In Loving Memory of Dave Brook

2026-02-11 1:51 PM

A Neighbor Who Walked the Walk

We gather with hearts heavy and hearts full, to honor Dave Brook — a man who didn’t just serve our community but lived it. Dave passed in comfort last week, surrounded by family and friends. And while we mourn his absence, we celebrate the indelible mark he left on our shared streets, trails, and lives.

Dave was a true neighborhood connector — not just in title, but in spirit. As SGNA’s longtime Communication Director, he was instrumental in launching the SGNA website and GulchNET, two places where he shared stories of our Gulch, our history, and our hopes. More recently, Dave served as the SGNA Chair and Treasurer, mentoring a new group of volunteers who have joined the board in the post-pandemic years. But his legacy runs deeper than meetings and newsletters. He was a pioneer. A builder. A believer.

He launched Portland Car Share — the first car-sharing company in the U.S. — here in our city. Later, he helped guide it into the hands of Flexcar and Zipcar, ensuring that his vision of accessible, affordable mobility would reach more of us. He didn’t just talk about change — he built it. And he did it with a quiet humility that made him beloved.

Dave was also a champion of the outdoors — of hiking, of skiing, of being present in nature. His passion for the trails was unshakable — even as his chronic respiratory condition slowed him, he never let it dim his joy. He taught us that “living in the moment” doesn’t mean ignoring limits — it means finding wonder in what you can still do and appreciating the time you’re given. He set a standard that we all strive to follow.

Dave’s life was lived with purpose — and it was lived for all of us. He was a neighbor, a mentor, and a friend. He believed in community. He believed in connection. And he believed that open conversation — honest, grounded, neighbor-to-neighbor — is how we build better places.

We miss him. We honor him. And we carry his spirit forward — not just in memory, but in action.

With deep respect,

The SGNA Team past and present

We will be re-posting Dave’s Gulch history blogs on our website in the coming weeks — not just as a tribute, but as a living guide to the work he started. His writings remind us that sustainability isn’t just about technology, but about equity, access, and care.

 

"When despair for the world grows in me 
 and I wake in the night at the least sound 
 in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be, 
 I go and lie down where the wood drake 
 rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. 
 I come into the peace of wild things 
 who do not tax their lives with forethought 
 of grief. I come into the presence of still water. 
 And I feel above me the day-blind stars 
 waiting with their light. For a time 
 I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.” 

― Wendell Berry