Multnomah Village
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neighborhood representation | |
Association | Multnomah Neighborhood Association |
Coalition | Southwest Neighborhoods, Inc. |
Neighborhood geography | |
Area | 3.74 km² (PDF map) |
Location | Interactive map |
Demographics (2000) | |
Population | 6625 (density 1771/km²) |
Households | 3196 (95% occupied) |
Owned | 1582 (49%) |
Rented | 1614 (51%) |
Size | 2.07 persons (average) |
The community of Multnomah, southwest of Portland, Oregon, developed in the 1910s around a depot of the Oregon Electric Railway of the same name. It was annexed by the city of Portland in the 1950s, and today Multnomah is one of 95 officially recognized Portland neighborhoods, centered around the Multnomah Village business district.
Multnomah lies between SW 45th Ave. in the west, SW Capitol Hill Rd. in the east, SW Vermont St. in the north, and I-5 in the south. Exceptions are the area north of SW Nevada Ct. and east of SW 26th Ave. (part of Hillsdale), an area south of SW Multnomah Blvd. and north of SW Dolph St. where SW 48th Ave. is the western border, and an area south of SW Marigold St. where SW Capitol Highway is the western border. The neighborhood is bordered by Maplewood, Ashcreek, and Crestwood on the west, Hayhurst and Hillsdale to the north, and South Burlingame, Markham, and West Portland Park to the south and east.
A bit of Portland history played out in the Village on April 7, 1987 when Mayor Bud Clark fired Police Chief Jim Davis while the two were having a breakfast meeting at the Fat City Cafe.
The neighborhood celebrates "Multnomah Days" with a parade and street festival each August.
Multnomah Village was, for a long time, home to the world's first wiki, WikiWikiWeb, which was physically located in an office there. The website has since relocated.[1]
[edit] Landmarks
- The Multnomah School (1913) has since 1979 served as the Multnomah Art Center.
- The Nelson Thomas building (1913) now houses Marco's Cafe.
- The 1925 Masonic Lodge (Orenomah Chapter No. 141) is now the Lucky Labrador Public House.
[edit] Parks
- Gabriel Park (1950), including Southwest Community Center and Pool (1999) and Gabriel Community Garden and Orchard (1975)
- Custer Park (1954), named for Gen. George Armstrong Custer
[edit] External links
- The Multnomah Village Post newspaper
- Profile of Multnomah
- Photo tour from MovingToPortland.net
- Photo of Oregon Electric Railway stop at Multnomah Station
- Multnomah Villager village resident's neighborhood weblog
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local
- Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local, WikiMapia
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA