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About PAE | mechanical engineering in Portland, OR

A History of Innovation

A company timeline:

1967–1970s

Harold PetersonIn 1967, Harold “Pete” Peterson, Sid Nielsen, and two other engineers left the Portland office of industry giant Skidmore Owings and Merrill (SOM) to establish Peterson Consulting Engineers.

An innovator from the beginning, PAE was the first engineering firm in Portland with integrated mechanical and electrical design. SOM, which soon closed its in-house engineering group, enlisted PAE for an array of commercial and industrial projects.

Working with other architects, the firm also branched into elementary and middle schools, hotels, and the promising hi-tech industry. The forward-looking Pete Peterson helped meet the demand by purchasing -- for $10,000 -- a revolutionary Wang Word Processor and renting time for engineering calculations on off-site computers.

PAE Employees

1980s

PAE engineers stamped a host of projects that would come to define Portland, from the passenger platforms of the city’s brand-new light rail system, to the 35-story KOIN Center, to the V.A. hospital on “pill hill.”

VA HospitalThe early part of the decade, however, brought the region-wide sting of a rapid fall in the local hi-tech industry. “Our Tektronix work stopped in a single phone call and everybody’s was stopped within a week,” reported one senior engineer. The lesson was well taken by new president, Carl Urben.

By 1986, when the firm officially became “PAE Consulting Engineers,” its mix of projects still included clean rooms and hi-tech research facilities but was far more diversified into commercial high-rises, a broad range of government buildings, healthcare facilities, and a few college and university projects.

1990s

The 1990s at PAE featured a series of intriguing projects, among them extensive work with numerous high-tech clients and Portland’s new high-rise courthouse building, one of the federal government’s first “Design for Excellence” projects.

Design for ExcellencePAE also expanded its geographic reach: north to Alaska, south into California, and -- with lighting design for retail showrooms -- eastward into Boston and Atlanta.

The firm’s work moved outdoors too, most notably at Portland’s Jamison Square and South Waterfront Park. These and most other projects called for energy-efficient design, making variable frequency drives, energy management systems, low-flow plumbing fixtures, compact fluorescent lamps, and a host of other technologies part of the firm’s everyday work.

Early in the decade, buildings with such technologies may have been dubbed as “intelligent” or "green" but by the end of the 1990s they were "high performance," "sustainable," and – with great anticipation – "LEED".

Meeting

2000s...

From the beginning of 2000 until mid 2007, PAE had designed systems for, planned, or commissioned nearly 30 LEED rated or registered buildings. This was an accomplishment equaled by few engineering firms nationwide.

On the firm’s drawing boards was a Net Zero Energy commercial building, the pilot project for the LEED for Neighborhoods rating system, and what promised to be one of the nation’s first "Living Buildings."

Port of Portland

In the commercial sector, PAE had major office building projects underway on both sides of the Columbia river and, for the Port of Portland, was engaged in a sizable parking structure/headquarters building as well as a new post-911 baggage screening system.

PSU Engineering BuildingCollege and university buildings had become a PAE staple, particularly LEED targeted libraries, student housing and science centers that demanded innovative engineering. Those projects often called for complex lighting approaches too.

Starting in 2001, PAE enlisted lighting design expertise from its newly separate division, Luma Lighting Design.

In 2010, PAE opened an office in San Francisco, the first satellite office in the firm's history.

Today, PAE has provided mechanical, electrical and/or lighting design for more LEED certified buildings than any of engineering firm in the U.S. And we've only scratched the surface of what can be achieved through a sustainable approach to design.