Portland Bureau of Development Services: Permits and Planning
The Portland Bureau of Development Services (BDS) is the primary regulatory agency through which the City of Portland reviews, approves, and enforces land use decisions, building permits, and construction code compliance. Its decisions shape how Portland's built environment develops — from single-family additions to large mixed-use towers. Understanding how BDS operates is essential for property owners, developers, contractors, and residents navigating Portland's development process.
Definition and scope
The Bureau of Development Services administers Portland's land use and building regulatory systems under authority granted by the Portland City Code and the Oregon Revised Statutes governing local planning and construction. BDS is responsible for 4 primary regulatory domains: land use planning and zoning decisions, building permits and plan review, construction inspection and code enforcement, and development-related appeals.
BDS operates under Portland's Zoning Code (Title 33 of the Portland City Code), which establishes land use zones, conditional use requirements, and design review standards across the city. Oregon's statewide land use planning framework, administered by the Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD), sets the broader regulatory context within which Portland's local code must operate. Portland's adopted Comprehensive Plan, last substantially updated in 2016, provides the long-range policy foundation that BDS applies when reviewing development proposals.
Scope limitations: BDS jurisdiction is limited to land within Portland city limits. Unincorporated Multnomah County land, properties within the city limits of Gresham, Lake Oswego, or Beaverton, and development within the Metro regional Urban Growth Boundary but outside Portland do not fall under BDS authority. County-level permitting for unincorporated areas falls to Multnomah County, Washington County, or Clackamas County respectively. State-licensed trades such as electrical and plumbing work are inspected by the Oregon Building Codes Division, which operates in parallel — not under BDS — for those specific scopes of work.
How it works
BDS processes two distinct but sometimes overlapping tracks: land use review and building permits. The distinction matters because a project can require both, either, or neither, depending on what is proposed.
Land use review determines whether a proposed development or use is allowed at a given location under Portland's Zoning Code. Reviews are categorized by procedure type:
- Type I (Ministerial): Administrative approval with no public notice; staff apply clear objective standards. Examples include accessory structures that meet all dimensional standards.
- Type II (Administrative): Staff decision with public notice; neighbors may comment and appeal. Common for conditional uses, design review for smaller projects, and adjustments to development standards.
- Type III (Quasi-judicial Hearing): Decided by the Hearings Officer or Design Commission with a public hearing. Required for larger conditional uses, planned developments, and major design review projects.
- Type IV (Legislative): City Council decisions on code amendments, zone changes, and Comprehensive Plan map amendments — not individual project approvals.
Building permits are separate from land use approvals. A building permit confirms that proposed construction meets Oregon's structural, fire, and life-safety codes. Plan review timelines vary by project complexity; BDS publishes average review cycle times on its permit tracking portal. Inspections occur at defined construction milestones — foundation, framing, insulation, and final — before a Certificate of Occupancy is issued.
Common scenarios
Most interactions with BDS fall into recognizable categories:
- Residential additions and ADUs: A homeowner adding an attached accessory dwelling unit (ADU) typically needs both a building permit and a land use review confirmation that the ADU meets Title 33 dimensional standards for the applicable zone. Portland eliminated development charges for ADUs on single-family lots in 2010, a policy that DLCD has cited as a housing production model (Oregon DLCD, Housing Implementation Program).
- Commercial tenant improvements: Interior remodels of commercial spaces generally require a building permit but not a land use review, unless the change involves a new use type that is not permitted outright in the zone.
- New multi-family construction: Projects of 20 or more units in design overlay zones require Type II or Type III design review. Review timelines for Type III hearings are typically 120 days or more from application completeness determination.
- Historic resource alterations: Properties in one of Portland's 30-plus historic and conservation districts require Historic Resource Review before exterior alterations, adding a separate BDS review track with its own decision standards and appeal rights.
- Code enforcement: BDS enforces the Portland City Code's property maintenance and nuisance provisions. Complaint-based inspections can result in notices of violation with correction deadlines; unresolved violations can result in civil penalties under Portland City Code Title 29.
Decision boundaries
The clearest source of confusion in the BDS process is understanding who decides what, and what triggers each requirement.
BDS vs. City Council: BDS staff and hearing bodies make quasi-judicial land use decisions on individual projects applying adopted standards. City Council does not decide individual permits; it sets the code standards through legislative action. Appeals of BDS decisions on Type II cases go to the Hearings Officer, and appeals of Type III decisions go to the Portland City Council as the final local appeal body before circuit court.
Portland vs. Metro: The Metro Regional Government sets the Urban Growth Boundary under Oregon's statewide planning Goal 14 but does not review individual development permits inside Portland city limits. Metro's land use authority is boundary-setting and regional; project-level review is Portland's responsibility.
Permit required vs. exempt: Oregon Residential Specialty Code, adopted statewide, establishes minimum thresholds for permit exemptions. Replacing in-kind roofing materials on a residential structure below a certain valuation threshold may be exempt from a building permit; structural modifications to roof framing are not. BDS publishes a permit-required checklist that cross-references these thresholds.
For a broader orientation to Portland's civic structure and how BDS fits within it, the site index provides a mapped overview of all major Portland government topics covered in this reference network.
References
- Portland Bureau of Development Services — Official Site
- Portland City Code Title 33 — Planning and Zoning
- Portland City Code Title 29 — Property Maintenance
- Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD)
- Oregon Building Codes Division — Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services
- Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 197 — Comprehensive Land Use Planning
- Metro Regional Government — Urban Growth Boundary
- Oregon DLCD — Housing Implementation Program