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portland oregon

Portland, Oregon
Flag Seal
Nickname: "City of Roses", "Stumptown," "Bridgetown," "PDX"
Location in Multnomah County and the state of Oregon
Coordinates: 45°31′12″N, 122°40′55″W
Country United States
State Oregon
County Multnomah County
Mayor Tom Potter
Area  
 - City 376.5 km²  (145.4 sq mi)
 - Land 347.9 km²  (134.3 sq mi)
 - Water 28.6 km² (11.1 sq mi)
Elevation 15.2 m
Population  
 - City (2005) 556,370
 - Density 1599.2/km² (4142.7/sq mi)
 - Metro 2,127,881
Time zone PST (UTC-8)
 - Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
Website: http://www.portlandonline.com/

Portland is the largest city in the U.S. state of Oregon, and county seat of Multnomah County. It straddles the Willamette River immediately south of its confluence with the Columbia River. Portland is the third largest city in the Pacific Northwest after Seattle, Washington and Vancouver, British Columbia, with a population of 556,370 (July 1, 2005 estimate).[1] Approximately 2 million live in the surrounding metropolitan area (MSA), the 24th-largest in the U.S.

Portland is known as "The City of Roses" or "Rose City" — its climate is ideal for their cultivation, and the city has many rose gardens, including the International Rose Test Garden in Washington Park. Other nicknames include "Stumptown" (due to early logging to clear land for development), "Bridgetown" (due to its numerous bridges), "Puddletown" (due to the rainy weather), "River City" (due to its proximity to the Willamette and Columbia), "PDX" (after the city's airport code), and "P-town".

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Law and Government
    • 2.1 Planning and development
  • 3 Geography and climate
    • 3.1 Climate
    • 3.2 Sections and neighborhoods
      • 3.2.1 Southwest
      • 3.2.2 Northwest
      • 3.2.3 North
      • 3.2.4 Northeast
      • 3.2.5 Southeast
  • 4 People and culture
    • 4.1 Demographics
    • 4.2 Media
    • 4.3 Parks and attractions
    • 4.4 Beer
    • 4.5 Sports
    • 4.6 Famous residents
  • 5 Education
    • 5.1 Public education
    • 5.2 Colleges and universities
      • 5.2.1 Schools of medicine
      • 5.2.2 Schools of law
      • 5.2.3 Schools of art
  • 6 Transportation
  • 7 See also
  • 8 Sister cities
  • 9 References
  • 10 Further reading
  • 11 External links
    • 11.1 Portland wiki sites

History

Portland in 1890
Main article: History of Portland, Oregon

Portland started as a spot known as "the clearing"[2], which was on the banks of the Willamette about halfway between Oregon City and Fort Vancouver. In 1843, William Overton saw great commercial potential for this land, but lacked the funds required to file a land claim. He struck a bargain with his partner Asa Lovejoy of Boston, Massachusetts: for 25¢, Overton would share his claim to the 640-acre (2.6 km²) sitecitation needed]. Overton later sold his half of the claim to Francis W. Pettygrove of Portland, Maine. Pettygrove and Lovejoy both wished to name the new city after their own home town; this was decided with a coin toss, which Pettygrove won.

At the time of its incorporation on February 8, 1851 Portland had over 800 inhabitants[3], a steam sawmill, a log cabin hotel, and a newspaper, the Weekly Oregonian.

Portland's location, with access both to the Pacific Ocean via the Willamette and the Columbia rivers and to the agricultural Tualatin Valley via the "Great Plank Road" through a canyon in the West Hills (the route of current-day U.S. Highway 26), gave it an advantage over nearby ports, and it grew quickly.[4] It remained the major port in the Pacific Northwest for much of the 19th century, until the 1890s, when Seattle's deepwater harbor was connected to the rest of the mainland by rail, affording an inland route without the treacherous navigation of the Columbia River.

The first known reference to Portland as "The City of Roses" was made by visitors to an 1888 Episcopal Church convention, the nickname growing in popularity after the 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition where Mayor Harry Lane suggested that the city needed a "festival of roses"[5] The first Portland Rose Festival was held two years later, and remains the city's major annual festival a century later.

Law and Government

The flag of Portland flying in Pioneer Courthouse Square
See also: List of mayors of Portland, Oregon

The city of Portland is governed by a mayor, four city commissioners and an auditor, who are each elected citywide to serve four-year terms. The city council consists of the mayor (Tom Potter as of 2005) and commissioners. The auditor does not have a vote on the city council or direct city operations, but provides checks and balances in the commission form of government and accountability for the use of public resources. In addition, the auditor gives access to information for all Council members and the public and issues reports on various matters of city government.

The city's Office of Neighborhood Involvement serves as a conduit between city government and 95 neighborhood associations grouped into seven coalitions.

Portland and its surrounding metropolitan area are also served by Metro, the nation's only directly elected regional government. Metro's charter includes land use and transportation planning, solid waste management, and map development. It also owns and operates the Oregon Convention Center, Oregon Zoo, Portland Center for Performing Arts, and Portland Metropolitan Exposition Center.

Planning and development

Aerial view of central Portland

Portland is often cited[2] as an example of a city with strong land use planning controls; the opposite extreme, a city with few or no controls, is typically illustrated by Houston, Texas. This is largely the result of statewide land conservation policies adopted in 1973 under Governor Tom McCall, in particular the requirement for an urban growth boundary(UGB) for every city and metropolitan area.

Portland's urban growth boundary, adopted in 1979, separates urban areas (where high-density development is encouraged and focused) from traditional farm land (where restrictions on non-agricultural development are very strictcitation needed]). This was atypical in an era when automobile use led many areas to neglect their core cities in favor of development along interstate highways, in suburbs, and satellite cities.

As a result, one can see pastoral farmlands and old red barns within 15 miles of downtown Portland, literally across the street from large suburban developments (where that street is the urban growth boundary.) Opponents argue that this growth boundary has limited growth and increased the costs of housing; proponents argue that it has preserved valuable farmland, made possible the popular farmer's markets in Portland, and brought more efficient public transportation and less traffic than similarly sized cities.

As the population has grown (twice as fast as the national average, during the 1980s and 1990s)citation needed], and undeveloped land inside the urban growth boundary has dwindled, there has been pressure to change or relax the rules. The rapid growth of two major employers in Washington County (the Nike shoe corporation, and the Intel semiconductor corporation) contributed to this pressure.

The original state rules included a provision for expanding urban growth boundaries, but critics felt this wasn't being accomplished. In 1995, the Legislature ordered cities to expand UGBs to provide enough undeveloped land for a 20 year supply of future housing at projected levels, and to complete the expansion by the end of 1999.[6]

1966 photo shows sawdust-fired power plant on the edge of Downtown that was removed to make way for dense residential development. High rises to left in background were early projects of the Portland Development Commission.

The Portland Development Commission is a semi-public agency that plays a major role in downtown development; it was created by city voters in 1958 to serve as the city’s urban renewal agency. It provides housing and economic development programs within the city, and works behind the scenes with major local developers to create large projects. It has been criticized for clubbiness and lack of transparency.

In the early 1960s, the PDC led the razing of a large Italian-Jewish neighborhood downtown, bounded roughly by the I-405 freeway, the Willamette River, 4th Avenue and Market street. It was replaced by concrete office developments that proponents find clean and modern, and opponents find antiseptic and lifeless at night.

Mayor Neil Goldschmidt took office in the 1970s as a proponent of bringing housing and the associated vitality back to the downtown area, which was seen as emptying out after 5pm. The effort has had dramatic effects in the 30 years since, with many thousands of new housing units clustered in 3 areas; west of Portland State University (between the I-405 freeway, SW Broadway, and SW Taylor St.); the RiverPlace development along the waterfront under the Marquam (I-5) bridge; and most notably in the Pearl District (between I-405, Burnside St., NW Northrup St., and NW 9th Ave.).

In 2006, Portland was ranked overall number 1 of 50 U.S. cities by the organization SustainLane on quality of life and economic factors that affect personal sustainability. [3]

Geography and climate

The Willamette River with Portland in the background.

Portland lies at the northern end of Oregon's most populated region, the Willamette Valley. (As the metropolitan area is culturally and politically distinct from the rest of the valley, local use often excludes Portland from the valley proper.) Although almost all of Portland lies within Multnomah County, small portions of the city lie within Clackamas and Washington counties, with mid-2005 populations estimated at 785 and 1,455, respectively[1]. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 145.4 mi² (376.5 km²). 134.3 mi² (347.9 km²) of it is land and 11.1 mi² (28.6 km²), or 7.6%, is water.

Portland lies on top of an extinct Plio-Pleistocene volcanic field[7]. The Boring Lava Field includes at least 32 cinder cones and small shield volcanoes lying within a radius of 13 miles of Kelly Butte, which is approximately four miles east of downtown Portland.

Climate

Portland's climate is temperate and seasonal. The average rainfall ranges between approximately 40 to 45 inches per year depending on location. Portland averages 155 days with measureable precipitation a year. Although it lies in the Marine West Coast climate zone, Portland shows many characteristics of a Mediterranean climate. The city has mild wet winters, and warm, dry summers. The summer months (June through September) mark the driest period, averaging no more than one inch of rain per month, but it is not uncommon for summer months to receive little or no precipitation. November through April is the rainy season, with 80% of the total annual rainfall occurring in those months. Winter low temperatures hover around 35 °F (2 °C), and summer highs average around 80 °F (27 °C), however summer heat waves with temperatures exceeding 100 °F (38 °C) do occur on occasion. But for the most part, the Portland summers are very pleasant with abundant sunshine. The lowest temperature ever recorded in Portland was −3 °F (−19 °C), set on February 2, 1950. Portland recorded a record high temperature of 107 °F (42 °C) numerous times, and temperatures of 100 °F (38 °C) have been recorded in each of the months from May through September.

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Avg high °F 46 50 57 62 68 74 80 81 74 63 51 46 63
Avg high °C 8 10 13 16 20 23 26 27 23 17 11 8 17
Avg low °F 37 39 41 44 50 54 58 58 55 48 42 37 47
Avg low °C 3 4 5 7 10 12 14 14 13 9 6 3 8
Rainfall inches 6.24 5.07 4.51 3.62 3.10 2.00 1.60 0.50 0.90 3.39 6.39 6.75 44.07
Rainfall mm 158.5 128.8 114.6 78.7 63.2 50.8 40.6 12.7 22.8 86.1 162.3 171.4 1119

Sections and neighborhoods

See also: Portland, Oregon neighborhoods
The sections of Portland.

Portland straddles the Willamette River near its confluence with the Columbia River. The denser and earlier-developed west side is mostly hemmed in by the nearby West Hills (Tualatin Mountains), though it extends over them to the border with Washington County. The flatter east side fans out for about 180 blocks, until it meets the suburb of Gresham. Rural Multnomah County lies farther east.

The "great renumbering" on September 2, 1931 (resolving issues from the 1891 consolidation of Portland with East Portland and Albina) divided Portland into five sections: Southwest, Southeast, Northwest, North, and Northeast. Burnside St. divides north and south, and the Willamette River divides east and west. The river curves west five blocks north of Burnside and in place of it, Williams Ave. is used as a divider. The North section lies between Williams Ave. and the Willamette to the west.

The streets of Portland are for the most part laid out on a grid, with named "streets" running perpendicular to the Willamette River and numbered "avenues" running parallel to (and with numbers increasing with distance from) the river. The grid breaks down in hilly regions, particularly in the West Hills, where roads follow the countours of elevation.

Southwest

Downtown Portland

Downtown Portland lies in the Southwest section between the I-405 freeway loop and the Willamette River, centered around Pioneer Courthouse Square ("Portland's living room"). Downtown and many other parts of inner Portland have compact square blocks (200 ft [60 m] on a side) and narrow streets (64 ft [20 m] wide), a pedestrian-friendly combination.

Many of Portland's recreational, cultural, educational, governmental, business, and retail resources are concentrated downtown, including:

  • South Park Blocks, Pettygrove and Lovejoy Parks, and Tom McCall Waterfront Park
  • Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland Art Museum, and Oregon Historical Society Museum
  • Portland City Hall, the Portland Building, Pioneer Courthouse, and Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse
  • Portland State University, with the largest student body of any in Oregon
  • The Meier & Frank Building, Pioneer Place mall, Wells Fargo Center, and the World Trade Center

Beyond downtown, the Southwest section also includes:

  • The campuses of Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Lewis & Clark College, and Portland Community College/Sylvania
  • Neighborhoods like Corbett-Terwilliger-Lair Hill, South Burlingame, Hillsdale, and Multnomah, with unique residential houses and well defined commercial and retail districts
  • Alpenrose Dairy in the Hayhurst neighborhood, the grounds of which host track cycling and Little League sports
  • Washington Park, site of North America's deepest transit station, the Oregon Zoo, Hoyt Arboretum, the International Rose Test Garden, the Portland Japanese Garden, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and many hiking trails.
  • The south Willamette riverfront along SW Macadam Ave., over 100 acres (0.4 km²) of former industrial land. This area is undergoing redevelopment as a mixed-use, high-density neighborhood, with an anticipated 2,700 residential units and 5,000 high-tech jobs after build-out.

Northwest

Northwest Portland includes the Pearl District, most of Old Town Chinatown, the Northwest District, and various residential and industrial neighborhoods. A range of streets in Northwest Portland are named alphabetically, from Burnside north to Yeon. (Several characters in Portland native Matt Groening's TV show The Simpsons have names based on these: Ned Flanders, the bully Kearney, Reverend Lovejoy, Mayor Quimby, and possibly C. Montgomery Burns[ide].)

The Pearl District is a recent name for a former warehouse and industrial area straddling NW Lovejoy St. between NW Broadway and the I-405 freeway. An elevated off-ramp ran along NW Lovejoy St. from the Lovejoy bridge past NW 10th Ave.; when it was demolished in the late 1980s, dozens of blocks were opened for development. Since then, and peaking in the 2000s, many of the warehouses, some on brownfield sites, have been converted into lofts, and new multistory condominiums have also been developed on previously vacant land next to the train yard. The increasing density has attracted a mix of restaurants, brewpubs, shops, and art galleries, though in some cases pioneering tenants have been priced out of the area. The galleries sponsor simultaneous artists' receptions on the first Thursday of every month.

Between the Pearl District and the Willamette is the Old Town Chinatown neighborhood. It includes Portland's Chinatown, marked by a pair of lions at its entrance at NW 4th Ave. and W Burnside St. and home to the Portland Classical Chinese Garden. Before World War II, this area was known as Japan Town or Little Tokyo; Chinatown was previously located just south of W. Burnside St. along the riverfront.

Further west is the compact but thriving NW 21st and 23rd Avenue restaurant and retail area, the core of the Northwest District. Parts of this area are also called Uptown and Nob Hill. The residential areas adjacent to the shopping district include the Alphabet Historic District (with large, often Craftsman homes built around 1905) and a large district centered around Wallace Park. The neighborhood has a mix of Victorian-era houses, apartment buildings from throughout the 20th century, and various businesses centered around Legacy Good Samaritan Medical Center. The Portland Streetcar connects Nob Hill to downtown, via the Pearl.

West of the developed areas is the northern portion of Portland's West Hills, including the majority of massive Forest Park.

North

North Portland is a diverse mixture of residential, commercial, and industrial areas. It includes the Portland International Raceway, the University of Portland, and massive cargo facilities of the Port of Portland.

During World War II, a planned development named Vanport was constructed to the north of this section between the city limits and the Columbia River. It grew to be the second largest city in Oregon, but was wiped out by a disastrous flood in 1948. Columbia Villa, another wartime housing project in the Portsmouth Neighborhood, is being rebuilt; the new $150 million community will be known as New Columbia and will offer public housing, rental housing, and single family home ownership units. Since 2004, a light rail line runs along Interstate Avenue, which parallels I-5.

Northeast

Northeast Portland contains a diverse collection of neighborhoods. For example, while Irvington and the Alameda Ridge boast some of the oldest and most expensive homes in Portland, nearby King is a more working-class neighborhood. Because it is so large, Northeast Portland can essentially be divided ethnically, culturally, and geographically into inner and outer sections. The inner Northeast neighborhoods that surround Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. were once predominantly African American, resembling typical urban inner-city environments found in most major U.S. cities. That is now changing due to the process of gentrification. Inner Northeast includes several shopping areas, such as the Lloyd District, Alberta Arts District and Hollywood, and part of the affluent Irvington, Alameda, and Laurelhurst neighborhoods and nearby developments. The city plan targets Lloyd District as another mixed-use area, with high-density residential development.

The Oregon Convention Center in NE Portland

At the base of Northeast is the Rose Quarter. It is named after the Rose Garden Arena, home of the Portland Trail Blazers, and also includes the Blazers' former home, the Memorial Coliseum. The Coliseum is the home to Portland's hockey team, the Portland Winter Hawks, of the Western Hockey League, though they often play at the Rose Garden. The newest Rose Quarter tenants are the LumberJax of the National Lacrosse League.

The city still holds the lease to the land and owns the Coliseum, but the Rose Garden and other buildings were owned by private business interests until they went into receivership. The area is quite active during the teams' home games, and the city hopes to extend the activity by promoting a major increase in residential units in the quarter using zoning and tax incentives.

Southeast

Southeast Portland stretches from the warehouses by the Willamette, through the historic Ladd's Addition, to the Hawthorne and Belmont districts. Southeast Portland residents initially tended to the blue-collar but have since evolved into a wide mix of backgrounds; inner southeast is home to several thriving subcultures including Hippies, Hipsters, and environmentalists, while the outer edges are populated by a diverse, largely working-class population which includes immigrant communities from Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia. The Hawthorne district is known for its hippie/radical crowd and small subculturally-oriented shops. Outer Southeast, particularly the area surrounding 82nd Avenue is constantly littered with Anarchist graffiti.

Farther south, the Brooklyn, Sellwood-Moreland, Woodstock, Brentwood-Darlington, and Eastmoreland neighborhoods near Reed College are close to the Willamette River. Lloyd Center, Washington Square, Clackamas Town Center and Mall 205 are the largest retail centers serving the area.

Between the 1920s and the 1960s, Southeast was home to Lambert Gardens. Southeast Portland also features Mt. Tabor, a park with one of only two extinct volcanoes in a continental U.S. city, which (on the south slope) is home to Warner Pacific College.

People and culture

Demographics

Historical populations [3][8][1]
Census
year
Population

1850 821
1860 2,874
1870 8,293
1880 17,577
1890 46,385
1900 90,426
1910 207,214
1920 258,288
1930 301,815
1940 305,394
1950 373,628
1960 372,676
1970 382,619
1980 366,383
1990 437,319
2000 529,121
2005 556,370

As of the 2000 census, there are 529,121 people residing in the city, organized into 223,737 households and 118,356 families. The population density is 1,521/km² (3,939.2/mi²). There are 237,307 housing units at an average density of 682.1/km² (1,766.7/mi²). The racial makeup of the city is 77.91% White, 6.64% African American, 6.33% Asian, 1.06% Native American, 0.38% Pacific Islander, 3.55% from other races, and 4.15% from two or more races. 6.81% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race.

Out of 223,737 households, 24.5% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.1% are married couples living together, 10.8% have a female householder with no husband present, and 47.1% are non-families. 34.6% of all households are made up of individuals and 9% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.3 and the average family size is 3.

In the city the population is spread out with 21.1% under the age of 18, 10.3% from 18 to 24, 34.7% from 25 to 44, 22.4% from 45 to 64, and 11.6% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 35 years. For every 100 females there are 97.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 95.9 males.

The median income for a household in the city is $40,146, and the median income for a family is $50,271. Males have a reported median income of $35,279 versus $29,344 reported for females. The per capita income for the city is $22,643. 13.1% of the population and 8.5% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 15.7% of those under the age of 18 and 10.4% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line. Oregon has a 9% income tax which tends to suppress accurate reporting. Figures delineating the income levels based on race are not available at this time.

Portland is becoming increasingly diverse. Recent trends have more young people moving into the city as older, more established white families with children move to the suburbscitation needed]. Although the city has the highest percentage of white residents of an American city of 500,000 or more, 60% of people moving to Oregon are non-whitecitation needed].

However, though the population of the city is increasing, the total population of children is diminishing, which has put pressure on the public school system to close schools. A recent study found that Portland is now educating fewer children than it did in 1925, and the city will have to close the equivalent of three to four elementary schools each year for the next decade.[9]

Portland's public school system has remained racially imbalanced. As of the 2000 census, three of its high schools (Cleveland, Lincoln and Wilson) were over 70% white, while Jefferson High School was 86% non-white. The remaining four schools are more ethnically balanced[10].

The imbalance can be explained through Portland's demographic history. Prior to the Second World War, Portland had very few residents of non-European ethnicity. In 1940, Portland's African-American population was approximately 2,000 and largely consisted of railroad employees and their families. During the war-time liberty ship construction boom, the need for workers drew many blacks to the city. Due to institutionalized racism in the real-estate community at the time, this new influx of blacks was guided to specific neighborhoods, such as the Albina district and Vanport. The post-war destruction of Vanport eliminated the only integrated neighborhood, and the ghettoization of blacks into the NE quadrant of the city continued.

Media

The Oregonian is the major daily newspaper in Portland, and circulates statewide. Local weekly papers include Willamette Week (the largest alternative weekly in the metro area); the Portland Tribune (a general audience twice-weekly), the Portland Mercury (targeted at younger urban readers), the Oregon Herald, and the Asian Reporter, a weekly newspaper covering both international and local Asian news. The Portland Chinese Times is a local newspaper printed in chinese aimed at the Chinese-American community in Portland Oregon.

Portland Indymedia is one of the oldest and largest Independent Media Centers and plays a large role in the city's radical-leaning population. The Portland Alliance, a largely anti-authoritarian socialist monthly, is the largest radical print paper in the city.

Portland Monthly is a monthly news and culture magazine. The Business Journal of Portland, a weekly, covers many business-news-related stories, as does The Daily Journal of Commerce. BarFly Magazine is a popular weekly periodical covering the city's nightlife and bar scene. Exotic Magazine is the major monthly magazine covering the city's adult entertainment and nightlife since 1993. The Mid-county Memo is a neighborhood newspaper serving the Gateway and Parkrose neighborhoods on Portland's east side. PORT is an art macroblog dedicated to the vibrant art scene that provides daily updates on the arty goings on around town. Oregon Business magazine covers business from a statewide perspective. Oregon Home magazine is the region's remodeling and decor publication.

Portland is well served by television and radio. The metro area is the 23rd largest Designated Market Area (DMA) in the U.S., consisting of 1,086,900 homes and 0.992% of the U.S. market. The major network television affiliates include:

  • KATU 2 (ABC)
  • KOIN 6 (CBS)
  • KGW 8 Northwest NewsChannel 8 (NBC)
  • KOPB 10 Oregon Public Broadcasting (PBS)
  • KPTV 12 Fox 12 Oregon(FOX)
  • KPXG 22 (i)
  • KRCW 32 (The CW)
  • KPDX 49 (MyNetworkTV)
  • KWVT-LP 52 (America One)
  • KPXG-LP 54 (i)
See also: List of radio stations in Oregon and Portland, Oregon in popular culture

Parks and attractions

The rose has played a significant role in Portland's history and inspires one of the city's nicknames.
See also: Tourist attractions in or around Portland, Oregon

Portland is proud of its parks and its legacy of preserving open spaces. Parks and Greenspace planning dates back to John Charles Olmsted's 1903 Report to the Portland Park Board, inspiring generations of urban greenspace advocates.citation needed] In 1995, voters in the Portland metropolitan region passed a regional bond measure to acquire valuable natural areas for fish, wildlife, and people. Ten years later, more than 8,100 acres of ecologically valuable natural areas had been purchased and permanently protected for the public.[11]

Mt. Tabor Park is focused on an extinct volcano, making Portland one of two cities in the continental US with an extinct volcano within its city limits, the other being Bend, Oregon.[12]

Forest Park is the largest wilderness park within city limits in the United States, with over 5,000 acres (20 km²). Portland is also home to Mill Ends Park, the world's smallest park (a two-foot-diameter circle, the park's area is only about 0.3 square meters). Washington Park is just west of downtown, and is home to the Oregon Zoo, the Portland Japanese Garden, and the International Rose Test Garden.

Tom McCall Waterfront Park runs along west bank of the Willamette for the length of downtown. The 37-acre (150,000 m²) park was built in 1974 after Harbor Drive was removed and now plays host to large events throughout the year. Portland's downtown also features two groups of contiguous city blocks dedicated for park space; they are referred to as the North and South Park Blocks.

The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, or OMSI, is located on the east bank of the Willamette River across from downtown Portland, and contains a variety of hands-on exhibits covering the physical sciences, life science, earth science, technology, astronomy, and early childhood education. OMSI also has an OMNIMAX Theater and is home to the USS Blueback (SS-581) submarine.

Portland is also home to Portland Classical Chinese Garden, an authentic representation of a Suzhou-style walled garden. Local construction workers provided the site preparation and foundation, and dozens of workers from Suzhou, using material from China, constructed its walls and other structures, including a tea house.

The only state park in the area is Tryon Creek State Park; its creek still has a run of steelhead. Adjacent to the park is the Tryon Life Community Farm, an aspiring urban ecovillage and educational center.

Portlandia, a statue on the west side of the Portland Building, is the second-largest hammered-copper statue in the U.S.

The Beverly Cleary Sculpture Garden, which immortalizes three of the award-winning author's best known characters with bronze sculptures, quote plaques, and a fountain, is located in Grant Park, just a few blocks from the real Klickitat Street of Henry Huggins fame.

Leach Botanical Garden is a 15.6 acre botanical garden in the Southeast section of the city, emphasizing plants of the Pacific Northwest.

Audubon Society of Portland (http://www.audubonportland.org/), founded 1903, is one of the largest local Audubon chapters in the country with over 10,000 members. The Chapter's book store, wildlife care center, and administrative offices are located on a 143 acre sanctuary nestled against Forest Park only 5 minutes from downtown Portland. The sanctuary trails are open to the public.

Beer

Portland and certain other Oregon cities (such as Hood River and Bend) are well-known for their beer. It is often said that Portland is the home of the microbrew revolution in the United States. Some illustrate Portlanders' interest in the beverage by an offer made in 1888, when local brewer Henry Weinhard volunteered to pump beer from his brewery into the newly dedicated Skidmore Fountain. However, the renown for quality beer dates to the 1980s, when state law was changed to allow consumption of beer on brewery premises. In short order, microbreweries and brewpubs began to pop up all over the city. Their growth was supported by the abundance of local ingredients, including two-row barley, over a dozen varieties of hops, and the pure water from Bull Run (a drainage basin of nearby Mount Hood).

Today, with 33 breweries within the city limits, Portland is home to more breweries than any other city in the world. The McMenamin brothers alone have over thirty brewpubs, distilleries, and wineries scattered throughout the metropolitan area, several in renovated theaters and other old buildings otherwise destined for demolition. Other notable Portland brewers include Widmer Brothers, Bridgeport, Full Sail, Hair of the Dog, and Pyramid (formerly Portland), and numerous smaller quality brewers. In 1999, author Michael "Beerhunter" Jackson called Portland a candidate for the beer capital of the world because the city boasted more breweries than Cologne, Germany. The Portland Oregon Visitors Association is promoting "Beervana" and "Brewtopia" as nicknames for the city.[4].

Portland hosts a number of festivals throughout the year in celebration of beer, including the Oregon Brewers Festival. Held each July, it is the largest gathering of independent craft brewers in North America. Other major beer festivals throughout the calendar year are: in April Spring Beer and Wine Festival, in July Portland International Beerfest and in December Holiday Ale Festival.

An unusual feature of Portland entertainment is the large number of movie theaters that serve beer, often with second-run or revival films. Examples include the Academy Theater, Bagdad Theater, Clinton Street Theater, Edgefield, Kennedy School, Laurelhurst Theater, and Mission Theater.

Sports

Portland does not have as many major league sports teams as other cities of its size but has a variety of minor league teams.

Club Sport League Championships Venue Founded
Portland Trail Blazers Basketball National Basketball Association 1 (1976-77) Rose Garden Arena 1970
Portland Timbers Soccer United Soccer Leagues First Division 0 PGE Park 2001
Portland Winter Hawks Ice Hockey Western Hockey League 2 (1982-83, 1997-98) Rose Garden Arena, Memorial Coliseum 1976
Portland Beavers Baseball Pacific Coast League 0 PGE Park 2001
Portland LumberJax Indoor lacrosse National Lacrosse League 0 Rose Garden Arena 2006
Portland Chinooks Basketball International Basketball League 0 Multiple arenas 2005
Oregon Riptide Basketball American Basketball Association 0 Warner Pacific College 2006
Portland Naughty Dogs Paintball National Professional Paintball League Multiple tournaments None 1996

Portland's first professional sports team was the Portland Rosebuds. Not only were they the first professional sports team in Oregon they were the first professional hockey team in the U.S. They joined the Pacific Coast Hockey Association in 1914. They were the first U.S. Team to play for the Stanley Cup; in 1916, they played against the Montreal Canadiens. In 1918, the team moved to Chicago and took the name Blackhawks.

The Rosebuds played at the Portland Hippodrome. At the time it was built, it was the world’s largest indoor ice rink. It was on NW 22nd and Marshall; it burned down in 1951.

Portland is home to only one team in a major league, the Portland Trail Blazers. The National Basketball Association team has several players in the Basketball Hall of Fame, including Dražen Petrović, Bill Walton, Lenny Wilkens, and Clyde "The Glide" Drexler. The Blazers won their only NBA Championship in 1977. They lost in the NBA finals in 1990 (to the Detroit Pistons) and 1992 (to Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls).

The Portland Winter Hawks, a major-junior ice hockey team in the Western Hockey League, have been a team since 1976-1977, when the Blazers won the NBA Finals. The Winter Hawks are one of the most popular junior ice hockey teams and there are many loyal fans in Portland. They have also produced many NHL stars.

The Portland Beavers, are a Triple-A baseball team from the Pacific Coast League affiliated with the San Diego Padres. They were founded in 2001. However, the original Beavers started playing in 1903. The Beavers play in PGE Park and sell a fair amount of tickets.

The Portland Timbers, of the United Soccer Leagues First Division, are a soccer team that plays at PGE Park. Since they were formed in 2001, the Timbers have made the playoffs four out of five times but have never won a championship.

The city was also home to a WNBA team, the Portland Fire. The team never made the playoffs and folded in 2002.

One of the cities’ newest and fastest growing teams in popularity is the Portland LumberJax of the National Lacrosse League. They play in the best box lacrosse league in the country but it is not a major league. In the LumberJax first season, they clinched their division, a rare and mighty feat for a first year team. Unfortunately for Jax fans, the team was upset in the first round of the playoffs by the Arizona Sting.

Portland is now home to two new basketball teams, the Oregon Riptide, in the American Basketball Association and the Portland Chinooks in the International Basketball League. Neither team has established a significant fan base yet

The city also has a successful paintball team in the National Professional Paintball League called the Portland Naughty Dogs. The team plays in a variety of tournaments around the U.S.

Portland is also one of the locations on the Champ Car World Series circuit, hosting races at the world-class Portland International Raceway. PIR also hosts a race on the American Le Mans Series and a variety of SCCA, historic, and annual races such as the Rose Cup during the city's Rose Festival. There has been recent interest in attracting a Major League Baseball franchise to Portland. In 2004, the city made an unsuccessful bid for the Montreal Expos, and in 2006 was contacted by the Florida Marlins. There is also an interest of the Pittsburgh Penguins of the NHL moving to Portland.

Skiing and snowboarding are particularly popular with Portlanders. The area is served by a number of resorts located on nearby Mount Hood, including Timberline, which allows skiing year round. The only other resort in North America with summer skiing is Whistler in British Columbia.

Rock climbing is growing in popularity as an outdoor pastime. At numerous small crags around town, one may glimpse mountaineers-in-training with their ropes, alpenstocks, and hard-soled boots practicing their technical moves on the rock in preparation for difficult alpine ascents.

The local Alpenrose Dairy is host to the annual Little League softball World Series and has a velodrome on site.

Running is a major sport in Portland, the home of the Nike shoe company and of Adidas' American operations. The Portland Marathon has been held annually in the city since 1971. The Hood to Coast Relay is the world's largest running relay race, with approximately 17,000 racers per year running from Timberline Lodge on Mt. Hood to the Pacific Ocean at Seaside.

Famous residents

See List of Portlanders.

Education

Public education

The Portland Public Schools district consists of about 100 schools covering in various combinations grades K through 12, as well as 50 special education programs. The number of students in the school district is approximately 53,000 — over 90% of the available school-age children, a higher percentage than other large urban school districts.[13][14] Nonetheless, total school enrollment is declining, accompanying a change in Portland's demographics, and the Portland Public Schools are facing increasing budget pressure.

Notable public high schools include: Woodrow Wilson High School, Lincoln High School, Cleveland High School, Metropolitan Learning Center and Benson Polytechnic High School. Lincoln, the oldest public high school west of the Mississippi River, was built in 1869, and boasts several famous alumni, including cartoon voice Mel Blanc, singer-songwriter Elliott Smith, Matt Groening (creator of The Simpsons) and astronaut S. David Griggs. Cleveland draws many students due to its International Baccalaureate program. Phil Knight, the founder of Nike, graduated from Cleveland. Benson is a citywide magnet high school named for lumber baron and social entrepreneur Simon Benson, who in 1917 endowed the school with a grant worth $1.5 million in 2006 dollars.

School districts in the suburbs include: to the east, Parkrose, Centennial,Gresham Reynolds Schools, and David Douglas; to the west, Beaverton, Tigard-Tualatin, Lake Oswego, and Riverdale; to the south, North Clackamas, West Linn-Wilsonville, and Oregon City.

The region also has several top private schools, including: the Catlin Gabel School, Central Catholic High School, French American International School, Jesuit High School, The Northwest Academy, Oregon Episcopal School, St. Mary's Academy, and Valley Catholic High School. Portland is also home to Montessori Institute Northwest, an internationally recognized (AMI) teacher training facility, and the city and nearby suburbs are known as a nexus for Montessori education from preschool through junior high.

Colleges and universities

Portland State University, with graduate and undergraduate enrollment of around 24,000, is Oregon's largest university. Its primary campus is at the southern edge of downtown. PSU has masters programs in liberal arts, business, engineering, computer science, performing arts, social work and urban affairs. PSU's doctoral programs include biology, civil engineering, education, electrical & computer engineering, computer science, environmental sciences, math, psychology, public administration, urban studies, social work, and systems sciences.

Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) includes a major medical school (see below), and several major research departments, including: Vollum Institute for Advanced Biomedical Research, Neurological Sciences Institute, Center for Research on Occupational and Environmental Toxicology, Oregon National Primate Research Center, Advanced Imaging Research Center, Center for Biostatistics, Computing & Informatics in Biology & Medicine, Center for the Study of Weight Regulation and Associated Disorders, Oregon Stem Cell Center, Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute, and the Oregon Graduate Institute School of Science and Engineering.

Community colleges include: Portland Community College, with three major campuses in the city—Cascade, Rock Creek, and Sylvania—as well as the smaller Southeast Center and Metropolitan Workforce Training Center; Mount Hood Community College in East Multnomah County near Gresham; Clackamas Community College in Oregon City; Chemeketa Community College in Salem, about 45 minutes south of Portland; Clark College in Vancouver, Washington.

Private colleges include: Cascade College, Capstone College, Concordia University, George Fox University, Lewis & Clark College, Linfield College, Marylhurst University, Pacific University, Reed College, University of Portland, Warner Pacific College, and Willamette University.

Other: Concorde Career Institute, Western Culinary Institute, and Multnomah Bible College.

Schools of medicine

OHSU has a major medical, dental, and nursing school at its primary campus just south of downtown, in the West Hills. The campus anchors a medical district (affectionately called "Pill Hill") surrounded by other hospitals including a Veterans Affairs Hospital, Portland Shriners Hospital, and Doernbecher Children's Hospital.

OHSU has residency training programs in the following disciplines: Anesthesiology, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, General Medicine, Dentistry, Dermatology, Diagnostic Radiology, Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, General Surgery, Medical Genetics, Neurology, Neurological Surgery, Nursing, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Orthopaedic Surgery, Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, Pathology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Public Health and Preventive Medicine.

Other schools of medicine include: Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, the National College of Naturopathic Medicine, Western States Chiropractic College, and the School of Optometry at Pacific University.

Schools of law

Lewis & Clark College includes Lewis & Clark Law School.

Schools of art

These include the Art Institute of Portland, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Oregon College of Art and Craft and Northwest Film Center.

Transportation

Portlanders waiting for MAX downtown.
Main article: Transportation in Portland

The Portland metropolitan area has the typical transportation services common to major U.S. cities, though Oregon's emphasis on proactive land-use planning and transit-oriented development within the urban growth boundary means that commuters have multiple well-developed options.

In fact, Portland is well-known for its comprehensive public transportation system. TriMet operates most of the region's buses and the Metropolitan Area Express, or MAX, light rail system, which connects the city and suburbs. 5th and 6th avenues are the Portland Transit Mall, an exclusive bus-only right-of-way running north/south through downtown.

I-5 connects Portland with the Willamette Valley, Southern Oregon, and California to the south and with Washington to the north. I-405 forms a loop with I-5 around the central downtown area of the city and I-205 is a loop freeway route on the east side which connects to the Portland International Airport. US 26 supports commuting within the metro area and continues to the Pacific Ocean westward and Mount Hood and Central Oregon eastward. US 30 has a main, bypass and business route through the city extending to Astoria, Oregon to the west; through Gresham, Oregon, and the eastern exurbs, and connects to I-84, traveling towards Boise, Idaho.

Portland's main airport is Portland International Airport, located about 20 minutes by car (40 minutes by MAX) northeast of downtown.

Portlanders have other transportation alternatives. The Portland Streetcar operates from the southern waterfront, through Portland State University north to nearby homes and shopping districts. The city is particularly supportive of urban bicycling and has been recognized by the League of American Bicyclists among others for its network of paths and other bicycle-friendly services. Car sharing through Flexcar is also available to residents of the city and some inner suburbs. The new Portland Aerial Tram will connect the South Waterfront district on the Willamette River and the Oregon Health & Science University campus on Marquam Hill above. Construction of the tram is scheduled for completion in December 2006.

See also

  • Architecture in Portland, Oregon
  • List of artists and art institutions in Portland, Oregon
  • List of hospitals in Portland, Oregon
  • Portland metropolitan area

Sister cities

Portland has eleven sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International:

  • Ashkelon, Israel
  • Bologna, Italy
  • Corinto, Nicaragua
  • Guadalajara, Mexico
  • Kaohsiung, Taiwan
  • Khabarovsk, Russia
  • Mutare, Zimbabwe
  • San Pedro Sula, Honduras
  • Sapporo, Japan
  • Suzhou, China
  • Ulsan, South Korea


Portland also has a friendship city relationship with Tallinn, Estonia.[15]

References

  1. ^ a b c http://www.pdx.edu/media/p/r/prc_2005_Table5_County_Split.xls
  2. ^ Orloff, Chet (2004). Maintaining Eden: John Charles Olmsted and the Portland Park System. Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers 66: 114–119.
  3. ^ a b Gibson, Campbell (June 1998). Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990. U.S. Bureau of the Census - Population Division.
  4. ^ "City keeps lively pulse." (Spencer Heinz, The Oregonian, January 23, 2001)
  5. ^ City Flower. City of Portland Auditor's Office - City Recorder Division.
  6. ^ Oregon Revised Statutes, Section 192.296
  7. ^ http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Oregon/BoringLavaField/description_boring_lava.html
  8. ^ http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/41/4159000.html
  9. ^ Egan, Timothy. "Vibrant Cities Find One Thing Missing: Children." New York Times. March 24, 2005.
  10. ^ "Abernethy Elementary School: Recent Enrollment Trends, 1995-96 through 2002-03." Portland Public Schools. Prepared by Management Information Services, October 30, 2002.
  11. ^ Metropolitan Greenspaces: A Grassroots Perspective, Audubon Society of Portland.
  12. ^ Portland Parks & Recreation, [1].
  13. ^ "Effects of Census Undercount on School Planning: Report Series: Report Number 5." U.S. Census Monitoring Board. February, 2001.
  14. ^ Buckingham, Matt. "Teach Your Children Well - Lunch Money Leading Indicator." Willamette Week. March 27, 1996.
  15. ^ Portland Mayor's Office. Retrieved on August 8, 2006.

Further reading

  • Stewart Holbrook, The Far Corner. Comstock Editions ISBN 0-89174-043-0 (1952).
  • E. Kimbark MacColl, The Shaping of a City: Business and Politics in Portland, Oregon 1885 to 1915. Portland: Georgian Press, 1976.
  • E. Kimbark MacColl, The Growth of a City: Power and Politics in Portland, Oregon 1915 to 1950. Portland: Georgian Press, 1979. ISBN 0-9603408-1-5

External links

Find more information on Portland, Oregon by searching Wikipedia's sister projects:

Dictionary definitions from Wiktionary
Textbooks from Wikibooks
Quotations from Wikiquote
Source texts from Wikisource
Images and media from Commons
News stories from Wikinews

  • Official City Government Website
    • Portland Maps (lot-level GIS)
    • Portland CrimeMapper
  • Official Metro Government Website
  • Portland Oregon Visitors Association
  • Vegetarian Dining Guide to Portland
  • Gulch Budget Travel Guide to Portland, OR
  • Portland Public Artwork
  • Oregon Tourism Commission: Portland
  • Photographs of Portland Neighborhoods
  • Portland Guide by a PSU Student
  • Local Portland Guide
  • Map of now-Demolished Buildings of PDX Mapped on Platial.
  • www.portswa.com - An information website built by Portland residents.
  • PortlandConnected - A community site, including information about Portland neighborhoods, schools, restaurants, arts and culture
  • Maps and aerial photos Coordinates: 45.52304° -122.640155°
    • Wiki Satellite view at – WikiMapia
    • Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local
    • Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local
    • Topographic map from TopoZone
    • Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA

Portland wiki sites

  • WikiWikiWeb installed by Howard Cunningham from Beaverton
  • Portland (Oregon) travel guide from Wikitravel
  • Laurelhurst Neighborhood
State of Oregon
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Portland, Oregon neighborhoods

Neighborhoods: Alameda · Arbor Lodge · Ardenwald-Johnson Creek · Argay · Arlington Heights · Arnold Creek · Ashcreek · Beaumont-Wilshire · Boise · Brentwood-Darlington · Bridgeton · Bridlemile · Brooklyn · Buckman · Cathedral Park · Centennial · Center · Collins View · Concordia · Corbett-Terwilliger-Lair Hill · Creston-Kenilworth · Crestwood · Cully · Downtown · East Columbia · Eastmoreland · Eliot · Far Southwest · Forest Park · Foster-Powell · Glenfair · Goose Hollow · Grant Park · Hayden Island · Hayhurst · Hazelwood · Healy Heights · Hillsdale · Hillside · Hollywood · Homestead · Hosford-Abernethy · Humboldt · Irvington · Kenton · Kerns · King · Laurelhurst · Lents · Linnton · Lloyd District · Madison South · Maplewood · Markham · Marshall Park · Mill Park · Montavilla · Mt. Scott-Arleta · Mt. Tabor · Multnomah · Northwest District · Northwest Heights · Northwest Industrial · Old Town Chinatown · Overlook · Parkrose · Parkrose Heights · Pearl District · Piedmont · Pleasant Valley · Portsmouth · Powellhurst-Gilbert · Reed · Richmond · Rose City Park · Roseway · Russell · Sabin · St. Johns · Sellwood-Moreland · South Burlingame · South Tabor · Southwest Hills · Sullivan's Gulch · Sumner · Sunderland · Sunnyside · Sylvan-Highlands · University Park · Vernon · West Portland Park · Wilkes · Woodland Park · Woodlawn · Woodstock
Other areas: Alberta · Belmont · Burnside Triangle · Dignity Village · Hawthorne · Ladd's Addition · South Waterfront

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Central Oregon marathoners claim high places in Portland 

BendBulletin.com - Oct 04 5:11 AM
PORTLAND - Two Central Oregon runners were among the top-10 finishers Sunday in the 2006 Portland Marathon.

Oregon dropout rate falls 
Coos Bay World Link - 44 minutes ago
PORTLAND - Oregon's statewide dropout rate inched lower in the 2004-2005 school year, falling to 4.2 percent from 4.6 percent in the previous year, state education officials said Wednesday.

Oregon dropout rate falls to 4.2 percent 
Ashland Daily Tidings - Oct 04 7:46 PM
PORTLAND, Ore. — Oregon’s statewide dropout rate inched lower in the 2004-2005 school year, falling to 4.2 percent from 4.6 percent in the previous school year, state education officials said Wednesday.

No. 7 Portland 3, Oregon 0 Pilots break open game with second-half spurt 
OregonLive.com - Oct 02 12:11 AM
Patience. It's what led to a 3-0 victory and kept the seventh-ranked University of Portland women's soccer team from succumbing to a scrappy Oregon squad Sunday afternoon.

Oregon soldier is killed in Iraq 
Coos Bay World Link - Oct 04 12:59 PM
PORTLAND (AP) - A soldier from Oregon died in Iraq when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle, according to the Department of Defense.

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