Dirt Cheap Guide to Portland, OR
This is a pretty cool guide. Sorry if I blogged on this before.
Dirt Cheap Guide to Portland, OR
Heres the whole thing
i. Avoid these tourist attractions ii. 17 Things: Portland in a couple days iii Coping with weather I. Getting Around
B. Cars C. Public Transit D. Bicycles E. Taxis F. Walking G. Leaving Portland
II. Food
B. Under $8(by cuisine) C. Grocery stores D. Open Late E. Coffee Culture
III. Entertainment
B. Tours (self-guided, of course) C. Movies D. Visual Art E. Everything Else E. Dirt Cheap Drinking
IV. Business Districts
B. Hawthorne C. the Pearl D. Northwest (NW 21st/NW 23rd) E. Alberta F. Old Town G. Belmont H. Clinton I. Multnomah Village J. Sellwood/Westmoreland K. NE Broadway L. E 28th M. Sandy BLVD (Hollywood and Roseway Districts) V. Lodging
B. Dirt Cheap Motels VI. The Suburbs
VII. Services
B. Internet Access C. Libraries D. Hospitals E. Post Offices F. Currency Exchange G. Gay/Lesbian Resources H. Laundromats VIII. Links
B. Parks C. Government D. News E. Stuff F. Transportation G. Travel | This is a guide to Portland for the frugal. Mission: pool useful information for tourists and locals alike while minimizing personal economic damage in the process. Contribute, Suggest, Ask: pdxdrtchp@hotmail.com. (image: 3-D) (map: Ladds Addition) (bus: 14 Hawthorne) 07.23.06 - UPDATES!! Yes it's been another six months but I am back! New sections: Coping with weather and Stairwalks! I moved Bike Paths to Tours, which is also where Stairwalks reside. I'll be adding new stairwalks and bike rides soon, and eventually I'll try to fix all the broken links to the City of Portland's website (they changed servers, again). Unrelated to this page specifically, check out my growing list of neighborhood photo blogs: Northwest District, Lair Hill, Kings Hill, Central Eastside.
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- From : Tad
Sent : Wednesday, December 7, 2005 7:24 PM
"I think you've given Saturday Market the short shrift. You say "if you don't want to buy tie dyed t-shirts, bongs, or jacuzzis don't bother going", but none of those things are allowed in Saturday Market proper (well, maybe the tiedye, but not t-shirts). The "real" Portland Saturday Market(under the bridge)Êonly allows locally handmade crafts and food to be sold.Ê The neighboring market with the tshirts and bongs is a different, seperate market going by a different name. I realize they kinda get lumped together, but it's misleading to imply they only sell junk.
Still might not be your cuppa tea, but it's definitely a good, entertaining, cheap(if you don't buyÊmuch)Êstop for a tourist who might be into that sorta thing. And the Elephant Ears are good!" - From : Michael Kay
Sent : Sunday, August 21, 2005 10:47ÊAM
"I strongly disagree with your "over rated" grading of the Portland Japanese Garden. Even on a frugal trip, it is worth seeing the most authentic Japanese Garden outside of Japan. It is recognized throughout the world. The scale of the garden fits its location perfectly; from the large waterfall with the "borrowed scenery" term that indicates scenery, such as the hillside above the falls, is actually not in the Garden's property-to the precisely raked Zen garden.
...
I do not argue that you might consider the admission fee too high, I totally disagree on your rating of the garden. I feel you should give your readers a chance to make the decision on how to apportion limited funds." - get a house brew at Tugboat Brewing Co.
- walk the Lower Macleay trail in Forest Park.
- browse magazines at Rich's Cigar store.
- people-watch at Forecourt Fountain (turned off in the winter) and at Pioneer Courthouse Square.
- bike one of the many Willamette River trails (Eastside Esplanade, Waterfront Park, Springwater Trail, Willamette Park) and ZooBomb.
- hike (or bike) to the top of Mt Tabor
- walk over the Hawthorne Bridge and...
- have a coffee and dig the free internet at Red Wing cafe and...
- get beer from one of XX countries and enjoy the legitimate industrial chic at Produce Row.
- walk through the Pearl District and marvel at the illigitimate industrial chic (and maybe browse at Powells)
- order Navratan Korma at the India Chaat House.
- dance your ass off at Holocene
- get a sandwich/pastry at Kens Artisan Bakery.
- get coffee at Albina Press and walk to...
- the big rose garden at Peninsula Park (only if they're in bloom)
- browse the galleries on NE Alberta street
- dig the St Johns Bridge from Cathedral Park.
- Extreme heat: Get your feet wet at a fountain: Forecourt Fountain, Lovejoy Fountain and Salmon Street Springs are the best (see fountains). You're still liable to get sunburned out there though. The best thing to do is to go to Forest Park. I swear it's 20 degrees cooler in there. No shit. You can feel it even when you're just at the entrance. It's shaded too (probably no coincidence). The creeks have good feet-chilling water as well. When it gets really hot I just sit in the park and wait for the sun to go down.
- Extreme cold: First off, it never gets below 30 degree Fahrenheit. So nobody's gonna freeze to death out there. But it's a wet cold so it isn't the best. The obvious answer is to stay home, right? Learn a new language, masturbate, start a blog. If you don't want to stay home but you don't want to spend money your best bet is the Multnomah County Central Library or Powells Books. If you're willing to spend a couple bucks on a coffee there are plenty places in town that are perfect for hibernating with some written media for 5 hours (see coffee culture). In Chuck Palahniuk's classic, Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk In Portland, Oregon, he suggests checking out eviction court at the Multnomah County Courthouse Room 120. "For anyone who thinks the tradition of oral storytelling is dead, this is a must-see. ... Eviction Court meets Monday through Friday at 9:00 AM, and all the dirty laundry is loudly thrown around. It is the professional wrestling of the courthouse." I highly recommend that book, by the way.
I once met a guy who said that when he used to be homeless he would ride the MAX back and forth all day because it was warm. Just a thought. - Never-ending gray: First the lack of shadows really starts to piss me off. Next it's the dull color that all the buildings assume. But believe it or not, if its not too wet, the forest is quite possibly the best place to be when it's painfully gray. There's something about the way the muted blue light filters through leafless temperate rainforest and bounces off dozens of shades of green that is surprisingly wonderful. It's particularly lush during that time of year too when the moss starts to get temple-of-doom thick. See Natural/Pseudo-Natural Parks.
- Absolutley perfect: People watching! When the weather has been bad for months and there is a sudden burst of sun Portlanders go ape-shit! Citizens flock to the streets in a dazed stupor, overwhelmed by everyday beauty. Pioneer Square and the Waterfront/Esplanade trail loop are the best for dense people watching. Go on a bike ride! Have a picnic! Don't spend money at a food establishment unless you can get outside seating.
i. Do not be deceived, avoid the following tourist attractions:
- the Japanese Garden (seriously overpriced, seriously overrated), Chinese Classical Garden (seriously overpriced, and it's just ONE SQUARE BLOCK), Saturday Market (at the "Skidmore Fountain" MAX station under the Burnside Bridge, a "Saturday Market" is held on Saturday and Sunday... if you don't want to buy tie dyed t-shirts, bongs, or jacuzzis don't bother going), the Rose Festival (during the early summer, Waterfront Park (read: Waterfront Park) is a pay-to-enter festival of beer and rides), Jakes Famous Crawfish (a seafood restaurant that is considered by many advertisements at the airport to be the classiest in town). more coming!
ii. 17 things: Portland in a couple days
Although I vouche for everything else on the site, these are my favorites:iii. Coping with weather
No this isn't about coping with depression, by the way. If 5 months of gray skies starts to get to you, I hear that coffee helps. Also I've heard there are some special light bulbs that emit light at the same frequency as the sun so if you stare at it for a couple minutes it fills the void. I've never tried it myself though.I. Getting Around
- Geographical Overview - Cars - Public Transit - Bicycles - Taxis - Walking - Leaving -A. Geographical Overview
Portland's geography is pretty straight forward. The city is divided up into five sectors (some people say quadrants, but there are 5... I don't want to say burroughs): SW, NW, NE, SE, and N. The Willamette River divides east and west, and Burnside St divides north and south (North Portland being on the east side). (image: 5-quadrants) This town is very legible, meaning that it is easy to tell where you are based on certain characteristics each area has, and a few other things. This isn't just something that the addresses follow, it is common way to explain location. "I live in southeast," is a typical explanation. It is also fairly common knowledge that the east side is significantly cheaper than the west side. Note: business districts are described later.
- 1. southwest
Inner-southwest is downtown. It is surrounded by huge suburban hills to the west and south, the "West Hills," which is the richest part of town for sure. Windy streets and culdesacs cut out of forest, basically. Lots of good parks in all that forest though: Washington Park, Terwilliger Park, George Himes Park, Willamette Park, Marquam Nature Park, Council Crest Park (all traversed by the Marquam Trail). Also check out Multnomah Village.
(image: Southwest Neighborhoods)
2. northwest
Northwest is the smallest sector, since the river cuts away half of it, but this doesn't stop it from being busy. Inner-NW neighborhoods that wrap around downtown are pretty popular with consumers: Old Town, Pearl District and Northwest District. The West Hills creep into NW for a little bit, but almost immediatley give way to Forest Park, a 5000 acre mass of forest. Most of the area along the river in northwest is industrial ("port"-land).
(image: Northwest Neighborhoods)
3. southeast
Just over the river from downtown, inner-SE is part of the Central Eastside Industrial District, mostly warehousing that supports downtown businesses. But once past that, the sprawl of old single family homes is a mix of young people and commercial strips built off of old streetcar lines. Hawthorne and Belmont are the most successful commercial centers, but Clinton and E 28th serve as hip nodes too. Going farther south, Sellwood and Westmoreland are commercial districts dependant on Reed College. Many neighborhoods in SE have an unusually high 18-35 age distribution, and the houses sport the necessary front porches and bad paint jobs. Lots of good vegetation too. A place worth being. Also noteworthy is the Ladds Addition neighborhoods strange street pattern and rose gardens, Laurelhurst Park, and Mt Tabor Park, an extinct volcano. However, outer south east (east of 82nd, lets say) is prime meth territory ("felony flats").
(image: Southeast Neighborhoods)
4. northeast
Northeast Portland has gone through some very serious changes in the past 10 years. At one time, a good percentage of the sector was busy with gang activity and murder. Today, it is still recovering in many ways. Although NE has not seen the succesfull gentrification that SE has, it is fairly inevitable. NE Alberta St has been it's biggest success story (or biggest tragedy, depending on who you talk to). As the young-and-poor crowd is gradually pushed out of inner SE, N and NE neighborhoods have grown. Nudged between the mansions of Irvington and the office towers of the super-ugly Lloyd District, NE Broadway is packed with expensive restaurants. Riding through Sandy Blvd, the Hollywood District is one of the few remaining "working class" commercial strips in town, and the Roseway District has more Vietnamese food and Vietnamese jewlers than you'll ever need. Don't forget the airport!
(image: Northeast Neighborhoods)
5. north Portland
North Portland is considered by many to be the least desirable place in Portland to live. Eco-feminists would argue otherwise. History hasn't been kind to NoPo, but the new MAX line is supposed to change things. I think North Portland has some good things going for it. The Cathedral Park neighborhood opposite of the St. Johns Bridge has a hidden commercial center on Lombard St and the coolest park in town: Cathedral Park. Check out Peninsula Park's rose garden too. The bluff in the Overlook neighborhood has a park with great views of the West Hills and the industrial districts along the river. Mississippi St is in very early stages of gentrification but growing quickly.
(image: NoPo Neighborhoods)
B. Cars
- Illegal
Motorized vehicles are illegal in Portland. Perpetrators are stoned to death in Pioneer Square so plan ahead.
C. Public Transit
Portland's public transportation system is very logical and easy to use. Everything described on this page is accessible by public transit (bus directions follow every description). Tri-Met (as in tri-country-metropolitan-area) covers all transit service in Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington Counties (the city and most of the suburbs). Across the state border, Clark County, WA is serviced by C-Tran.
- 1. Buses
The bus system runs in a "radial pattern" (meaning most buses travel out from downtown) with several cross-town buses filling the gaps in between. Although Tri-Met runs half a dozen "transit centers" (where several lines connect) within the city, the downtown Bus Mall is definitely the most significant transfer point. The bus mall is composed of two streets: SW 5th and 6th Ave (running south and north, respectively) where over forty bus lines are organized into a system of stops based on the general direction of the route (N, NE, SE, SW, W, S).
(image: Bus Mall map, Bus Mall)
2. Lightrail
The MAX (metropolitan area express) light-rail runs about 40 miles of track thru east-west suburbs, downtown, airport, and North Portland. After crawling through downtown and the Lloyd District at street grade, the MAX spends most of it's time speeding alongside freeways, only to stop at park-and-rides and transit centers. It's functional for moving commuters, but most trips within Portland would be more suitable on a bus (w/ the exception of the yellow line in North Portland).
(image: MAX)
(link: MAX route and timetables)
The Portland Streetcar runs on the street with traffic as a circulator between Portland State University, downtown, the Pearl District, and the Northwest District. The 2.4 mile route was built primarily to attract inner-city development and suburbanite disposable income, however it does connect most of the food and attractions in and around downtown quite conveniently.
(link: Portland Streetcar route and time tables)
(image: Streetcar)
3. Fares
All buses and trains in Portland are run by Tri-Met, so fares and transfers apply the same to all. The downtown area as well as parts of Old Town, the Pearl, and the Lloyd District fall within fareless square, where all buses and trains are free (70% of the Portland Streetcar route is within fareless square, as well as MAX stations between SW 10th and Lloyd Center, not to mention the entire bus mall). After that, all buses and trains run on a 3 zone system where you pay for the number of zones you intend to pass through (2-zone $1.65, all-zone $1.95). Almost the entire city of Portland is within the first two zones (except the airport and the neighborhoods east of I-205).
(image: Fare-Zone Map)
(link: Fares)
4. Bike Accomodations
All Streetcars, MAX trains, and buses are bike accomodating. And it's free! No passes needed. The way to do it is best discribed by Tri-Met on their own site: Bikes On Tri-Met.
D. Bicycles
Note: Bike rides have been moved to Tours.- 1. Street Hierarchy
- A lot of people talk up some of the bike co-ops for their political message. However, City Bikes is known for having a condescending staff and expensive equipment. I've also heard a few stories of the Community Cycling Center selling bikes that weren't fit to ride.
On the other hand, there's a lot of locally owned bike shops around.
- Many have told me that Coventry Cycle Works is extremley cheap and honest (SE 20th and Hawthorne, map, bus: 14-Hawthorne).
- I've had excellent experiences at Northwest Bicycles(916 NW 21st Ave at NW Kearney, map, bus: (17-NW 21st Ave, Portland Streetcar).
- I've heard good things about North Portland Bike Works too (N Mississippi and N Shaver, map, bus: 4-Fessenden).
- I've never tried Missing Link Mobile Bicycle Repair, who will drive to wherever you are w/ their "customized fully equipped van", but it sounds pretty cool (503.740.3539, link).
From : Bill Fitzgerald
Sent : Friday, June 3, 2005 12:44 AM
"The owner -- Joe Rettke -- runs a great shop with a cool attitude toward biking -- he is very into bikes as a means of transportation and as a means of reducing auto traffic while getting healthy -- All in all, the kind of local business that makes Portland a pretty unique place." - For retail, Bike Gallery is has the biggest selection at stores downtown and on Sandy blvd, but labor is not cheap (link).
- From : Patrick David Barber (patrick@pdbd.com)
Date : Friday, April 22, 2005 2:28 PM
"re bike rentals: we should have followed your advice, but did not--and rented two crappy, badly maintained bikes from City Bikes. We returned them after the first grueling day, got the remainder of our money back, and rented two Breezers from Veloce Bicycles on Hawthorne, address below. I don't rent bikes very often so I don't know how the prices compare but we rode about 20 miles a day so it was worth it to us. The guy at Veloce is super nice and helpful, and his rental bikes are well cared for. Breezers aren't really intended for the miles we put on them, but they did OK anyway. He rents road bikes but needs advance notice--$150 a week for the road bikes. I think about $120 a week for Breezers. Veloce Bicycles. 3202 SE Hawthorne 97214, 234-8400. Demetri Macrigeanis is the owner's name. i posted some photos of our trip on our blog. they're pretty touristy but if you want to use any please feel free. the address is http://www.pdbd.com/henwaller" - From : lilbuddhanic@aol.com
Sent : Wednesday, November 30, 2005 11:54 PM
"So this place called seven corners bike shop is the shit. The owner, big dude, hooks it up and is super stoked to talk shop and give discounts to bike commuters. The bike shop is on division and 21st and the owner's name is Cory.Ê helluva guy!"
note: take the 4-Division bus to 21st.I don't know, there's a lot of places I haven't been. Any good or bad stories?? mailto:pdxdrtchp@hotmail.com
The Portland Department of Transportation established three basic types of streets from a cyclist's perspective on their bike map (linked below): off street paths, bike lanes (usually on major streets), and "bicycle boulevards." Bicycle boulevards are small neighborhood streets with low traffic that run parallel to traffic arteries. Traffic calming techniques slow auto traffic to the speed of a bike, and stop sign changes give bikes the right of way. So biking across town can be extremely pleasant when you take the path of least resistance. For example, Hawthorne BLVD has 4 lanes of dense traffic and no bike lane, but SE Lincoln St and SE Salmon St run parallel on either side. Anyways, if you're going to bike in Portland, I would highly recommend becoming familiar with such streets (listed as "Shared Roadway- on lower traffic street").
The map is also important for knowing where not to bike.
(link: Portland Bike Map)
2. Bridges
Ten bridges span the Willamette River in Portland, eight of them downtown. It's worth noting which ones to use since they make such important connections and have the potential to be extremley dangerous. (image: map of bridges)
Bad: The Fremont and Marquam bridges are freeways so they're off limits by default. The Morrison and Ross Island bridges feature freeway on/off ramps and extremely minimal sidewalks so they pose a serious threat. The Burnside Bridge is okay (has a bike path next to the small sidewalk) but motorists are rather aggresive on Burnside and the immediate neighborhoods on either side of the bridge are seedy.
(image: Fremont Bridge, Marquam Bridge, Morrison Bridge, Ross Island Bridge, Burnside Bridge)
Good: The Hawthorne Bridge (connecting downtown to inner SE) is extremley bike friendly. Well engineered bike paths at both ends make the entrance easy and the bridge has 12-foot-wide sidewalks that bicyclists and pedestrians share. The same goes for the Broadway Bridge (connecting the Pearl District and inner N/NE) that also has a bike signal on the western exit. The Steel Bridge (connecting Old Town and the Lloyd District) would be a tough one with it's long steep entrance, but a walkway was added to the lower deck (where the freight trains run) that connects Waterfront Park to the Eastbank Esplanade.
(image: Hawthorne Bridge, Broadway Bridge, Steel Bridge, Steel Bridge lower deck)
3. Rentals/Service
Rentals
Frankly, renting a bike in Portland is so expensive that I wouldn't recommend it. But anyways...
Fat Tire Farm
Offers Schwimm cruisers for $25 a day. Hours: M-F(11AM-7PM), Sat(9AM-6PM), Sun(10-5). Located at 2714 NW Thurman St (at NW 27th Ave).
(map: Fat Tire Farm)
(bus: 15-NW 23rd Ave, 17-NW 21st Ave, 77-Broadway/Halsey, walk two blocks south of Vaughn St. to Thurman St.)
(link: http://www.fattirefarm.com/rentals/)
Repair
E. Taxis
- 1. Why?
Because buses don't run late. This is true. Portland has no owl bus service and the last MAX train usually leaves downtown at 12:30 or 1AM. Some buses leave downtown at 1:30AM, like the 15-NW 23rd and the 20-Burnside/Stark, but that isn't good enough. AND because friends don't let friends drive drunk. This is you asshole- not in my town.
2. However, Portland isn't a really taxi oriented city- meaning it will be tough to find one driving down th street.Some taxi cab companies:
Yellow Cab - (503) 227-1234
Radio Cab (503) 227-1212
F. What about walking?
G. Getting Out of Town
- 1. airport
The best way to get there is to catch the MAX Red-Line. It's about a 35 minute ride from downtown, it's pretty smooth, it's pretty cheap ($1.70). And dependable. You can catch the Red Line at any MAX station between Beaverton Transit Center and Gateway Transit Center. The train lets you off about 100 feet from baggage claim- pretty self explanatory. If you're driving: I-205 North will take you there. From downtown Portland: I-405 North, stay in left lane while going over Fremont Bridge (white one), take I-5 South, stay in right lane, I-84 East, I-205 North.
(map: PDX)
(bus: MAX Red Line)
(link: PDX)
2. train station - bus station
Located just north of downtown. On the Bus Mall in Fareless Square. They are both on 6th Ave- bus station at NW Glisan St, train station across the street at NW Irving St. By bus: catch one of many "Union Station" buses on SW 6th Ave. A bunch of buses terminate at Union Station (14, 31, 32, 33, 35, 38, 43, 44, etc).
(map: Union Station/Greyhound Station)
(image: Union Station)
3. By Car
To get to Tacoma, Seattle, or Vancouver, CA, get on I-5 North. For Salem, Eugene, or California, get of I- 5 South. To the coast: take US 30 to Astoria, US 26 to Canon Beach. I-84 East to eastern Oregon (what the fuck are you doing in eastern Oregon?).
(image: freeway map)
(link: MilebyMile: Oregon Highway Travel Guide)
II. Food
- Under $5 - Under $8 - Grocery Stores - Open Late - Coffee Culture -
- SW 5th Ave between Oak and Stark (parking lot). The highest concentration, probably 15 to 20 carts. Mexican, Italian, Pan-Asain, Indian, Soul Food, etc.
(image: aerial photo)
(map: SW 5th and Oak)
- SW 9th/10th between Alder/Washington (parking lot). Next best. Indian, Soul Food, Thai, German, Mexican, Espresso.
(image: aerial photo)
(map: SW 9th and Alder)
- SW Park/9th bewtween Taylor/Yamhill (parking lot). Crepes, Hawaiian, Burmese/Thai, Mexican, Vegetarian.
(image: aerial photo)
(map: SW Park and Yamhill) - everywhere else- Lone food carts are not uncommon. They pop up on the South Park Blocks on PSU campus, misc parking lots closer to the river, Pioneer Square.
b. WHICH ONES DO I GO TO
- Indian food carts are a reoccurring theme in Portland (at least 6 of 'em). My favorite is India Chaat House at SW 12th and Yamhill (link: map). For one they are open till 7PM Mon-Sat (most close at 6 or even 3PM and only weekdays). Also, they have covered seats (rare) and the price is right. The massive vegetarian lunch special is $5 (w/ naan), but I highly recommend the Navratan Korma.
- No Fish Go Fish - They also have a restaurant at SE 40th and Hawthorne, but the cart downtown ar SW 5th and Yamhill has excellent lunch specials: amazing soups and these "fish sandwiches" (fish stuffed w/ feta and spinach and that sort of stuff). Read their menu. (map) Open weekdays 11-3.
- some crepe place (forget the name) at SW 9th and Yamhill (link: map). Good for pizza-type crepes w/ all kinds of shit in 'em or basic desserts. Most stuff is around $4-5, open till 8PM Mon-Fri.
- more comin', lots of surveying to do...
c. YEAH, BUT WHERE DO I TAKE THE FOOD TO EAT IT?
i. Parks- South Park Blocks
- Waterfront Park
- Pioneer Square
- Ira Keller Fountain
- Obrayant Square (SW 9th and Washington, map)
- Little known to the student body, the Urban Studies building in the Urban Plaza (SW 6th and Mill, map) has a 4th floor covered terrace with tables and chairs. Those three things make it the BEST place to take your food when it's rainy. Take the elevator up to the 4th floor and walk over the skybridge.
- The third floor covered skybridge between Smith Memorial Center and Neuberger Hall has seats, tables, and view. SW Broadway at Montgomery, map.
- Worst comes to worst, go into the cafeteria near the surface level entrance to the Smith Memorial Center. (same location as above)
- Cheerful Tortoise- OK, the place is a dump. It's a bar (21+) w/ early morning alcohol specials. But I'll get to the point: 2 eggs, hashbrowns, toast, $2. No shit. They call it, "the best deal in town," or something to that effect. I have yet to see any competition anyway. The deal is on all day everyday. SW 6th and College, on Portland State's campus by the southern tip of downtown.
(map)
(bus: it's on the bus mall in fareless square. you could walk from anywhere downtown, but if you want, take the 1, 8, 9, 12, 17, 19, 40, 43, 44, 45, 55) - From: David Orr (orrd@pobox.com)
Date : Sun, 12 Jan 2003 16:07:02 -0800
"...At Legacy-Good Samaritan Hospital: The Legacy-Good Samaritan Hospital cafe, is located in the hospital, through the main entrance on 22nd between Lovejoy and Northrup. Lots of tables with space to spread out and study! A best kept secret of NW Portland: decent, inexpensive food. Open daily from 6:30am to 7:30pm. Cheap food, different specials everyday, and it's often really really good. I ate there everyday when I stayed in the hostel over there..."
(map: Legacy Good Sam. Hospital)
(bus: Portland Streetcar to NW 22nd and Northrup,
17-NW 21st to NW 21st and Lovejoy,
15-NW 23rd to NW 23rd and Lovejoy) - Food For Thought Cafe- PSU's relativley new student run co-op restaurant. The hours kinda suck (8-5:30 weekdays, except friday close at 2). The ambiance isn't bad for a basement cafeteria. But it's CHEAP! Excellent salads under $4. Mediterranean plate of food for $4.75. $1 coffee if you bring your own mug (or temporarily steal one of theirs), huge $1.50 scones. It's a good spot. Go to the Smith Memorial Center (an administrative/lounge building on Portland State's campus), enter on SW Harrison St between Park and Broadway, go to the basement. On the bus mall (take 1, 8, 9, 12, 17, 19, 40, 43, 44, 45). (link: Food for Thought Cafe)
- From: Sean Kelly
Date: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 6:41 PM
"You can eat dirt cheap at any of the taquerias that dot the east side. Taqueria Uruapan is the one that comes to mind. Even cheaper are the Vietnamese bakeries, whose names I can't remember. There's one on 52nd and Foster, and one on Powell and 80th. You can get bbq pork sandwiches for $1.50 and these little pork dumplings. Yum."
(bus: 14-Hawthorne to SE 52nd and Foster, 9-Powell to SE Powell and 80th; Taqueria Uruapan is at SE 82nd and Reedway, 2 blocks south of Foster, take the 14-Hawthorne)
A. Under $5
- Food Carts - Mexican - Misc -
- 1. Food Carts
"Food carts" are food generating trucks that are stationed in downtown Portland for the purpose of providing quick, cheap meals for the downtown work force. Not to mention frugal tourists like you. Note: I'm not going to bother posting bus directions because they're all downtown in fareless square within walking distance.
a. WHERE ARE THEY
They tend to cluster at downtown surface parking lots:
2. Mexican food
Mexican food that isn't dirt cheap? Not my kind of Mexican food. Avoid any place in Portland that wants more than $4 for a burrito.
Ole Ole - Prices has jumped a little since Cha Cha Cha bought 'em. Still, huge burritos and chimichangas all fall under the $5 mark. On the edge of PSU campus at SW 6th and Jackson.
(map: Ole Ole)
(bus: on the south end of the bus mall: take the 1, 9, 12, 17, 19, 40, 43, 44, 45)
El Grillo - Cheapest central business district meal (aside from the carts, of course). Hole in the wall in an alley 1 block south of Burnside and Broadway. Burrito f' $4.25! Be sure and take a piss there (you have to walk thru a depressing titty bar to get to their bathroom). SW Broadway and Ankeny (map)
(bus: downtown, 1 block from the bus mall- just figure it out)
La Serenita - a little farther away and a little more popular (... a little more crowded). NE Alberta and 28th. Quesdillas are $1.25.
(map: La Serenita)
(bus: 9-Broadway to 27th and Alberta)
Catalina's - I admit, I haven''t gone yet. Supposedly they have $2.50 chimichangas.
B. Still pretty cheap (by cuisine)
- Diners - Bi-Ways Cafe - oh my fucking god. Open 7-3, closed Monday. NW Glisan between 12th and 13th. Portland Streetcar, 17-NW 21st Ave. - Fat City Cafe- Huge portions, good price, cool krew. At SW Capitol Highway and 35th (map) in Multnomah Village. (bus: 44-Capitol Highway or 45-Garden Home to SW Troy and 35th, walk 1 block south to Capitol) || Thai - Thai Orchid - 22nd and W Burnside. $7 lunch specials (heavy). (map: Thai Orchid) (bus: 15-NW 23rd Ave, 20-Burnside) || Indian - Swagat - NW 21st and Lovejoy. Best in town for sure. $8 lunch buffet. 17-NW 21st Ave, Portland Streetcar, 77-Broadway/Halsey. || Sandwiches - Gotham Building Coffee Shop - 2240 N Interstate Ave and Albina, in an industrial district in inner North Portland. A front for a catering service, incredible sandwiches ($5-7) and view of the Fremont Bridge. CLOSED INDEFINITLEY(map: Gotham Building Coffeeshop) (link: the menu) (bus: Yellow Line, 1-Greeley, or 33-Fremont to Albina/Mississippi station) - Capitol Coffee House- Similar story as above (the coffeeshop-front-for-gourmet-catering-deal) transplanted to southwest Portland. The dinner menu is in the $10+ so to hell w/ that, but the lunch specials (till 5pm) are around $7 and superb. 'Doubles as a cool coffee shop with a quiet second floor and garage-door-size-door that opens to outside seating. at SW Capitol Highway and Nebraska (map). (bus: 44-Capitol Highway or 45-Garden Home to Capitol & Nebraska) - Kens Artisan Bakery- Excellent sandwiches, soups and desserts in the $3-7 range. Better than Pearl Bakery's get up for sure. NW 21st and Flanders (map). Take the 17-NW 21st to 21st and Glisan, or the 15-NW 23rd to 23rd and Flanders, or take the 20-Burnside to W Burnside and 21st. || Mediterranean - Nicholas' Restaurant- Hot DAMN! The Central Eastside's finest. Huge sandwiches in the $5 range, kababs and other good stuff around $7-8. They bring the pita out still steaming. Popular: avoid waiting in line (Grand Ave is an ugly 4-lane monster). At SE Grand and Pine (map) between Burnside and Belmont/Morrison. (bus: 6-MLK, 15-Belmont, 20-Burnside) - La Villa- A good reason to never wait in Nicholas' line. Excellent Kafta sandwich ($5) and a $7 weekday all-you-can-eat-lunch-buffet (11:30-2:00). SE 7th and Morrison (map). (bus: 6-MLK, 15-Belmont) || Italian - Pastini - NE 15th and Broadway & NW 23rd and Quimby. Avoid the dinner crowd. Lots of good stuff under $8. NE location: 9-Broadway, 8-NE 15th, 77-Broadway/Halsey, NW location: 77-Broadway/Halsey, 15-NW 23rd. || Japanese - Saburo's - Yeah, sushi probably won't come up under $8, but it's really good and huge portions. The wait is typically 30 minutes so I'd just get there before they open at 5PM, or you can put down your name and play shuffleboard around the corner. In Westmoreland at 1667 SE Bybee St, just east of Milwaukie. (map) (bus: 19-Woodstock to SE Milwaukie and Bybee or 70-12thAve to SE 17th and Bybee)
C. Grocery stores
Picked for their proximity to where you will probably be hanging out/staying. If you need to know more about a grocery store near you go to citysearch.com's grocery store page.
- 1. dahhh...
I used to have a list of big box grocery stores around town. I recently decided to redo it and include the entire heirarchy of grocery stores, but then I found that the alt.portland grocery section has everything I could have thought of and more. However, alt.portland forgot to include the Portland Farmers Market which, although closed for half the year, offer some great food.
2. Winco
From: "Fuzzy Rick" (g_thic@hotmail.com)
Date: Sat, 23 Aug 2003 17:24:49 +0000
"...Fred Meyers is not only expensive but their staff are often downright rude. If you want cheap groceries, you have to go to WinCo. There is a WinCo on 82 Ave in SE Portland and one in Tigard. Be prepared - must WinCo stores do not take debt cards; cash or check only. But, their stuff is so CHEAP - if a gallon of milk cost $3 at Fred Meyers then it is a $1.60 at WinCo. Plus, they have a huge section with barrels of pasta, flour, cereal, trail mix, etc. where everything costs $1 or so a pound. As a college student, I find that if I shop at WinCo, I can eat real food. If I go to Fred Meyers, all I can afford to eat is oddles and noodles..."
Authors note: the 82nd ave Winco is actually in Clackamas, a suburb. the Winco within the city limits is at:
1222 NE 102nd Ave (map) (bus: MAX blue and red lines to Gateway TC).
D. Open Late
(note: GrubNow.com has a great Late Night section that covers all-ages and 21+ joints)I'll level with you. This city sleeps. There are more 24 hour businesses than some cities, less than most. Anyways, here is what you got. (keep in mind that if you're of age, your options are larger)
- 1. the Roxy
24 hour diner in downtown. Located on SW Stark St (gay district) at 11th. Stay clear of the 3AM rush when the place is packed beyond belief with drunks (bars close at 2:30). It can be a little rough: drunk people, the staff has an attitude problem, really loud bad music. Regardless, it is practically the only place downtown, so you'll probably have to go there. 1 pancake- $2.25. Pot of coffee- $1.25. Important: closes at 3AM Monday morning (or Sunday night, if that is easier to understand) and opens 8AM Tuesday.
(map: Roxy)
(bus: 20-Burnside/Stark, Portland Streetcar)
2. La Casita
Mexican food. Big ass burritos for $6. Mighty fine lemonade. A little pricey for the quality, but thats what you get at 2 AM. Open: Tues-Wed- 11AM-1AM, and Thurs-Sun 24 hr. Closed Mondays. Recently moved to SE Morrison between 7th and MLK.
(map: map)
(bus: 15-Belmont, 6-MLK)
(link: La Casita)
3. Montage
Half of the menu is Italian, the other half is Southern. Liquor served, yet it is all ages. Open till 4AM Fri-Sat, 2AM otherwise. Too hip. Tables that would usually seat 2 people are lined up really long and you will be seated next to people you don't know. Absolutley amazing macaroni and cheese (all kinds too) from 5 to 9 bucks. SE 3rd and Morrison, in a warehouse district just across the river from downtown under the Morrison Bridge. Kind of hard to find. Once you get over the river you have to zig zag back under the bridge (be careful not to drive on the train tracks).
(link: Le Bistro Montage)
(map: Le Bistro Montage)
(bus: 15-Belmont, 6-MLK)
4. Chintos
Mexican food cart downtown at 3rd and Stark St. Open till 3AM Fri-Sat. About $4. No seats tho'.
5. Voodoo Doughnuts
(hours have gotten inconsistent, see link below) Stumptown coffee. Doughnuts. A popular after-drinking spot ('cause it's by Old Town). Downtown at SW 3rd and Burnside. (map: 22 SW 3rd) (link: voodoodoughnut.com)
E. Some Words On Coffee Culture in the Pacific Northwest
I had heard that coffee was "big" in the northwest before I moved here. So fucking what? It's popular all over the world. Apparently, the difference here (as far as I can tell) is social coffee shops. A handful of 'cool' coffee shops operate like popular bars. People drive across town to get to the coolest one. I guess you can make friends easily at them. Part of the NW's charm, perhaps? Well, I can't stand these fucking places, so... I'm going to list some popular "social" coffee shops and connect you to reviews from Citysearch.com that are hopefully less biased. But I'm warning you, these are real "scene" places. (perhaps this should be under entertainment instead of food)Coffee Time, Pied Cow, etc.
From: Sean Kelly
Date: Wednesday, December 29, 2004 6:41 PM
"In "Coffee Culture", I think that the thing that makes Portland stand out are the coffeehouses, what you call "social" coffee shops. I think you might have a bad impression of them based on the ones you've been to. I wouldn't call the Pied Cow a coffeehouse, because it's not that comfortable, and you get a bill. The great coffeehouses in Portland are places like the Portland Coffeehouse on Broadway and Alder, or Tiny's on Hawthorne and 12th, or either Papaccino's, or the good Stumptown (the one on Division). These are the places where you can go and sit by yourself on a comfy couch, sit for three hours, and not get kicked out. Plus at Stumptown you can get two cups of coffee for a buck. Of course, there are plenty of bad trendy coffee"houses" in Portland that might have skewed your judgment, like the Stumptown downtown and any Starbucks or Coffee People. "
--Along the lines of these legit coffeehouses that Sean described: Three Friends Coffeehouse at SE 12th and Ash; the Hof at SW 19th and Jefferson; Village Coffee at SW 35th and Capitol; Star E Rose at NE 24th and Alberta; Anna Bananas at NW 21st and Northrup.
III. Entertainment
-cheap entertainment is tough-This is true. Almost everything costs a shitload of money. However, if you can enjoy things without necessarily buying them you broaden you options quite a bit.
- Start: W Burnside and NW 24th Place (map)
- Bus: 15-NW 23rd or 20-Burnside to W Burnside and 23rd.
- Map: Washington Park/Arlington Heights/Kings Hill Stairwalk
- View text with pictures inserted: here
- Time: 45 minutes not including extra time to smell the Rose Garden's roses or have a picnic
A: Starting at 24th place, cross Burnside to a non-descript entrance to Washington Park (image: 1). Take the small staircase on the right. Follow this combination of paths and staircases for a while (image: 2). When you reach the painted white pole (image: 3) go right and continue up the staircase. Be careful when passing the big tree: many steps have been displaced by its roots. Just before you cross the first paved road (actually about a dozen steps before) turn right on an unpaved trail (image: 4). Follow this path past a small staircase on your left and an abandoned building. The trail will finally spit you out on SW Wright Av at SW Tichner Dr.
B: Turn right on SW Tichner and enter one of Portland priciest neighborhoods: Arlington Heights. Continue down Tichner for a few blocks until you see the sign for SW Parkside Drive and turn left. Follow the short staircase (image: 5) up to uber-skinny Parkside Drive. A couple hundred feet later when Parkside Drive ends at a T with Parkside Lane, stay to the left. Follow the street for 300 or 400 feet, the next staircase will be on your left. Be careful: this one is easy to miss (image: 6). At the bottom of the stairs a path will take you to SW Marconi (no sign). Turn left at Marconi and follow the street for a couple hundred yards to the staircase entrance to the International Rose Test Garden (image: 7).
C: This staircase will take you to Portland's most famous park. On top of the obvious roses (if they're in bloom) it's an excellent spot for people watching (image: 8). The garden has a bathroom and a water fountain (maps there will direct you). Exit the park at its northeastern corner (you entered at its northwestern) on a paved path (image: 9). Follow the path until it ends at a sidewalk on the right (image: 10). Continue on the sidewalk for a few hundred yards, cross at the crosswalk by the water fountain (image: 11). Past the water fountain, turn right on a paved road (closed to cars) and pass the swing set to the big obelisk (image: 12).
D: This is the official front entrance to the park. There are water fountains and several picnic tables. Go down the stairs in front of the obelisk and turn left at SW Lewis and Clark Drive. A hundred feet down the road there is a very small path on your right that will take you to SW Cedar (image: 13). Be careful not to miss that path! On SW Cedar make an almost immediate left. The road dead-ends soon thereafter at my favorite staircase in Portland (image: 14). Continue down SW Cactus, turn left at SW Green and the next thing you know you're at the awful 23rd and W Burnside intersection you more or less started at. I wouldn't recommend buying the food at the adjacent Zupans grocery store but they have bathrooms and some good samples. - Leif Erikson Drive (in Forest Park)
- Mocks Crest/St Johns
- Council Crest
- Columbia Gorge Historic Highway
- Mt Tabor path thing
- Sauvie Island Loop (link: SauvieIsland.org)
h. There's also a lot of good trails (so I've heard anyway) in the suburbs of Vancouver, WA (link: Vancouver WA: Parks and Recreation: Parks and Trails: Trails) and Lake Oswego, OR (link: Lake Oswego Parks and Recreation: Pathways).
Take C-Tran line 105 to downtown Vancouver, and take Tri-Met line 35-Macadam or 78-Beaverton/Lake Oswego to downtown Lake Oswego. - BarFly Magazine's bar search page is great. You can search bars by quadrant (ie- SW, NW, SE, NE/N) and by characteristics (ie- dive, hipsters, patio, karoake, etc).
- Oregon Brewers Guild: Microbreweries in Portland, Oregon- DID YOU KNOW that Portland is microbrewery capitol of USA?
- alt.portland: beer beer beer- reviews of individual craftbrews, brewpubs, taverns, and bars.
- From : Chris Greatorex
Sent : Friday, June 17, 2005 12:12ÊAM
"The Widmer Gasthaus has $2 pints every Friday and Saturday night starting at 10:30pm. Not everything on draught is $2, but most of their stuff gets the cheap treatment. They shut down the grill about 10:00, so the food is limited to cold sandwiches. But the beer is good, and it's about 2 blocks away from the nearest MAX stop. http://www.widmer.com/gasthaus/index.html"
note: nearest MAX stop is N Albina/Mississippi on the yellow line
A. Parks
This section constitutes a very large part of this page. This is because parks are free (read: dirt cheap) and Portland has lots. Of course, this is a small picking of the larger pool: these are the parks that I have found to be worth my time. Although the landscaped parks are spread out pretty evenly, the nature parks tend to concentrate on undeveloped land in the Tualatin Mountains (the formation that includes the West Hills and Forest Park), the east Portland buttes (a half dozen or so extinct volcanic vents from Mt Hood ['cinder cones'] that pop up all over the outer eastside), and along the Willamette and Columbia Rivers.(ref: Parks Links)
- 1. natural/psuedo-natural
a. Forest Park
Apparently, Forest Park is the largest forested city park in the USA (or something like that). 5000+ acres of untouched forest starts a half mile west of downtown. The 30+ mile Wildwood Trail is the spine of the trail system; Lief Erickson Drive is an 11 mile (unpaved) road closed to cars and open to bikes, pedestrians, and equestrians (starts at the dead end of NW Thurman St, map). Firelanes 1, 3, 10 and 15 are also open to bikes [and closed to cars :) ]. This park is connected to Washington Park (see below) and many trails, including the Wildwood, go into Washington Park. The only entrance supported by transit is that of the Lower Macleay Trail. To get there, take the 15-NW 23rd Ave, 17-NW 21st Ave, or 77-Broadway/Halsey west to NW 27th and Vaughn. Walk 1 block south and 3 blocks west to NW 30th and Upshur. The entrance has a map and a bathroom. Note: do not get stuck in Forest Park at night- this is where several transients sleep (supposedly) and there are no lights whatsoever. (image: Forest Park) (image: aerial)
(link: Maps of Forest Park) (link: Wildwood Trail) (link: National Geographic: 97210)
b. Mt. Tabor Park
Mt. Tabor is an extinct volcanic vent for Mt Hood (or the Columbia Gorge, I can't remember...). It offers some badass views of se pdx, downtown and the West Hills. Especially at night. But it has some good hiking trails too. And a paved road that winds to the top has been closed to cars so it's popular w/ cyclists and there's a soapbox derby every August. The top of the park is flat (top of a volcano, right?) with grass and picnic benches and even better views (if you can grab the right bench). Enter the park on SE Salmon St at 60th Ave: Salmon quickly winds up to the popular view point and a couple trails start on the left side.
(map: SE 60th @ Salmon St)
(map: Mt Tabor (pdf))
(bus: 15-Belmont, 71-60th/122nd Ave)
(image: Mt Tabor view 1, Mt Tabor view 2)
(link: US Geological Survey: Mt Tabor Cinder Cone)
(link: Mt Tabor photos @ Portland Ground)
c. Marquam Nature Park
One of the most lush forests in the city and it's less than a mile from downtown. If there was something more I could say about it (i.e. - describe the ecosystem) I would, but you'll just have to see for yourself. 500 ft elevation change (if you take the steepest trails). The Marquam Trail connects Marquam Nature Park to Terwilliger Park and Willamette Park to the east and Council Crest Park and Washington Park to the west. Enter the park on SW Sam Jackson Rd a few hundred feet west of Terwilliger Blvd (just past the water towers) at the Marquam Park Shelter (a trailhead w/ maps and such).
(bus: 8-OHSU to SW Terilliger Blvd and Sam Jackson Rd [first stop on Terwilliger], above directions)
(map: Marquam Park Shelter)
(map: trail map comin' soon)
(link: Portland Park & Rec- 40-Mile Loop: Marquam Trail)
d. Washington Park
Washington Park is Portland's 'showcase' park. Sort of like Golden Gate Park. Museums, zoo, pay-to-enter gardens, touristy stuff. Washington Park is in the SW Portland's West Hills, just west of downtown. Driving? I have no idea. You can walk in thru the Kings Hill neighborhood west of downtown (walk up to the front entrance via SW Main at 22nd).
(bus: MAX Blue and Red Lines to Washington Park station, 63-Washington Park runs between downtown and the MAX station, stopping at most (if not all) Washington Park attractions on the way)
Inside Washington Park is:
i. Hoyt Arboretum
Big open space, lots of trails, large collections of trees from all over. Vietnam memorial too. It starts at the Washington Park MAX Station.
(image: photo) (link: Hoyt Arboretum) (link: Trails of Hoyt Arboretum pdf)
ii. International Rose Test Garden
A large rose garden that is sort of touristy but worth a look. The "famous" views of downtown are mostly covered by trees. (image: photo). On the 63 bus.
(link: Rose Garden photos)
iii. Pittock Mansion
e. Rocky Butte
Rocky Butte is the next farthest East Portland Butte after Mt Tabor. Less popular than Mt Tabor but cooler in many ways. The sides are steeper so there are less trails, but the top has a view: 360 degree panorama with little tree interference. Mt Tabor and southeast Portland to the south; Mt Hood, freeways, farther east buttes, outer northeast Portland to the east; Mt St Helens, I-205 bridge, Columbia River, Government Island, PDX (airport), and Washington state to the north; northeast Portland, downtown, West Hills to the west. Yup. You have to walk up steep-and-long NE Rocky Butte Rd, but the bike ride back down is most rewarding. Enter NE Rocky Butte Rd by NE 92nd and Fremont Drive. From NE Fremont Street and 82nd (map): east on Fremont St, slight right onto Fremont Dr (a few blocks after 82nd), at 92nd (map) go up NE Rocky Butte Rd.
(map: NE 92nd and Rocky Butte Rd)
(bus: 33-Fremont and 72-82nd Ave to Fremont and 82nd; MAX Blue and Red Lines to 82nd Ave station, but be sure to go north on 82nd first 'cause if you try and head east on Halsey you hit some sidewalk-less overpasses)
(link: US Geological Survey: Rocky Butte)
(image: North, East)
f. Oaks Bottom Park
On the westside of the river by Ross Island, bisected by the Springwater bike trail, has beach access and lots o' trails. Enter at the south entrance off at SE 7th and Sellwood (in Sellwood), or on the Springwater Trail.
(link: PP&R page)
g. George Himes Park
A conveniently located park of trails connecting Terwilliger Park to Willamette Park, George Himes Park's short distance from transportation corridors is it's blessing and it's damnation. Translation: it's very bus accessible, but then you have to listen to nearby traffic arteries. I'm giving it a bad rap. After all, if I didn't like it I wouldn't bother typing this. Lots of moss (no complaints). The Barbur Blvd overpass is actually kind of cool. Enter the park at SW Terwilliger and Capitol (map).
(bus: 44-Capitol Highway, 45-Garden Home, 54-Beaverton/Hillsdale Highway, or 56-Scholls Ferry Rd to SW Terwilliger and Capitol Highway)
h. Powell Butte Nature Park
One of several extinct volcanoes on the eastside, 570 acre Powell Butte is far away (I'm not sure if it's in Portland or Gresham) but it has some good contrasts. The eastern half is relatively barren (due to [I'm guessing] the powerful winds that outer eastsiders experience from the Columbia Gorge) which makes for some great views of Mt Hood and a handful of other hills. The western half is good ol' Pacific Northwest forest. Sorry kids, no downtown views (wouldn't be all that impressive anyways being that you're 8 miles out). A heavy sunrise facing east perhaps? I wouldn't know, I don't have time to be at 162nd at the crack of dawn. 9 miles of trails reaching an elevation of 630 feet (even a wheelchair accessible one). From SE Powell Blvd, walk south up windy 162nd Ave for a few hundred feet to the main entrance (maps, bathrooms, parking).
(map: SE 162 @ Powell)
(link: Powell Butte Nature Park Trail Map pdf)
(link: Friends of Powell Butte)
(link: US Geological Survey- Powell Butte Cinder Cone)
(bus: 9-Powell -only every other bus goes east of 97th so check the schedule-)
i. Smith and Bybee Lakes
Really cool. Two big lakes w/ trees and views and everything. "Comprising almost 2000 acres, makes up one of the nation's largest urban freshwater wetlands" so they say. Lots of birds screaming and dragon flys fighting (or mating?). Bus access isn't great. I'd recommend getting there on the Marine Drive bike path from the Expo Center MAX station.
(link: this site has links and maps and everything)
(bus: Yellow Line to Expo Center)
j. Kelly Point Park
Not to be confused w/ Kelly Butte on the outer eastside. This park is at the very tip of the North Portland peninsula, where the Columbia River, Columbia Slough, Willamette River and Willamette Slough meet. Beaches have great views of the freight traffic on the rivers and Sauvie Island. Thick canopy lines the paved and unpaved paths. More or less inaccessible by bus. But you could bike there from St Johns (Yellow Line "to Expo Center", get off at Lombard TC, 75-39th/Lombard westbound to St Johns). Or you could take the Marine Drive bike path from Expo Center station)
- a. South Park Blocks
Downtown Portland has two stretches of park blocks. One is the "north park blocks" that are between Park Ave and NW 8th Ave north of Burnside, and the other is the "south park blocks" between Park Ave and SW 9th Ave south of Salmon St. The North Park Blocks are usually full of transients and scuz since the immidiate neighborhood is full of shelters and drunk tanks. Therefore, I recommend hanging out at the South Park Blocks. They cut through downtown from Salmon St to Hall St. Full of trees and pedestrians. Even though it is in the middle of downtown it's very very relaxing. A good walk. My favorite park in Portland. South of Market St, the South Park Blocks are the exact middle of Portland State University campus, which is often full of people and the occasional shitty band. Just walk there.
(image: South Park Blocks 1, 2) (map: map)
b. Cathedral Park
Probably the most stunningly beatiful park in Portland. It's located way out in North Portland (image: map) in the St. Johns neighborhood. Under the east side of the super-gothic St. Johns Bridge (image: St. Johns Bridge), an unexpected park is full of the usual trees and grass, but the really cool thing is the bridge and it's supports (Forest Park in the background). Way the hell out there, but well worth it. Take the Yellow Line to Lombard TC and transfer to 75-39th/Lombard westbound to downtown St Johns. From the main bus stop, work your way to the underside of the bridge.
These photos will convince you. (image: Cathedral Park, Cathedral Park 2, Cathedral Park 3, map)
c. Laurelhurst Park
Laurelhurst Park attracts lots of people (and dogs) from affluent Laurelhurst and surrounding neighborhoods. Although it's only a few square blocks, it's Olmstedian landscaping features a small lake and some serious canopy. It's location and size make it a relativley effortless escape when compared to most of the other parks mentioned. The two main entrances are at SE 31st and Ankeny (map) and SE 38th and Oak (map).
(image: Laurelhurst Park 1, Laurelhurst Park 2, Laurelhurst Park 3)
(bus: 15-Belmont, 20-Burnside/Stark, 75-39th Ave)
d. Waterfront Park
(image: Waterfront Park)
e. Mocks Crest Park
Little known to the public, this small park in North Portland's Overlook neighborhood offers sweeping views of industrial districts (Union Pacific Railyards, Swan Island, and the Northwest Industrial District), bridges (Fremont Bridge, St Johns Bridge, and Railroad Bridge), West Hills neighborhoods (Hillside, Kings Hill, Washington Park, Council Crest, and Marquam Hill), downtown, the Willamette River, and miles of Forest Park. Mocks Crest Park isn't on most maps and isn't mentioned by the parks and recreation dept, so this is insider knowledge. And it's panoramic for sure. The view at night of all those lights is also serious (I imagine the sunset would be good since you're facing southwest).
Mocks Crest Park is at the dead end of N Skidmore Terrace.
(map: Mocks Crest Park)
(image: Mocks Crest Park 1, Mocks Crest Park 2, Mocks Crest Park 3)
(bus: Yellow Line to N Prescott station, walk 1 block south to Skidmore, west on Skidmore until the T at Overlook Terrace where Skidmore St joggs over to Skidmore Terrace)
f. Peninsula Park
Ten years ago it was a place to murder someone, but 21st century Peninsula Park is just a place to hang out. It's a square-block-concave-radial-rose-garden. And there's a fountain in the middle. N Albina St and Ainsworth St.
(map: Peninsula Park)
(image: Peninsula Park 1, Peninsula Park 2)
(bus: 4-Fessenden to N Albina and Ainsworth, 40-Mocks Crest to N Albina and Portland)
g. Sellwood Riverfront Park
At the southern tip of the city limits on the east bank of the Willamette River, Sellwood Riverfront Park offers good views and a decent escape from everything urban (except all the people). On the short stretch of beach, one has a great view of the Sellwood Bridge, the hills of forest on the westside, and the river. A landscaped area behind the beach is popular w/ dog owners and many nearby trails also entertain. The popular Springwater Corridor bike path runs right through the park as well. To get to the park, walk west on SE Tacoma St until you're under the bridge.
(map: Sellwood Riverfront Park)
(bus: 40-Tacoma)
(image: One, Two, Three)
h. Terwilliger Park
The hike up Marquam Hill from downtown on SW Terwilliger Blvd is about 90 minutes to the southern terminus at SW Capitol Highway. This "park" of a street is surrounded by a few blocks of natural vegetation and a wide paved sidewalk on the side is wheelchair accessible and well lit. Short trails occasionally meander off and back onto the sidewalk. The views are excellent too. Drops you off at the back entrance to George Himes Park at Terwilliger and Capitol, so coordinating both parks into your day is smart. The Marquam Trail also passes thru Terwilliger Park, but the connection to Marquam Nature Park isn't as easy as some maps would let on (you have to hike through fast, windy, sidewalk-less streets for over a mile).
Note: in many ways this isn't even a park. But it's in this section because it's a good walk (which is usually what the natural/pseudo-natural parks are all about) and it connects to other parks.
(map: SW Terwilliger Blvd)
(bus: 8-Jackson Park runs up Terwilliger from downtown to the massive OHSU hospital complex. It's a good way to get there from downtown, but it doesn't run down the entire length of the park. Pick up the 44-Capitol Highway, 45-Garden Home, 54-Beaverton/Hillsdale Highway, or 56-Scholls Ferry Rd at the southern tip at Capitol Highway (map)
i. Council Crest Park
The landscaping isn't that amazing, but locals know: it's the view. At 1040' above sea level, most of downtown is too short to be seen. But you can see clear out to the east Portland volcanoes, the airport, Columbia River, southern Washington state, etc. Lots of SW Portland too from the west side of the park. Enter the park on a short trail at SW Talbot and Fairmount. A particularly nice way to get there is on trails (1.7 miles) from Marquam Nature Park (follow signs to "Council Crest").
(bus: service isn't great, so plan ahead- 51-Vista to SW Patton and Talbot/Humphrey (the street changes names at Patton), and walk south on Talbot a couple blocks to Fairmount)
(map: SW Talbot and Fairmount)
(image: Council Crest Park 1, *2, *3)
j. Willamette Park
Functionally, this park is very similar to Waterfront Park: grass and benches with a big view of the river. But instead of bridges, freeways, and warehouses, you can see Ross Island, Oaks Bottom Wildlife Refuge and the Springwater Trail (nature instead of infrastructure, basically). The park is pretty dead usually, which is nice. The Willamette Green Trail (bike path) runs through the park and continues through Butterfly Park (collection of trails that winds through trees close to the water) and Marine Powers Park (trail that runs south of the Sellwood Bridge along the water with lots of beach access). Enter Willamette Park at SW Nebraska just east of Macadam.
(map: SW Nebraska and Macadam)
(image: Willamette Park 1, Willamette Park 2, Marine Powers Park 1, Marine Powers Park 2)
(bus: 35-Macadam and 40-Tacoma to SW Nebraska and Macadam, 43-Taylors Ferry to SW Nebraska and Virginia)
- keep in mind that none of the fountains are running in the winter since they would freeze -
- a. Ira Keller Fountain
A series of small fountains that you can actually sit in (like a hot tub) come together to make a waterfall-ish effect over a sort of wading pool that is partially covered in concrete so you can walk around without getting wet. Really good when it is hot out because you can roll your pants up and walk around in the water. When it is this hot, it turns into something of a municipal pool, with kids splashing all over the place. This would sound annoying, but I think the Ira Keller Fountain is most beautiful when it's really in use. There is also a lot of steps to sit on, so don't think that this is only for those who want to get wet. Really incredible use of public space. Strongly recommended.
(image: Ira Keller Fountain 1, Ira Keller Fountain 2, Ira Keller Fountain 3)
(map: SW 3rd and Clay)
(bus: inside fareless square, 2 blocks from bus mall)
b. Pioneer Courthouse Square
The 'square is often refered to as "Portland's Living room" (EYES ROLL). Def: the public square in the center of the retail district of downtown. So it serves that sort of purpose: people hanging out, the occasional bullshit festival or promotion of downtown commerce. Circles of hacky-sack. People playing chess. A big fucking Starbucks. Between SW Morrison St, SW Yamhill St, SW 6th Ave, and SW Broadway. The MAX stops on both sides, on the bus mall in fareless square.
(image: Pioneer Courthouse Square 1)
(image: Pioneer Courthouse Square 2)
B. Tours
"Tour" as in suggested itinerary for exploring Portland.- 1. Stairwalks Portland's public staircases often offer good views of the city or at least unique perspectives of the neighborhood. Grossly underused and underappreciated, these mossy right-of-ways come from a time when developers were sensitive to the pedestrian experience. Furthermore, they're just plain sexy. Wear shoes with decent traction since steps can be mossy (or even muddy in parks). Most staircases run right between private houses and yards so try to be respectful and not holler obscenities- but they are public right-of-ways and don't let anybody tell you otherwise!
As with the rest of the website, pictures open in new windows but I'm going to offer an alternative page to each stairwalk that is complete with photos in the page in case you want to print it with the pictures for reference. But be warned: they have LOTS of photos so it might spoil it for you. I highly recommend looking at the map I made too.
- a. Washington Park/Arlington Heights/Kings Hill Stairwalk
Coming soon.
c. Marquam Hill/Portland Heights Stairwalk
Coming soon.
d. Linnton Stairwalk
Coming soon.
I honestly believe that Portland is the best city in the United States for bicycling. I'm not the only one either.
- a. Waterfront Park/Eastbank Esplanade
Waterfront Park runs along the west side of the Willamette River downtown from the Hawthorne Bridge to the Steel Bridge. It's closed to cars, but also very popular with pedestrians and the sight-seeing bunch that aren't watching for bikes so be careful. The Eastbank Esplanade is a wide path that runs along the same stretch as Waterfront Park but on the east side of the river. Although it runs a little too close to the interstate at times, many sections are actually floating on the water and the views of downtown and the bridges are a plus. To connect between the two, pass over the lower deck on the Steel Bridge without changing elevation at all.
(map: Waterfront Park and Eastbank Esplanade)
(image: Waterfront Park, Eastbank Esplanade 1, Eastbank Esplanade 2)
(link: parks: Tom McCall Waterfront Park)
(bus: any bus/MAX that goes downtown)
b. Springwater Trail
The Springwater Trail is an extremely popular path that runs from the east end of the Hawthorne Bridge south along the river to the Sellwood neighborhood before cutting east along Johnson Creek out to Gresham (about 21 miles total). A gap between the north-south segment and the east-west segment exists between the Sellwood Bridge and 32nd and Berkeley that's best explained on this map.
The first stretch along the river offers great views of the Willamette River and Ross Island and connects to the Oaks Bottom Wildlife Refuge and Sellwood Riverfront Park. The Johnson Creek watershed is rich with vegetation and Salmon restoration has been underway for several years now. The Johnson Creek alignment of the trail connects to Tideman Johnson Nature Park, Beggars-Tick Wildlife Refuge, Powell Butte Nature Park, Leach Botanical Garden, Mt Scott Park etc. (good views of Mt Hood too). The path is wide and changes elevation very little.
(map: Springwater Trail)
(link: Springwater Trail)
(image: Springwater 1, 2)
(bus: 4-Division, 6-MLK, 10-Harold, 14-Hawthorne, and 33-McLoughlin all connect to the northern terminus at the east end of the Hawthorne Bridge; 40-Tacoma connects to the trail at Sellwood Riverfront Park and at Tacoma St; and the 75-Lombard/39th intersects at SE 45th, 71-60th/122nd intersects at SE 72nd and SE 122nd)
c. Willamette Greenway trail
From: Gregg Everhart (PKGREGG@ci.portland.or.us)
Date: Wednesday, December 10, 2003 11:38 AM
"Willamette Greenway Trail is on west bank of Willamette River. It is paved, open to both bikes and pedestrians. It has been constructed one property at a time so there are some dangerous right angle turns, constrictions and interim sections. Expect more trail traffic on weekends and during commute hours. Some sections use bikelanes, sidewalks, and shared low traffic roads. Not as good as Springwater or Marine Drive for a family-style bike ride but we do get kids just learning to ride and seniors."
Yeah, it's pretty cool. Goes thru Willamette Park, Butterfly Park. You have to ride thru an ugly industrial area on SW Moody St for a mile or so south of the Ross Island Bridge (south of Waterfront Park).
(map: Willamette Greenway trail)
(bus: 35-Macadam, 40-Tacoma, 43-Taylors Ferry)
d. Marine Drive
There are portions in North and Northeast Portland but they don't connect (bike map lists the connection as rough). I've only tried the NoPo one so thats all I can talk about.
Marine Drive runs along the south side of the Columbia River on the absolute edge of Oregon. Be sure and take the Marine Drive path to Smith and Bybee Lakes, and way up to Kelly Point Park. Both parks have lots of paved trails. If you take the Yellow Line to the Expo Center stop, it's about 6-7 miles one way to Kelly Point.
I know that the Northeast part of the trail goes from the airport and I-205 to NE 33rd. You can take the Red Line to Parkrose/Sumner Transit Center and ride the I-205 bike path up to Marine Dr.
(map (PDF): North Portland segment)
(map (PDF): Northeast segment)
(transit: MAX, can hold a lot of bikes- good for groups)
e. Ladds Addition
It's such a popular place for bicyclists, I thought I'd mention it before getting into the actual paths. After riding across the Hawthorne Bridge to the east side, head down Hawthorne Blvd to about 12th and make a slight-right onto Ladd Ave into Ladds Addition. This is a small neighborhood in inner South-East Portland. Its streets were layed out by famous landscape architects in the 1920s into a kalidascope shape with diagonal streets, a circular park in the center surrounded by 4 small rose gardens. (image: Aerial Photo) Head down Ladd Ave to the center park (Ladds Circle). On the other side of the small park is a good coffee shop (Palio) and a small grocery. Lock your bike up, grab some coffee and walk (or bike) around the remaining 4 rose gardens (which can be suprisingly hard to find even though they are 2 blocks away). Lots of trees, lots of roundabouts so the motorists drive slow. It'll make you want to move here.
(map: Ladds Addition)
(bus: 4-Division, 10-Harold, 14-Hawthorne, 70-12th Ave)
f. Zoobombin'
I don't know how this thing started exactly. Many "bike Oregon" type of books list the ride from downtown up into Washington Park as one for "experienced" riders only because it's so steep. On the other hand, if you take your bike on the MAX to Washington Park station, and take the elevator 250 feet up you don't have to do any work at all. So a bunch of these ruffians get drunk and stoned and ride homemade bikes very fast through the park at midnight. It's become a popular thing, talked about in the papers, etc. Suprisingly fun, tho.
Take the MAX blue or red lines west from downtown to Washington Park station. From the surface, turn right (its the only street there), ride a few hundred yards (past the Vietnam Memorial Garden), cut through a parking lot on your right and head down SW Kingston. The entire route is pretty self explanitory (ie-downhill). 'Hits the Rose Gardens and goes thru Kings Hill before winding back downtown.
(link: some sort of description)
(link: zoobomb.org)
g. I'll write up the rest as I try them, but the weather is currently terrible, so don't hold your breath. Contributions appreciated! (mailto:pdxdrtchp@hotmail.com)
C. Movies
Let's be realistic. Why would you come all the way to Portland to watch a movie? Plus, movies aren't that cheap. Don't ask me why. Here are some particularly cheap theaters.Current Movie Listings
- 1. Cheap theaters
- a. Avalon Theater
$1.25 (standard), $3.00 (starred attraction). Usually bad movies, but that comes with the territory (cheap movies that is). The Avalon has a nickel arcade also: Wunderland. It's on SE Belmont St at SE 37th, accessible 2 buses: 15-Belmont, and 75-39th/Lombard
b. 5th Ave Cinemas
$4 (general), $3 (student- you are always a student), $2 (PSU student- sorry, gotta have ID). Located on Portland State University campus, and run by PSU students- they run two movies on Fridays and Saturdays. It's hard to find their listings- check out the Willamete Weekly, Mercury, or go here. Located on SW Harrison St between SW 5th and SW 6th Avenues. On the busmall in Fareless Square.
c. Hollywood Theater
NE 42nd & Sandy, $4
d. Cinema 21
e. Northwest Film Guild
D. Visual Art
- 1. Museums
-I have not mentioned the better known Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI), the Art Museum, and others simply because they aren't dirt cheap-
- a. American Advertising Museum
http://www.admuseum.org/museum/mainmenu.htm- $4 MORE INFO
b. Oregon History Museum
I wouldn't bother unless you have some particular interest in Portland, but if you do there is lots of good stuff. There is an ongoing exibit on old movie theaters in Portland, 19th century birds eye views, lots of old photos, old news footage, etc. The non-Portland history in the museum is pretty tiresome. $6 general, $3 students. Located on the South Park Blocks. 1200 SW Park Avenue (at Madison St). I'd recommend walking, but if you want to take a bus, look at the buses that go to the South Park Blocks. (website: Oregon Historical Society)
2. Galleries
First Thursday of each month is the day where most downtown and Pearl District galleries are open. On the last Thursday of the month, a string of galleries on NE Alberta St open up. I am less knowledgeable than I could be on the subject, so I'll just pass on some links:
Willamette Week - Visual Arts - a good site with samples and directions for westside galleries and other visual arts listings.
Portland Mercury - Visual Arts - a little less broad, more suggestive.
alt.portland - art - some more links
E. Everything else
- 1. Books
- a. Powells
Powells is the biggest independant book store in North America. Or the biggest book store in the United States. Or something like that. It's different every time I hear it. Anyways, it's huge. The beauty of Powells is that you can grab a book, take it to their coffee room on the first floor, and read the book for free (regardless of whether or not you buy the damn coffee). I have read entire books over the course of weeks by hanging out at Powells. I often go to the "Pearl Room" (on the 3rd floor), which is also the art room, and look at free eye candy for hours. The architecture section is fucking heavy. I highly recommend stopping by Powells- this is one of the few places that an article about Portland in an airplane magazine will tell you about that is actually worthwhile. An entire square block between W Burnside, NW 10th, NW 11th, and NW Couch St. The main entrance is at NW 10th and Burnside. Public transit: 20-Burnside, Portland Streetcar. (image: Powells Books) (website: http://www.powells.com/)
b. Reading Frenzy and Counter Media
Although there is no coffee shop, basically the same idea as above. Eye candy. Browsing for free. which one? specializes in foreign comics and weird smut magazines, and which one? specializes in independant comics and less-popular magazines. SW Oak St between 9th and 10th Ave. Public transit: 20-Burnsideto 10th and West Burnside and walk one block south-west on Oak St, Portland Streetcar to SW 10th and SW Stark and walk one block north to Oak St OR to SW 11th and Alder and walk one block east to 10th and three blocks north to Oak St *depending on direction*. If you cross Burnside St when you are finished at Powells, turn left and pass the shitty pizza place on your right can't miss 'em. Side note: a cool store behind one of the small book stores is "Billy Galaxy" (on W Burnside, between 9th and 10th) that has really old toys, lot of Japanese shit.
- a. Ground Kontrol
A retro-arcade, meaning that all the games are pre-1988 (about). A lot of good old games that you have forgot about are here: Pole Position, Hamburger Time, Joust, Missle Commando, dozens others. Even if you were born in the 80s like me, and you don't remember any of that shit, it is still really neat to try all these prehistoric games. All games are a quarter. They also sell a bunch of overpriced Atari equipment and serves as an indie record store on the side, but that isn't cheap. What is cheap: is the games. A little to hip but... definitley worth seeing. As cheap as it gets without being free. 11AM-10PM everyday except Friday and Saturday they close at midnight. On NW Couch St between NW 5th and 6th ave's. Public transit: on the bus mall in old town, take 1, 4, 8, 9, 10, 14, 17, 20, 31, 32, 33, 35, 40, 43, 44, 45, 54. Walkable from almost anywhere downtown. (website: http://www.groundkontrol.com/)
c. PSU's arcade
Not a particularly interesting arcade, but it's cheap and if you're in the neighborhood and you're in the mood... Go to the Smith Memorial Center between SW Broadway, SW Park, SW Montgomery, and SW Harrison. On the busmall in fareless square. Go to the basement.
- a. Mark O Hatfield Federal Courthouse
This is a pretty new, pretty big building in downtown Portland. Make sure you have no weapons or drugs on you, be prepared to show ID at the door... then take the elevator up to the 9th floor and walk out onto the terrace. Really good views and some rediculous art. You can also take the elevator up to the 16th floor and just look out the window for a very different angle. Downtown at SW 3rd and SW Main St. Public transit: A couple of blocks from the bus mall in fareless square. If you want to get closer, catch the 4, 10, 14, or 33 from 5th Ave (north of Salmon St) and get off at 4th and Madison and walk accross the park. (image: Mark O Hatfield Federal Courthouse)
b. Ecotrust Building
This is an old rail building that was revitalized (including adding a 3rd floor) by an environmental group. A free tour of the building is pretty interesting (the floor of the second floor is recycled car tires, for example). From 9AM-5PM on week days, you can walk up to the 3rd floor terrace on stairs from the outside. Great views of downtown, the Pearl District, and the Fremont Bridge. NW 10th and NW Johnson. Public transit: Portland Streetcar to NW 10th and Johnson.
(image: Ecotrust Building)
(link: Architecture Week - "Historic Warehouse Grows Green")
(website: http://www.ecotrust.org/)
c. Parks
Mt Tabor, Rocky Butte, and Mocks Crest all have amazing views and are accessible at night. (image: Mt. Tabor view)
d. Misc
E. Dirt Cheap Drinking
- I'm working on this shit. These links have more than I could ever tell you anyway:
IV. Business Districts
In light of the fact that this page is viewed by locals and tourists alike, I've added every noticable business district I can. However, if you're only gonna be in town for a couple days you might not want to stub your toe trying to hit every one. SO- I've arranged the following areas in order of [what I perceive to be] descending popularity. Will someone please contribute photos for these areas (pdxdrtchp@hotmail.com)?Also, might I note, I haven't included any 'mall' type of commerce (like Lloyd Center, Clackamas Town Center, 82nd Ave, Washington Square) because they're fucking despicable.
A. Downtown
Well no shit. For one neighborhood, downtown Portland has more going for itself than any other neighborhood (as it should). Inside fareless square. Take the MAX to Pioneer Square, grab food at the food carts on 9th or on 5th and eat your food at Ira Keller Fountain, drink beer at Tugboat (SW Broadway and Ankeny), Donkey Kong at Ground Kontrol, relax in the South Park Blocks, check out the view from the 9th floor terrace at the Mark O Hatfield Courthouse, walk along Waterfront Park, stop by some book stores by Burnside, drool on some old cool toys at Billy Galaxy (Burnside and 9th).B. Hawthorne
SE Hawthorne BLVD is Portland's powerhouse linear commercial street. Bars and pubs of varying chic-ness, movie theaters, cheap and expensive food, tattoo parlors, laundromats, vintage clothing and furniture, antiques, record stores, futons, grocery stores, knickknacks (ie bullshit), book stores, coffee shops, head shops, salons. The most popular part is between 32nd and 39th. This is where the knickknacks concentrate, but Powells also has a location around the way, the Baghdad Theater is a rockin' pub-theater, and the Hawthorne Hostel is somewhere in the early 30s. From 12th to 22nd, it's a little more mellow: mostly restaurants and bars and less jerk-off businesses like in the 30s. On the other side of 39th to about 47th, the rents are cheaper (I'm guessing) which leads to head shops, taverns, and antique stores that defy darwinism.Firstly, if I were you, I'd check out ABCDEFGHIJKL (largest used magazine retail in the US, at 33rd), Imbibe (get the omlet w/ brie during the Sunday brunch) at 22nd, get coffee at Tiny's (at 12th) and play shuffleboard at the Watering Trough (between 48th and 49th). Second, I think that people should start referring to Hawthorne as "the boulevard," so you should use it occasionally.
(map: Hawthorne Blvd)
(bus: 14-Hawthorne, 70-12th Ave, 75-39th/Lombard)
(link: Hawthorne photos @ Portland Ground)
C. the Pearl
Every city has to have at least one hopelessly gentrified warehouse district. The Pearl District has gone through all the stages and is now packed with bad galleries, hi-rise apartment buildings, expensive and inexpensive food, and the Streetcar. I'm giving it a bad rap. Buy a sandwich at Pearl Bakery (NW 9th and Couch), enjoy the view from the Ecotrust Building, eat some fucking killer breakfast at Bi-Ways Cafe (NW Glisan between 12th and 13th).(map: Pearl District)
(bus: 17-NW 21st , Portland Streetcar)
(link: Pearl District photos @ Portland Ground)
D. Northwest District (NW 21st/NW 23rd)
The NW District, or "Nob Hill," as the business owners like to call it (in direct reference to San Francisco's Nob Hill. let's not even get into that shit...) is a mostly residential neighborhood that has 2 strong commercial streets: NW 23rd and NW 21st.On the whole, the commercial streets don't have a lot that interests me (and therefore, you). The neighborhood is architecturally rich though (especially varied east of 23rd, see link below). Try Couch Park (between NW Glisan, Hoyt, 19th and 20th) out for size, take a walk on the Lower Macleay Trail in Forest Park (entrance at 29th and Upshur), sleep cheap at the NW District Hostel (18th and Everett). Upper Thurman and Vaughn Streets (west of 23rd) have made a small start: get a sandwich at Food Front Co-op (at 23rd place and Thurman) and rock the chimichanga + margarita at Acapulco's Gold (Vaughn at 25th).
(link: Northwest District Photos)
(map: Northwest)
(bus: 17-NW 21st Ave, 15-NW 23rd Ave, 77-Broadway/Halsey, Portland Streetcar)
E. Alberta
Add equal parts eyesores and slick business, mix thoroughly. By "eyesore" I mean boarded up buildings, empty parcels overgrown with weeds. By "slick business" I mean vegetarian restaurants, vintage clothing outlets and coffeeshops. Hot with the artists too (cheap rent), and lots of galleries. On the last Thursday of each month all the galleries open at night ("last Thursdays," like downtown/Pearl's "first Thursdays"). La Serenita is a very popular and very cheap Mexican Restaurant (at 28th). Vita Cafe has more street credibility than any other veggie restaurant in town (at 31st). Good food (mostly vegetarian) and not-so-bad-coffee at Star E Rose (at 24th). Bumpin' at varying levels between 10th and 30th.
(bus: the 72-82nd/Killingsworth runs up and down Alberta but it doesn't go downtown or anywhere else that you might actually catch it. Take the 8-NE 15th Ave to Alberta and 15th, the 9-Broadway to Alberta and 27th, or the 10-NE 33rd Ave to 33rd and Alberta.)
(map: Alberta St)
(link: Alberta photos @ Portland Ground)
F. Old Town
Sometimes called Chinatown by those who forget that there aren't any Chinese people there (although a half dozen Chinese restaurants concentrate by the silly Chinese gate thingy at 4th and W Burnside), Old Town is a neighborhood of stark contrasts. It sports a huge concentration of social services and, as a result, is one of the only (if not the only) neighborhoods in PDX that is sketchy after dark. At the same time, loads of popular bars and clubs take advantage of the cheap rents just blocks from downtown and many buildings have been converted into $1k/sq.ft. lofts. If you go drinking there, you can have everything from chic clubs w/ expensive lighting to some depressing dives with alcoholic rates (like 7AM specials). To each their own.Backspace, at NW 5th and Davis, is a "hangout." There's a gallery in the back, four or five vintage arcade games, pool, espresso, couches, and a bunch of computers to play RPGs and first person shooters against other people (rather expensive)- which is billed as their main attraction. I think they also have wireless internet. Open till midnight usually, but 4AM Fri/Sat. Voodoo Doughnut (just south of Burnside on SW 3rd) is open from 10PM to 10AM, making it another important late night stop (link: voodoodoughnut.com). Darcelle's nightclub (NW 3rd and Everett) hosts Portland's premiere burlesque drag queen show and holds down a half century tradition of electing an empress every year (hosted by Darcelle's in Washington Park every August).
History lesson: 19th century tunnels under Old Town connected the bustling port to warehouses so goods could be transported directly from a ship to a warehouse. With the presence of numerous dives, drunk men where often "Shanghaied" (kidnapped and sold to ship captains for slave labor) by falling through trap doors, having the shit beat out of them, and then being transported to the ship via the tunnel. Between the 1890s and the end of WWI, Portland had a reputation for being the scariest place on the west coast for a sailor. You can tour the tunnels with some paranormal investigative unit (who apparently takes this shit seriously) on Halloween (link: Portland Underground FAQ).
Technically Old Town is bordered by W Burnside, the North Park Blocks, and the Willamette River. However, many of the buildings and businesses a few blocks south of Burnside and east of 4th have a notably similar aesthetic. (bus: The northern terminus for the Bus Mall is in Old Town (NW 5th/6th), so all buses going over the Steel Bridge (1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 33, 40, 77) as well as all buses bound for Union Station (14, 31, 32, 35, 44) pass thru)
(image: Old Town)
(map: Old Town)
G. Belmont
SE Belmont St has a dense strip of stuff between 33rd and 35th. The second run Avalon Theater and adjoining Wunderland nickel arcade are at 35th. Laughing Planet has kinda pricey vegan burritos. Pied Cow is a popular coffee night spot w/ a garden-patio-thing. Damn close to Laurelhurst Park.(map: Belmont)
(bus: 15-Belmont)
H. Clinton
SE Clinton St at 26th is an old streetcar stop developed into an uber-hipster intersection. The Clinton Theater isn't that cheap ($6, I think), but it does the whole Rocky Horror Picture Show in drag thing. Dot's Cafe is the best place on the eastside to get that shitty punk-rock-service (a black clad diner w/ a bar). Noho's has some damn fine Hawaiian food. I think there are a couple independant record shops and vintage clothing stores too.(map: Clinton St)
(bus: 4-Division, 10-Harold)
I. Multnomah Village
SW Capitol Highway from 36th to 32nd is the only noteworthy commercial area (outside of downtown) in mostly suburban southwest Portland. This oddly shaped street would probably be described as having a "quaint small town feel" by a real estate agency. Luckily you've got me to sort through the bullshit for you. A lot of antique stores that don't deserve to survive, coffee, restaurants. One nice thing about Multnomah Village is that the businesses are actually "neighborhood oriented" in the true sense of the phrase. As their popularity increases, many business districts have developed a touristy aesthetic that's bland and cold. However, locals seem to outnumber the rest of us down there and it reflects on the attitude (from a service perspective) and the types of businesses you see (lots of burger/steak/pizza/burrito options, zero pho/curry/falafel options).OK, enough on the ambiance. Fat City Cafe is one of the top 2 or 3 diners in town (instead of asking if you want an english muffin or toast with your breakfast, it's hash browns or pancakes). Village Coffee has a lot of magazines. Bring your dog to the picnic tables in front of the Lucky Labrador and have a pint w/ other K-9s (and their owners).
(map: Multnomah Village)
(bus: 44-Capitol Highway, 45-Garden Home)
J. Sellwood/Westmoreland
underconstructionblahblahK. NE Broadway
underconstructionblahblahL. E 28th Ave
East 28th Ave (from NE Flanders to SE Ankeny) is an extremley young and small main street. But it's restaurants are being hyped like crazy so I thought I'd mention it. After surveying the area, I found that the businesses are about 1/3 wine joints, 1/3 gelato joints, and the rest are salons and Chinese restaurants. I can't imagine this niche market lasting the next wave of gentrification, but I guess we'll just wait and see.(map: E 28th)
(bus: 20-Burnside/Stark, 19-Glisan)
M. Sandy BLVD
Although I made a specific point of leaving "auto-oriented" streets out of the picture I happen to really like NE Sandy and, consequently, I'm the fucking boss, so... In the Central Eastside, it's mostly auto dealerships and shit like that but stop by Sandy Hut at 14th for free shuffleboard and cheap brew. The Hollywood District (39th-47th) was apparently downtown's biggest competitor way back. [don't eat Chinese food in the Hollywood District] The Hollywood Theater (at 41st) is art-house enough to have a newsletter (link). Farther up in Rose City Park (47th-60th) is where the food really starts. Violet Cafe's breakfast is no joke (at 52nd), Du's Grill is absolutley the best teriyaki shack in town (at 54th), Chaba Thai is seriousness (at 58th). The Roseway District (60s) has a bunch of Vietnamese Restaurants but I have yet to find one that really kicks my ass.It's pretty much fast-food and laundromats after that but if you're feeling really cool, venture out to the code-breaking residential motels and trailer parks at 122nd and beyond, known city-wide for their sex offenders and meth labs. Also avoid the 12th-11th-Burnside-Sandy intersection (regardless of travel mode), one of the most complicated in Portland.
(map of Sandy)
(bus: 12-Sandy)
V. Lodging
A. Hostels
- 1. Hostelling International- NW District
In the Northwest district, it's probably closer to a lot of the things you'll be seeing. Closer to the bus mall too (important!). (Dorm is $16 a night, private room is $40-50 a night. Located at 1818 NW Glisan St (at NW 18th Ave). The hostel's website has directions on it. NW District Hostel.
2. Hostelling International- SE Hawthorne Neighborhood
Right on Hawthorne Blvd, amid the heavy consumption, this hostel in at the center of the eastside business world. Same prices as above. Located at 3031 SE Hawthorne Blvd (between SE 30th and SE 31st). The website has directions and other info. Hawthorne Neighborhood Hostel.
3. McMenamins: White Eagle
From : Jeff Mendon
Sent : Tuesday, January 24, 2006 7:33 PM
"dirt cheap lodging? how about mcmenamins white eagle hotel? 900 n. russell (map). $30 bucks a night for a bunk room and free cover to their nightly shows. very clean and great atmosphere. better than any crappy $60 hotel. right on the MAX line too."
According to the website: Room rates are the same for single or double occupancy. Guests must be age 21 and over. Add 12.5% state and county room tax to all room rates.
Transit: MAX Yellow line, 1-Greeley, or 33-Fremont to Albina/Mississippi station.
B. Cheap motels
The outer eastside has some cheap motels, but they are usually far away and in seedy neighborhoods. The southern tip of downtown has several cheap motels on lots of bus lines.
- 1. Downtown Value Inn
Summer Rates: 1 person 1 bed- $55, 1-2 person 2 bed- $59. Winter Rates: 1 person 1 bed- $40, 1-2 person 2 bed $45. Located at 415 SW Montgomery St (at SW 4th Ave). Close to PSU, on the bus mall, in fareless square. http://www.downtownvalueinn.com/
2. should be pretty damn cheap, not sure of price though...
Fourth Avenue Motel
1889 SW 4th and Hall, (503) 226-7646
(link: citysearch review)
Travelodge Downtown
2401 SW 4th and Barbur (just south of 405 freeway), (503) 226-1121
(link: citysearch review)
Downtown Value Inn
415 SW Montgomery and 4th, (503) 226-4751
(link: citysearch review)
Sixth Ave Motel
2221 SW 6th and Barbur (just south of 405 freeway), (503) 226-2979
(link: citysearch review)
VI. Suburbs
- Metro Area Map
A. Oregon City
Oregon City is the first town in Oregon. Although it's historic downtown retains some of it's original character, the city itself has become another suburb of Portland. Still, go to downtown Oregon City. Take the Municipal Elevator (visable from anywhere in downtown Oregon City) up to the top to look at the crusty old skyline, huge paper mills, Willamete River, and surrounding forest from an elevated view. Then, walk along the promenade until you can see all of the paper mills. From the elevator (still on top), walk away from the downtown to 7th St (the other main street) where you'll find Super Torta (damn cheap, damn fine burritos) and a couple of antique stores. Take Oregon Highway 99-E south. This highway (McLoughlin Blvd) runs through downtown Oregon City. Or take the 33-McLoughlin or 35-Macadam to 7th St and Main St. The 33 comes more often, but the 35 has a more scenic route.(image: Oregon City 1, Oregon City 2)
(link: Oregon City photos @ Portland Ground)
B. Everywhere else
Aside from Oregon City, Portland suburbs are pretty fucked. These are the few things worth doing if you have a car and the time: -- Uwajimiya, (directions) , Beaverton, is a really huge Asian market. Their candy isle is fucking unbelievable. Bus: 54- Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway. -- Tryon Creek State Park in Lake Oswego is pretty tough. Take the 35-Macadam to downtown LO, walk north on State Street (highway 43) for less than half a mile when Terwilliger Blvd branches off to the left. On Terwilliger you're a block or so from the park. It's a great place to bicycle to as well. Ride down SW Terwilliger Blvd about 5 miles from downtown Portland. A 3 mile bike path runs more-or-less parallel to Terwilliger at the end of the trip to downtown Lake Oswego. (link: Oregon State Parks: Tryon Creek). George Rogers Park in Lake Oswego and Mary S. Young Park in West Linn both have some of the only natural space left on the river.VII. Services
- A. Police/Fire
- From : Todd Lisonbee
Sent : Wednesday, November 2, 2005 9:47 AM
"The Washington County Library System has a cultural pass that you can check out so that you can visit any of the following places for free: Portland Art Museum, Japanese Garden, Oregon Garden, Pittock Mansion, Chinese Classical Garden, Forest Discovery Center, and others...
http://www.wilinet.wccls.lib.or.us/news/default.cfm?pac=h&pg=pass
If you are in Multnomah it might be inconvenient to go all the way to Washington county to get the pass but with the Art Museum, for example, this pass could save you $30 for two people.
Library cards are currently free for residents of Washington, Multnomah, Clackamas or Hood River counties in Oregon; and Clark, Klickitat and Skamania counties in Washington. You need to reserve the pass about one week in advance because they are limited (although this applies more to the weekends). Also, each pass is good for two people and is for one specific location.
Have a nice day, -Todd Lisonbee" (what a guy!)
standard 911 on any phone for emergency
Portland Police non-emergency 503-823-3333
B. Internet Access
heaven- sw 10th and stark. (hours?)
seattle's best- sw 6th and mill (PSU Urban Center)
kinkos- sw 2nd and alder, nw 23rd and lovejoy, ne 7th and weidler
C. Libraries
Multnomah County: http://www.multcolib.org/mcl-hrs.html
Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital & Medical Center
1015 NW 22nd Avenue
Legacy Emanuel Hospital & Health Center
2801 N. Gantenbein Avenue
Providence Portland Medical Center
4805 NE Glisan Street
E. Post offices
Westside
(downtown)
University Station, 1505 SW 6th Avenue (at Clay St), Portland, OR 97201
Week Days 07:00AM-06:00PM
Saturday 10:00AM-03:00PM
503-274-1362
Pioneer Station, 520 SW Morrison (at 5th), Portland, OR 97204
Week Days 08:00AM-05:00PM
503-294-2564
(nw)
Portland Main Office Retail, 715 NW Hoyt St (at Broadway), Portland, OR 97208
Week Days 07:00AM-06:30PM
Saturday 08:30AM-05:00PM
503-294-2564
Forest Park Station, 1706 NW 24th Ave (at Savier St), Portland, OR 97210
Week Days 08:30AM-05:00PM
503-228-5412
Eastside
East Portland Station, 1020 SE 7th Ave (at Yamhill), Portland, OR 97214
Week Days 08:30AM-05:00PM
503-234-6182
Brooklyn Station, 1410 SE Powell (at 14th), Portland, OR 97242
Week Days 09:00AM-05:00PM
503-236-0256
F. Currency Exchange
Travelex America Inc
7000 NE Airport Way # 2161
G. Gay/Lesbian Resources
PDX Gay and Lesbian Yellow Pages
Gay PDX
H. Laundromats
Northwest Neighborhood Laundry
NW 26th and Thurman
A-1 Cleaners
NE 27th and Glisan
Wash World
SE 28th and Belmont and SE 20th and Division
Springtime Cleaners & Laundry
SE 29th and Hawthorne ('heard you can play pool)
VIII. Links
- A. Other Guides
alt.portland.guide- this excellent guide has expanded to include daily blog entries on Portland. A must-
Wikipedia Portland
portland.cityseach.com- reviews of just about EVERY restaurant or business you might use in town, but not exactly trustworthy.
BootsNAll Guide- some good info but beware: hasn't been updated in years and occasionally incorrect (Fort Stevens Park, for example, is 2 hrs, not 20 min from Portland)
The Artist's Guide to North Portland- don't let the name turn you off. Lots of good stuff about a chunk of town I'm relativley oblivious to.
Vegetarian Travel Guide- Portland
Portland Ground- a Portland based photoblog with beautiful photos organized by neighborhood.
B. Parks
Portland Parks and Recreation
Oregon State Parks
Washington State Parks
US Geological Survey - Portland Volcanoes and Mountains
Vancouver, WA Parks and Rec
Lake Oswego Parks and Rec
Tualatin Hills Park and Rec District
Sauvie Island
C. Government
City of Portland
Multnomah County
Portland Police Bureau
Metro
Portland Developement Commission
Portland Maps
D. Media
* more popular publication
Asian Reporter
Business Journal Of Portland
Cascadia Times
El Hispanic News
Jewish Review
KATU
KOIN
Oregonian*
Oregon Herald
Portland Chinese Times
Portland Indymedia
Portland Mercury*
Portland Tribune*
The Skanner
Willamette Week*
Portland Radio Guide
E. Stuff
Urban Adventure League
Critical Mass
Current Weather
Movie Listings
Old Portland Postcards
Oregon Historical Society
Portland Bridges
SCRAP!
pdxHISTORY.com
The Know
Zoobomb
Hollywood Theater
Reading Frenzy
craigslist- Portland
Free Geek
Portland, Oregon In 3D
Chunk 666
BarFly Magazine
Oregon Brewers Guild- Microbreweries in Portland
NW FILM CENTER
Biking Trails
SOAPBOX DERBY
S H I F T to bikes!= calendar
Aerial Photographs- Northwest
Portland Architecture
Stumptown Confidential
portland radio authority
The Portland Radio Guide - pdxradio.com
t e a m . m i d n i g h t
F. Transportation links
Office of Transportation: Getting Around
Tri-Met
C-Tran
Bicycle Transportation Alliance
Shift To Bikes
Portland International Airport
Portland Skateparks
Portland Inline Skate Association
G. Travel links
Hostelz.com
Hostelling International
Mister SF (San Francisco)
MilebyMile.com: Free Highway Travel Guides
Walk Vancouver
Forgotten New York
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