Romtec News
![]() |
Win-Win for College and CommunitySustainable Land Development Today, June 2008 by Eileen Mozinski Portland (Ore.) Community College and Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation District collaborate on an award-winning 32-acre sports and recreational complex. Romtec, Inc. designed and supplied the 1000 sq. ft. restroom-concession building for this project. The story illustrates how cooperating public agencies can work together to create great recreational facilities. Sustainable Land Development Today article |
|
Golf Course Trades Company SpotlightGolf is all about beautiful courses and challenging play. See our "Company Spotlight" page in the February 1, 2008 edition of The Golf Course Trades! Read the article in The Golf Course Trades! Download the Golf Course Restrooms brochure. |
|
Providing Greener Restroom FacilitiesPROBLEM: We'd like our parks to be more eco-friendly, but we're not sure we can afford it. We're currently adding new restrooms to the site. Is there a way to make them greener? More about green restrooms in Recreation Management Problem-Solver Guidebook, Aug 07 |
|
Evergreen Sustainable Buildings by RomtecRomtec, Inc. has introduced the EVERGREEN line of public restrooms, restroom/shower buildings, concession/multi-use facilities and municipal/industrial control buildings. The new pre-engineered and prefabricated structures are designed around Romtec's emphasis on resource efficiency and sustainability.Evergreen Technology -- more information! |
|
Romtec Sierra building serves Bend, Ore. parkFarewell Bend is Bend (Ore.) Metro Park & Recreation District's newest river park. Alongside the Deschutes River, the park contains two viewing shelters, a picnic shelter, benches and doggie rest stops.More about this custom restroom building. |
|
Finding the Right Buildings for a Multi-Use ParkThe right facilities for a multi-use park are buildings that can fill various needs as park uses change from season to season, year-to-year. Park managers who choose to invest in multi-function buildings often do so because they realize that future uses of a particular park may be quite different from current uses.Read more in Recreation Management. |

