Community members interested in contributing to the vision of what Camas’ North Shore area might someday look like are invited to a visioning workshop from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4, at Camas High School, 26900 S.E. 15th St., Camas.
It has been more than six years since Camas City Council members approved an agreement designed to guide future development in “North Shore,” a nearly 800-acre swath of land that extends to Camas’ northern city limits and is bordered by Lacamas Lake, Northeast 232nd Avenue and Everett Street.
Planning for the North Shore began in the early 2000s, after members of the Mills and Johnston families — who owned hundreds of acres in the North Shore area — started talking about their desire to see the area, then home to dairy farms and forests, converted into a mixed-use community where residential neighborhoods commingled with business parks and open spaces.
In 2008, the city of Camas annexed the rural properties into its inventory of urban land.
In 2013, city officials designated zones for the North Shore that were to include 314 acres for an industrial business park development, 100 acres for multifamily housing, 40 acres for single-family housing and nearly 6 acres for community commercial uses.