University Park, Portland, Oregon

University Park
Neighborhood
University Park
Coordinates: 45°34′44″N 122°44′13″W / 45.579°N 122.737°W / 45.579; -122.737Coordinates: 45°34′44″N 122°44′13″W / 45.579°N 122.737°W / 45.579; -122.737
PDF map
Country United States
State Oregon
City Portland
Government
  Association University Park Neighborhood Association
  Coalition North Portland Neighborhood Services
Area
  Total 1.20 sq mi (3.10 km2)
Population (2000)[1]
  Total 5,250
  Density 4,390/sq mi (1,694/km2)
Housing[1]
  No. of households 1692
  Occupancy rate 95% occupied
  % households renting 27% renting
  Avg. household size 3.10 persons

University Park is a neighborhood in the north section of Portland, Oregon on the east shore of the Willamette River. University Park is bounded by North Lombard Street and the Portsmouth neighborhood to the north, North Chautauqua Boulevard and the Arbor Lodge neighborhood to the east, The Willamette River and Mock's Bottom industrial area to the south, and the North Portland railroad cut with Cathedral Park and St. Johns neighborhoods to the west.

The neighborhood is home to an 11.26-acre (4.56 ha) North Portland park of the same name, land for which was acquired in 1953.[2]

History

University Park was named for its proximity to the former Portland University, a Methodist institution founded in 1891.[3] Property of 71 acres for the university and roughly 530 acres for the surrounding neighborhood was platted from land owned by pioneer families and sold at half-value to the Methodist Episcopal Church, then owners of Willamette University in Salem. The church planned to sell individual lots through a realty company in University Park to finance the university, but home site sales did not sustain the institution.[4] A financial failure for most of its brief existence, the university closed in 1900.[5]

After Portland University closed, the land and buildings were purchased by the Archdiocese of Portland in 1901, and Columbia University[6] opened on the site, later renamed the University of Portland. Public transportation was installed, and industry began to develop in the area.

A 1902 proposed site plan, on land that later became the University Park neighborhood, for the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition. The exposition was instead held on an artificial island in Guild's Lake.

As designers of University Park, Methodist Episcopal officials aligned streets along a northeast  southwest axis and a northwest  southeast axis in order to maximize exposure to sunlight. Church officials also chose street names in remembrance not only of institutions of higher learning but also persons and places important to Methodists of the time. As a result, University Park is a neighborhood without an ordinal relationship among streets; therefore, navigation requires knowledge of all streets.[4][7]

Parks, sports venues and natural areas

References

  1. 1 2 Demographics (2000)
  2. "University Park". Portland Parks & Recreation. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  3. "The Portland University, Located in This City". The Oregonian. Portland: Henry Pittock. January 1, 1895. p. 29. Retrieved February 12, 2015.
  4. 1 2 Snyder, Eugene E. (1979). Portland Names and Neighborhoods. Portland: Binford and Mort. pp. 31–37. ISBN 978-0832303470.
  5. "Close of Portland University". The Oregonian. Portland: Henry Pittock. May 17, 1900. p. 7. Retrieved February 12, 2015.
  6. No affiliation with Columbia University in New York.
  7. For example, Portland's Alphabet District has numbered avenues along a north  south axis and alphabetized streets along an east  west axis that form a grid where navigation only requires knowledge of the order of numbers and letters.
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