Architect and Co-director of Design, Josh Gabbard, Architectural Associate, and Skyler Oberholtzer, Lead Superintendent; from RoseVilla: CEO Glen Lewis and Vice President of Strategic Operations Jim Willeford, and Green Hammer President Stephen Aiguier, SHP. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography. 

RoseVilla Residents are active partners in climate preparedness. The Resident-led Green Team promotes climate action campus-wide and shares best practices with Portland-area senior living communities. The Ready Force Resident Emergency Preparedness Team stands ready to assist neighbors during emergencies. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography. 

Sustainable and Resilient Senior Living

The ROSE Port is part of RoseVilla’s 25-year Resiliency and Sustainability Action Plan , a Resident-supported roadmap to achieving climate preparedness, sustainability, and community wellbeing. Additional solar-powered hubs are planned for RoseVilla’s 22-acre campus.

Resident-Led Climate Action

Residents play a leading role in advancing RoseVilla’s climate resilience work. The Resident-led Green Team drives campus-wide sustainability efforts and collaborates with senior living communities throughout Portland. The Ready Force Emergency Preparedness Team is trained to support neighbors during crises.

“Residents care deeply about sustainability and want to live in alignment with their values,” said Lewis. “Their passion and leadership are helping us build a climate-ready community, one where people can live safely, purposefully, and in harmony with the planet.”

Left to right: RoseVilla Senior Living CEO Glen Lewis, RoseVilla Resident and Ready Force Team Member Steve Morris, and Stephen Aiguier, founder and president of Green Hammer Design + Build, cut the ribbon at the ROSE Port Dedication Ceremony on Nov. 13, 2025. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography. 

After the Dedication Ceremony, guests participated in a self-guided tour to learn about the ROSE Port’s key features with Skyler Oberholtzer, Lead Superintendent at Portland-based Green Hammer Design + Build. Photos by Bill Purcell Photography. 

About RoseVilla Senior Living

RoseVilla Senior Living is a single-site, nonprofit Life Plan Community (also known as a Continuing Care Retirement Community) located on 22 acres along the Willamette River at 13505 SE River Rd in Portland, Oregon. RoseVilla offers independent living, 24-hour supportive living through Madrona Grove, and in-home care through its licensed agency, Avencia.

With nine neighborhoods, including two net-zero energy developments, The Oaks and Trillium Townhomes , RoseVilla is nationally recognized for sustainability and resiliency innovation, and a culture of belonging. RoseVilla is guided by its mission to champion the power of community, driven by people, purpose, and possibility, creating an inclusive space where all can belong and thrive. Visit www.rosevilla.org.

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