Loading AI tools
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This list presents the full set of buildings, structures, objects, sites, or districts designated on the National Register of Historic Places in South and Southwest Portland, Oregon, and offers brief descriptive information about each of them. The National Register recognizes places of national, state, or local historic significance across the United States.[1] Out of over 90,000 National Register sites nationwide,[2] Oregon is home to over 2,000,[3] and over one-fourth of those are found partially or wholly in Portland. While these sites are widely spread across all six of Portland's quadrants, heavy concentrations are found in the Downtown and Southwest Hills neighborhoods of the Southwest quadrant, and the Northwest District neighborhood of the Northwest quadrant.
Only historic places within the municipal boundaries of Portland are shown in this list and its four companion lists for the other quadrants. Some sites beyond city limits will appear in other lists showing "Portland" as a general locality, but are excluded here. Although Portland's legal boundaries extend into Clackamas and Washington counties, all of the city's National Register sites lie within Multnomah County.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted September 13, 2024.[4]
[5] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[6] | Location | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Maud and Belle Ainsworth House | February 27, 1986 (#86000288) |
2542 SW Hillcrest Drive 45°30′27″N 122°42′06″W |
Maud Ainsworth was a prominent Northwest photographer in a cutting-edge, modernist style. The 1907 Arts and Crafts house she shared with her sister Belle included her studio and darkroom. The house is a defining work of architect William C. Knighton, a designer of importance throughout Oregon.[7] | |
2 | Alderway Building | June 11, 2024 (#100010438) |
521-539 SW Broadway 45°31′13″N 122°40′45″W |
||
3 | Ambassador Apartments | February 26, 1979 (#79003738) |
1209 SW 6th Avenue 45°30′56″N 122°40′51″W |
||
4 | Annand–Loomis House | June 27, 1997 (#97000586) |
1825 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′52″N 122°41′49″W |
||
5 | Arlington Club | August 30, 2010 (#10000599) |
811 SW Salmon Street 45°31′04″N 122°40′54″W |
A four-story brick and terra cotta structure built in 1910.[8] | |
6 | Arminius Hotel | July 14, 1988 (#88001038) |
1022–1038 SW Morrison Street 45°31′12″N 122°40′58″W |
||
7 | Arnold–Park Log Home | February 12, 2010 (#10000016) |
12000 SW Boones Ferry Road 45°26′15″N 122°41′22″W |
||
8 | Auditorium and Music Hall | February 22, 1980 (#80003357) |
920–928 SW 3rd Avenue 45°30′59″N 122°40′34″W |
One of the few remaining Romanesque Revival buildings in Portland, this 1890s building housed concert space, a commerce center, a dance hall, apartments, a boxing gym, and offices through its history.[9] | |
9 | Auto Rest Garage | September 12, 1996 (#96000997) |
925–935 SW 10th Avenue 45°31′06″N 122°41′00″W |
||
10 | Balfour–Guthrie Building | August 1, 2002 (#02000824) |
733 SW Oak Street 45°31′21″N 122°40′44″W |
||
11 | Ball–Ehrman House | February 22, 1991 (#91000143) |
2040 SW Laurel Street 45°30′38″N 122°41′57″W |
||
12 | Bank of California Building | March 14, 1978 (#78002306) |
330 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′16″N 122°40′38″W |
||
13 | Baruh–Zell House | April 5, 2007 (#07000256) |
3131 SW Talbot Road 45°30′05″N 122°42′33″W |
Leading Portland residential architect Herman Brookman's design for this 1937 Tudor Revival house was one of his finest achievements. In many of its features, such as curved walls, stripped-down ornamentation, recessed entry, and functionally-oriented rear elevation, it heralds the transition from highly traditional European styles executed on a grand scale to a modernized and simplified reinterpretation of those styles responsive to contemporary technology and preferences.[10] | |
14 | John M. and Elizabeth Bates House No. 1 | June 12, 1990 (#90000846) |
1837 SW Edgewood Road 45°30′16″N 122°41′55″W |
Architect Wade Pipes, a pivotal figure in the Arts and Crafts movement in Oregon, designed this house in the mid-1930s. Built in 1935, it represents that decade's transition in Pipes' focus from English vernacular exterior elements toward clean lines, rectilinear forms, and minimal decoration. Its interior spaces and details express his devotion to Arts and Crafts principles. John and Elizabeth Bates subsequently commissioned three further houses from him.[11] | |
15 | Bedell Building | February 23, 1989 (#89000066) |
520–538 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′11″N 122°40′40″W |
||
16 | John Virginius and Annice Bennes House | March 27, 2013 (#13000119) |
122 SW Marconi Avenue 45°31′23″N 122°42′18″W |
||
17 | Benson Hotel | November 20, 1986 (#86003175) |
309–319 SW Broadway 45°31′19″N 122°40′43″W |
||
18 | Simon Benson House | October 25, 2002 (#01000155) |
1803 SW Park Avenue 45°30′44″N 122°41′07″W |
Was originally listed in 1983 at its original location at 1504 SW 11th Avenue. Was delisted and relisted on the same day in 2002 after it was moved to its present location. | |
19 | Charles F. Berg Building | September 1, 1983 (#83002170) |
615 SW Broadway 45°31′11″N 122°40′47″W |
||
20 | Beth Israel School | August 10, 1978 (#78002308) |
1230 SW Main Street 45°31′04″N 122°41′11″W |
||
21 | Bishopcroft of the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon | May 18, 2000 (#00000061) |
1832 SW Elm Street 45°30′34″N 122°41′52″W |
||
22 | Bishop's House | October 18, 1974 (#74001706) |
219–223 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′13″N 122°40′26″W |
||
23 | Bohnsen Cottages | December 4, 2008 (#08001182) |
1918–1926 SW Elm Street and 2412–2416 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′35″N 122°41′55″W |
||
24 | Joseph R. Bowles House | March 8, 1978 (#78002309) |
1934 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′47″N 122°41′48″W |
||
25 | J. S. Bradley House | February 22, 1991 (#91000133) |
2111 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′43″N 122°41′53″W |
||
26 | Broadway Building | September 12, 1996 (#96001000) |
715 SW Morrison Street 45°31′10″N 122°40′47″W |
||
27 | Brown Apartments | October 17, 1991 (#91001553) |
807 SW 14th Avenue 45°31′13″N 122°41′13″W |
||
28 | Burnside Bridge | November 14, 2012 (#12000931) |
Spanning the Willamette River at river mile 12.7 45°31′23″N 122°40′03″W |
Opened in 1926 as a centerpiece of Portland's transportation system, the Burnside Bridge was embroiled in a public corruption scandal during its development. Part of a three-bridge package funded by a public bond issue, it was one of the final works in bridge engineer Gustav Lindenthal's impressive career.[lower-alpha 1] It is one of the country's heaviest bascule bridges, and the earliest to use a concrete deck on the lift span.[12] | |
29 | Buyers Building | January 28, 1994 (#93001567) |
317 SW Alder Street 45°31′09″N 122°40′31″W |
||
30 | Calumet Hotel | September 21, 1984 (#84003073) |
620–626 SW Park Avenue 45°31′11″N 122°40′49″W |
||
31 | Calvary Presbyterian Church | March 29, 1972 (#72001086) |
1422 SW 11th Avenue 45°30′55″N 122°41′08″W |
||
32 | Campbell Court Hotel | June 25, 2008 (#08000559) |
1115 SW 11th Avenue 45°31′03″N 122°41′06″W |
||
33 | David Campbell Memorial | September 24, 2010 (#10000802) |
1800 W Burnside Street 45°31′22″N 122°41′24″W |
||
34 | Cardwell–Parrish House | February 22, 1991 (#91000130) |
7543 S Fulton Park Boulevard[lower-alpha 2] 45°28′11″N 122°40′27″W |
||
35 | Judge Charles Henry and Mary Bidwell Carey House | November 2, 2022 (#100000832) |
1950 South Carey Ln. 45°26′56″N 122°39′33″W |
||
36 | Central Building, Public Library | January 11, 1979 (#79002129) |
801 SW 10th Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°41′00″W |
Architect A.E. Doyle's 1913 public library building was one of the first open plan libraries in the US. It has become the core of the Multnomah County Library system.[13][14] | |
37 | Francis R. Chown House | February 23, 1990 (#90000296) |
2030–2032 SW Main Street 45°31′12″N 122°41′41″W |
||
38 | Clyde Hotel | January 21, 1994 (#93001498) |
1000–1038 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′19″N 122°40′54″W |
||
39 | Frank J. and Maude Louise Cobbs Estate | July 25, 2002 (#02000826) |
2424 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′34″N 122°42′10″W |
||
40 | Commodore Hotel | June 27, 1984 (#84003076) |
1601–1617 SW Morrison Street 45°31′19″N 122°41′18″W |
||
41 | Concord Building | October 21, 1977 (#77001110) |
208 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′12″N 122°40′26″W |
||
42 | Corbett Brothers Auto Storage Garage | September 12, 1996 (#96000999) |
630 SW Pine Street 45°31′20″N 122°40′39″W |
||
43 | Corkish Apartments | December 2, 1981 (#81000514) |
2734–2740 SW 2nd Avenue 45°30′11″N 122°40′46″W |
||
44 | Cornelius Hotel | February 27, 1986 (#86000286) |
801–809 SW Alder Street 45°31′14″N 122°40′49″W |
||
45 | Costanzo Family House | August 20, 2007 (#07000842) |
811 SW Broadway Drive 45°30′16″N 122°41′09″W |
||
46 | Cotillion Hall | March 9, 1979 (#79002130) |
406 SW 14th Avenue 45°31′22″N 122°41′06″W |
Now known as the Crystal Ballroom | |
47 | Cumberland Apartments | October 17, 1990 (#90001509) |
1405 SW Park Avenue 45°30′54″N 122°41′02″W |
||
48 | The Dekum | October 10, 1980 (#80003363) |
505–519 SW 3rd Avenue 45°31′10″N 122°40′31″W |
||
49 | Digman–Zidell House | May 27, 1993 (#93000453) |
2959 SW Bennington Drive 45°31′14″N 122°42′43″W |
||
50 | Henry E. Dosch House | October 2, 1978 (#78002312) |
4825 SW Dosch Park Lane 45°29′15″N 122°42′25″W |
||
51 | Alice Druhot House | February 29, 1988 (#88000079) |
1903 SW Cable Avenue 45°30′52″N 122°41′42″W |
||
52 | Durham–Jacobs House | March 6, 1987 (#87000307) |
2138 SW Salmon Street 45°31′15″N 122°41′43″W |
||
53 | J. G. Edwards House | February 22, 1991 (#91000128) |
2645 SW Alta Vista Place 45°30′32″N 122°42′17″W |
||
54 | Electric Building | February 23, 1989 (#89000059) |
621 SW Alder Street 45°31′12″N 122°40′44″W |
||
55 | Elks Temple | February 17, 1978 (#78002313) |
614 SW 11th Avenue 45°31′14″N 122°40′57″W |
Building currently serves as the west wing of the Sentinel Hotel. | |
56 | Elm Street Apartments | February 20, 1991 (#91000056) |
1825–1837 SW Elm Street 45°30′36″N 122°41′51″W |
||
57 | Envoy Apartment Building | March 3, 1988 (#88000093) |
2336 SW Osage Street 45°31′23″N 122°42′00″W |
||
58 | Equitable Building | March 30, 1976 (#76001584) |
401–421 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′15″N 122°40′41″W |
||
59 | Failing Office Building | October 31, 2007 (#07001129) |
620 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°40′37″W |
||
60 | First Congregational Church | May 2, 1975 (#75001594) |
1126 SW Park Avenue 45°30′59″N 122°40′55″W |
||
61 | First National Bank | October 15, 1974 (#74001707) |
401–409 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′14″N 122°40′37″W |
||
62 | First Presbyterian Church of Portland | December 19, 1974 (#74002294) |
1200 SW Alder Street 45°31′16″N 122°41′03″W |
||
63 | First Unitarian Church of Portland | November 22, 1978 (#78002315) |
1011 SW 12th Avenue 45°31′07″N 122°41′08″W |
||
64 | Caroline W. and M. Louise Flanders House | March 1, 1991 (#91000127) |
2421 SW Arden Road 45°30′17″N 122°42′10″W |
||
65 | Flatiron Building | March 16, 1989 (#89000200) |
1223–1235 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′22″N 122°41′01″W |
||
66 | M. Lloyd Frank Estate | April 18, 1979 (#79002133) |
615 S Palatine Hill Road[lower-alpha 2] 45°27′01″N 122°40′12″W |
||
67 | Fried–Durkheimer House | November 8, 2019 (#100004606) |
2177 SW Broadway Drive 45°30′27″N 122°41′07″W |
||
68 | Fruit and Flower Mission | June 5, 1986 (#86001225) |
1609 SW 12th Avenue 45°30′52″N 122°41′16″W |
||
69 | J. O. Frye House | June 6, 1985 (#85001183) |
2997 SW Fairview Boulevard 45°31′17″N 122°42′44″W |
||
70 | Joseph Gaston House | February 21, 1989 (#89000052) |
1960 SW 16th Avenue 45°30′43″N 122°41′34″W |
||
71 | Gaston–Strong House | February 23, 1990 (#90000292) |
1130 SW King Avenue 45°31′12″N 122°41′43″W |
||
72 | Giesy–Failing House | February 22, 1991 (#91000137) |
1965 SW Montgomery Place 45°30′49″N 122°41′58″W |
||
73 | Gilbert Building | August 21, 1980 (#80003365) |
319 SW Taylor Street 45°31′02″N 122°40′35″W |
||
74 | J. K. Gill Company Building | February 23, 2021 (#100006186) |
408 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′14″N 122°40′35″W |
Eight-story building that housed the J. K. Gill Company and its downtown Portland store. | |
75 | Alan and Barbara Goldsmith House | April 5, 2007 (#07000261) |
4140 SW Greenleaf Court 45°30′10″N 122°43′00″W |
||
76 | Grand Stable Building and Adjacent Commercial Building | October 7, 1982 (#82001512) |
411–429 SW 2nd Avenue 45°31′11″N 122°40′26″W |
||
77 | Bertha M. and Marie A. Green House | October 15, 1992 (#92001379) |
2610 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′30″N 122°42′11″W |
||
78 | Frederick and Grace Greenwood House | June 19, 1991 (#91000814) |
248 SW Kingston Avenue 45°31′18″N 122°42′23″W |
||
79 | Halprin Open Space Sequence | March 6, 2013 (#13000058) |
Southwest open spaces and pedestrian malls between Lincoln and Clay Streets 45°30′39″N 122°40′44″W |
||
80 | Hamilton Building | March 17, 1977 (#77001112) |
523–529 SW 3rd Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°40′31″W |
||
81 | Hanthorn Apartments | August 25, 2014 (#14000846) |
1125 SW 12th Avenue 45°31′03″N 122°41′10″W |
||
82 | Dr. Homer H. Harris House | March 7, 2017 (#100000725) |
4116 SW Tualatin Avenue 45°29′39″N 122°42′01″W |
||
83 | Harrison Court Apartments | October 19, 2005 (#05001179) |
1834 SW 5th Avenue 45°30′39″N 122°40′53″W |
||
84 | Hawthorne Bridge | November 14, 2012 (#12000932) |
Spanning the Willamette River at river mile 13.1 45°30′48″N 122°40′15″W |
Part of the Willamette River Highway Bridges of Portland, Oregon MPS | |
85 | Ernest Haycox Estate | January 28, 1994 (#93001565) |
4700 SW Humphrey Boulevard 45°30′17″N 122°43′30″W |
||
86 | Heathman Hotel | August 25, 2014 (#14000879) |
723 SW Salmon Street 45°31′04″N 122°40′53″W |
Not to be confused with the current Heathman Hotel, which is also listed on the National Register, as the New Heathman Hotel. | |
87 | Albert, Oscar, and Linda Heintz House | October 17, 1990 (#90001508) |
2556 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′30″N 122°42′06″W |
||
88 | C. K. Henry Building | May 13, 1982 (#82003743) |
309 SW 4th Avenue 45°31′16″N 122°40′32″W |
||
89 | Levi Hexter House | February 12, 1980 (#80003367) |
2326 SW Park Place 45°31′16″N 122°41′56″W |
||
90 | Rufus C. Holman House | February 22, 1991 (#91000147) |
2116 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′44″N 122°41′58″W |
||
91 | Holt–Saylor–Liberto House | November 22, 1978 (#78002317) |
3625 SW Condor Avenue 45°29′49″N 122°40′45″W |
||
92 | David T. and Nan Wood Honeyman House | May 7, 1987 (#87000677) |
1728 SW Prospect Drive 45°31′02″N 122°41′52″W |
||
93 | John S. Honeyman House | October 31, 1985 (#85003436) |
1318 SW 12th Avenue 45°30′58″N 122°41′10″W |
||
94 | Hotel Alder | August 11, 2004 (#04000831) |
415 SW Alder Street 45°31′10″N 122°40′35″W |
||
95 | Hotel Alma | September 9, 2009 (#09000706) |
1201–1217 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′22″N 122°41′00″W |
||
96 | Hotel Ramapo[lower-alpha 3] | October 31, 1985 (#85003474) |
1337 SW Washington Street 45°31′21″N 122°41′06″W |
||
97 | Hyland, Olive and Ellsworth Apartments | February 1, 1980 (#80004548) |
1424–1434 SW Morrison Street 45°31′16″N 122°41′13″W |
Constructed in 1905 during Portland's period of rapid growth around the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition, this was one of the city's earliest modern apartment buildings. The property is closely associated with three generations of the Bronaugh family, who were prominent in Oregon law and politics.[15] | |
98 | Imperial Garage | May 27, 1993 (#93000451) |
200–218 SW 4th Avenue 45°31′17″N 122°40′28″W |
||
99 | Imperial Hotel | December 2, 1985 (#85003037) |
422–426 SW Broadway 45°31′15″N 122°40′42″W |
||
100 | Josef Jacobberger House | March 9, 1990 (#90000369) |
1502 SW Upper Hall Street 45°30′45″N 122°41′31″W |
||
101 | W. Leland James House | May 23, 2016 (#16000291) |
5303 SW Westwood View 45°29′05″N 122°41′25″W |
||
102 | Jeanne Manor Apartment Building | March 5, 1998 (#98000201) |
1431 SW Park Avenue 45°30′53″N 122°41′03″W |
||
103 | Jewish Shelter Home | June 14, 1984 (#84003083) |
4133 S Corbett Avenue[lower-alpha 2] 45°29′36″N 122°40′35″W |
||
104 | Dr. Noble Wiley Jones House | February 11, 1988 (#88000088) |
2187 SW Market Street Drive 45°31′07″N 122°41′49″W |
||
105 | Victor H. and Marta Jorgensen House | May 15, 2008 (#08000405) |
2643 SW Buena Vista Drive 45°30′32″N 122°42′15″W |
||
106 | Journal Building | September 12, 1996 (#96000995) |
806–818 SW Broadway 45°31′06″N 122°40′47″W |
||
107 | Jacob Kamm House | November 5, 1974 (#74001708) |
1425 SW 20th Avenue 45°31′04″N 122°41′42″W |
||
108 | John A. and Hattie Mae Keating House | February 28, 2020 (#100005019) |
2531 SW St. Helens Court 45°30′35″N 122°42′07″W |
||
109 | Grace Kern House | January 9, 2008 (#07001378) |
1740 SW West Point Court 45°30′59″N 122°41′49″W |
||
110 | Kiernan House | March 18, 2019 (#100003460) |
1020 SW Cheltenham Court 45°28′54″N 122°41′29″W |
Settlement-era Dwellings, Barns and Farm Groups of the Willamette Valley, Oregon MPS | |
111 | Samuel W. King House | September 8, 1987 (#87001471) |
1060 SW King Avenue 45°31′13″N 122°41′43″W |
||
112 | King's Hill Historic District | February 19, 1991 (#91000039) |
Roughly bounded by W Burnside Street, SW Canyon Road, SW 21st Avenue, and Washington Park 45°31′17″N 122°41′51″W |
||
113 | Edward D. Kingsley House | February 23, 1990 (#90000283) |
2132 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′43″N 122°41′59″W |
||
114 | Dr. Frank B. Kistner House | April 30, 1987 (#87000681) |
5400 SW Hewett Boulevard 45°30′07″N 122°43′58″W |
||
115 | Moses and Ida Kline House | August 11, 2004 (#04000830) |
2233 SW 18th Avenue 45°30′37″N 122°41′48″W |
||
116 | Kress Building | September 12, 1996 (#96000994) |
638 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′08″N 122°40′38″W |
||
117 | Ladd Carriage House | January 7, 2010[lower-alpha 4] (#09001211) |
1331 SW Broadway 45°30′54″N 122°40′56″W |
||
118 | Alexander and Cornelia Lewthwaite House | January 18, 2006 (#05001539) |
1715 SW Montgomery Drive 45°31′01″N 122°41′47″W |
||
119 | H. Liebes and Company Building | September 12, 1996 (#96000993) |
625 SW Broadway 45°31′11″N 122°40′47″W |
||
120 | Lipman–Wolfe and Company Building | September 8, 1988 (#88001531) |
521 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′12″N 122°40′38″W |
||
121 | A. G. Long House | September 9, 1993 (#93000917) |
1987 SW 16th Avenue 45°30′43″N 122°41′37″W |
This 1908 house is perhaps the finest example of residential Colonial Revival architecture from the years soon after the style was introduced to Portland. It is additionally notable for its unusual admixture of Craftsman elements to the overall Colonial form, especially on the interior.[17] | |
122 | Lumbermen's Building | September 12, 1996 (#96000992) |
333 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′16″N 122°40′36″W |
||
123 | Matthew J. and Florence Lynch House and Garden | September 15, 2002 (#02000674) |
337 SW Kingston Avenue 45°31′15″N 122°42′26″W |
||
124 | W. R. Mackenzie House | November 28, 1978 (#78002319) |
1131 SW King Avenue 45°31′12″N 122°41′45″W |
||
125 | William and Annie MacMaster House | October 30, 1989 (#89001862) |
1041 SW Vista Avenue 45°31′14″N 122°41′55″W |
||
126 | A. H. Maegly House | December 2, 1981 (#81000518) |
226 SW Kingston Avenue 45°31′20″N 122°42′23″W |
||
127 | Daniel J. Malarkey House | May 27, 1993 (#93000450) |
2141 SW Hillcrest Place 45°30′27″N 122°42′10″W |
This was the home of noted legislator and trial lawyer Dan Malarkey (1870–1939) from its construction in 1909 until his death. Associated with Progressive causes, Malarkey presided over the Oregon Senate during its 1913 session, when the legislature passed landmark bills establishing a minimum wage and regulating public utilities. In private legal practice, he played a key part in the ultimately successful battle against the 1922 Oregon School Law.[18] | |
128 | Herbert and Elizabeth Malarkey House | August 4, 2005 (#05000827) |
1717 SW Elm Street 45°30′34″N 122°41′46″W |
||
129 | Mallory Hotel | May 19, 2006 (#06000406) |
729 SW 15th Avenue 45°31′15″N 122°41′16″W |
||
130 | William F. Mangels Four-Row Carousel | August 26, 1987 (#87001383) |
4033 SW Canyon Road 45°30′38″N 122°43′05″W |
As of 2013, the carousel is no longer located at these coordinates or address. | |
131 | Markle–Pittock House | February 28, 1985 (#85000368) |
1816 SW Hawthorne Terrace 45°30′27″N 122°41′55″W |
||
132 | Morris Marks House | December 30, 1975 (#75001596) |
1501 SW Harrison Street 45°30′49″N 122°41′30″W |
||
133 | Marquam Manor | May 27, 1993 (#93000449) |
3211 SW 10th Avenue 45°29′58″N 122°41′26″W |
||
134 | Medical Arts Building | November 6, 1986 (#86002968) |
1020 SW Taylor Street 45°31′07″N 122°41′00″W |
||
135 | Meier & Frank Building | July 8, 1982 (#82003744) |
621 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°40′41″W |
||
136 | L. B. Menefee House | October 30, 1989 (#89001866) |
1634 SW Myrtle Street 45°30′37″N 122°41′41″W |
||
137 | Mohawk Building | September 12, 1996 (#96001002) |
708–724 SW 3rd Avenue 45°31′04″N 122°40′31″W |
||
138 | Morgan Building | September 12, 1996 (#96001003) |
720 SW Washington Street 45°31′14″N 122°40′46″W |
||
139 | Morrison Bridge | November 14, 2012 (#12000933) |
Spanning the Willamette River at river mile 12.8 45°31′04″N 122°40′11″W |
Part of the Willamette River Highway Bridges of Portland, Oregon MPS | |
140 | Multnomah County Courthouse | June 11, 1979 (#79002136) |
1021 SW 4th Avenue 45°30′59″N 122°40′42″W |
||
141 | Multnomah Hotel | February 28, 1985 (#85000369) |
319 SW Pine Street 45°31′19″N 122°40′27″W |
||
142 | Multnomah School | March 4, 2020 (#100005016) |
7688 SW Capitol Highway 45°28′06″N 122°42′36″W |
||
143 | Neighborhood House | July 10, 1979 (#79003737) |
3030 SW 2nd Avenue 45°30′04″N 122°40′46″W |
||
144 | Neighbors of Woodcraft Building | February 22, 1996 (#96000123) |
1410–1412 SW Morrison Street 45°31′15″N 122°41′12″W |
||
145 | New Fliedner Building | October 26, 2020 (#100005725) |
1017 SW Washington Street 45°31′18″N 122°40′54″W |
||
146 | New Heathman Hotel | February 16, 1984 (#84003087) |
712 SW Salmon Street 45°31′02″N 122°40′52″W |
||
147 | New Imperial Hotel | October 24, 2003 (#03001068) |
400 SW Broadway 45°31′16″N 122°40′42″W |
||
148 | Nicholas–Lang House | March 13, 1979 (#79002137) |
2030 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′44″N 122°41′50″W |
||
149 | Dr. A. S. Nichols House | March 5, 1992 (#92000090) |
1961 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′47″N 122°41′51″W |
||
150 | Dr. Herbert S. Nichols House | June 1, 1990 (#90000829) |
1925 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′48″N 122°41′51″W |
||
151 | Northwestern National Bank Building | September 12, 1996 (#96001001) |
621 SW Morrison Street 45°31′09″N 122°40′44″W |
||
152 | Odd Fellows Building | October 24, 1980 (#80003372) |
1001–1019 SW 10th Avenue 45°31′04″N 122°41′01″W |
||
153 | Olds, Wortman and King Department Store | February 20, 1991 (#91000057) |
921 SW Morrison Street 45°31′13″N 122°40′53″W |
||
154 | Pacific Building | March 5, 1992 (#92000091) |
520 SW Yamhill Street 45°31′05″N 122°40′43″W |
||
155 | Paramount Theatre | April 22, 1976 (#76001585) |
1037 SW Broadway 45°31′01″N 122°40′53″W |
||
156 | Peck Bros. and Bartle Tire Service Company Building | February 27, 2003 (#03000072) |
900 SW 13th Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°41′09″W |
||
157 | Louis Pfunder House | June 10, 2005 (#05000574) |
2211 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′40″N 122°41′54″W |
||
158 | Charles Piggott House | March 28, 1979 (#79002139) |
2591 SW Buckingham Avenue 45°30′23″N 122°41′14″W |
||
159 | Pioneer Courthouse | March 20, 1973 (#73001582) |
520 SW Morrison Street 45°31′07″N 122°40′42″W |
Built in 1875 and restored in the 1970s, this was one of the first monumental buildings in the Pacific Northwest. It has served as a U.S. courthouse, a customhouse, and a post office. It underwent another rehabilitation in the 2000s.[19] | |
160 | George Pipes House | February 22, 1991 (#91000131) |
2526 SW St. Helens Court 45°30′35″N 122°42′06″W |
||
161 | Martin Luther Pipes House | March 6, 1987 (#87000310) |
2675 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′23″N 122°42′15″W |
||
162 | Pittock Block | September 8, 1987 (#87001507) |
921 SW Washington Street 45°31′17″N 122°40′51″W |
||
163 | Portland (steam tug) | August 14, 1997 (#97000847) |
Berthed on the Willamette River at the foot of SW Pine Street 45°31′12″N 122°40′11″W |
||
164 | Portland Art Museum | December 31, 1974 (#74001710) |
1219 SW Park Avenue 45°30′58″N 122°41′01″W |
||
165 | Portland City Hall | November 21, 1974 (#74001711) |
1220 SW 5th Avenue 45°30′54″N 122°40′45″W |
||
166 | Portland Garden Club | October 7, 2005 (#05001151) |
1132 SW Vista Avenue 45°31′12″N 122°41′52″W |
||
167 | Portland Police Block | June 6, 1985 (#85001185) |
209 SW Oak Street 45°31′15″N 122°40′24″W |
Boundary decrease approved April 3, 2020. | |
168 | Portland Public Service Building | October 25, 2011 (#11000770) |
1120 SW 5th Avenue 45°30′56″N 122°40′43″W |
Commonly known as the Portland Building | |
169 | Portland Skidmore/Old Town Historic District | December 6, 1975 (#75001597) |
Roughly bounded by the Willamette River,[lower-alpha 5] NW Everett Street, NW/SW 3rd Avenue, and SW Oak Street 45°31′23″N 122°40′18″W |
One of the most impressive historic commercial districts on the West Coast, this is where Portland began and first flourished. The buildings, which date from the mid-to-late-19th century, were built in a variety of High Victorian architectural styles, and many feature cast iron fronts.[19] Also extends into Northwest Portland. | |
170 | Portland Yamhill Historic District | July 30, 1976 (#76001587) |
Roughly bounded by SW Taylor and Morrison Streets, SW 2nd Avenue, and the Willamette River 45°31′01″N 122°40′26″W |
||
171 | Portland Zoo Railway Historic District | March 4, 2020 (#100005018) |
4001 SW Canyon Road 45°30′40″N 122°42′37″W |
||
172 | Postal Building | March 14, 1978 (#78002321) |
502–513 SW 3rd Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°40′28″W |
||
173 | Ira F. Powers Building | December 2, 1985 (#85003082) |
804–810 SW 3rd Avenue 45°31′02″N 122°40′32″W |
||
174 | O. L. Price House | August 11, 1988 (#88001242) |
2681 SW Buena Vista Drive 45°30′34″N 122°42′16″W |
||
175 | Public Service Building and Garage | September 12, 1996 (#96000998) |
920 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′02″N 122°40′44″W |
||
176 | Railway Exchange Building and Huber's Restaurant | March 13, 1979 (#79002132) |
320 SW Harvey Milk Street 45°31′13″N 122°40′30″W |
||
177 | Rosamond Coursen and Walter R. Reed House | February 23, 1990 (#90000288) |
2036–2038 SW Main Street 45°31′12″N 122°41′41″W |
||
178 | Samuel G. Reed House | October 17, 1990 (#90001516) |
2615 SW Vista Avenue 45°30′31″N 122°42′12″W |
||
179 | Roosevelt Hotel | March 5, 1998 (#98000211) |
1005 SW Park Avenue 45°31′04″N 122°40′57″W |
||
180 | Dr. J. J. Rosenberg House | June 1, 1990 (#90000828) |
1792 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′56″N 122°41′50″W |
||
181 | Dr. James Rosenfeld House | February 23, 1989 (#89000060) |
2125 SW 21st Avenue 45°30′43″N 122°41′57″W |
||
182 | St. James Lutheran Church | May 21, 1975 (#75001598) |
1315 SW Park Avenue 45°30′56″N 122°41′01″W |
||
183 | Charles J. and Elsa Schnabel House | September 8, 1987 (#87001496) |
2375 SW Park Place 45°31′17″N 122°41′59″W |
||
184 | Maurice Seitz House | October 17, 1990 (#90001515) |
1495 SW Clifton Street 45°30′39″N 122°41′33″W |
||
185 | Selling Building | October 17, 1991 (#91001554) |
610 SW Alder Street 45°31′10″N 122°40′43″W |
||
186 | Seward Hotel | February 28, 1985 (#85000370) |
611–619 SW 10th Avenue 45°31′14″N 122°40′56″W |
Building currently serves as the east wing of the Sentinel Hotel. | |
187 | Sherlock Building | October 20, 1977 (#77001111) |
320 SW Oak Street 45°31′15″N 122°40′28″W |
||
188 | Alfred H. and Mary E. Smith House | September 6, 2007 (#07000926) |
1806 SW High Street 45°30′25″N 122°41′56″W |
||
189 | Milton W. Smith House | January 11, 1980 (#80004547) |
3434 S Kelly Avenue[lower-alpha 2] 45°29′53″N 122°40′28″W |
||
190 | Walter V. Smith House | February 19, 1993 (#93000020) |
1943 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′49″N 122°41′55″W |
||
191 | South Park Blocks | March 23, 2022 (#100007518) |
1003 SW Park Ave. 45°31′04″N 122°40′56″W |
||
192 | South Portland Historic District | July 31, 1998 (#98000951) |
Roughly Bounded by SW Arthur Street, S Naito Parkway, S Grover Street, S Hood Avenue, S Curry Street, and SW Barbur Boulevard[lower-alpha 2] 45°29′58″N 122°40′44″W |
||
193 | Sovereign Hotel | December 2, 1981 (#81000520) |
710–716 SW Madison Street 45°30′57″N 122°40′54″W |
||
194 | Spalding Building | October 7, 1982 (#82001513) |
311–319 SW Washington Street 45°31′11″N 122°40′30″W |
||
195 | Arthur Champlin and Margaret Fenton Spencer House | August 5, 1999 (#99000942) |
1812 SW Myrtle Street 45°30′38″N 122°41′48″W |
||
196 | Stevens Building | March 5, 1998 (#98000213) |
812 SW Washington Street 45°31′15″N 122°40′49″W |
||
197 | Stratton–Cornelius House | March 8, 1978 (#78002322) |
2182 SW Yamhill Street 45°31′20″N 122°41′47″W |
||
198 | Alice Henderson Strong House | October 17, 1990 (#90001520) |
2241 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′43″N 122°42′04″W |
||
199 | Swetland Building | April 24, 2007 (#07000367) |
500 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′12″N 122°40′36″W |
||
200 | Peter Taylor House and Gotlieb Haehlen House | August 1, 1984 (#84003091) |
2806–2818 SW 1st Avenue 45°30′10″N 122°40′42″W |
||
201 | Telegram Building | January 28, 1994 (#93001560) |
1101–1117 SW Washington Street 45°31′19″N 122°40′57″W |
||
202 | Terminal Sales Building | October 17, 1991 (#91001555) |
1220 SW Morrison Street 45°31′14″N 122°41′05″W |
||
203 | Terwilliger Parkway | March 1, 2021 (#100006188) |
3000 SW Terwilliger Blvd. 45°30′09″N 122°41′00″W |
||
204 | Abraham Tichner House | August 23, 2000 (#00001022) |
114 SW Kingston Avenue 45°31′24″N 122°42′23″W |
||
205 | The Town Club | March 6, 1987 (#87000328) |
2115 SW Salmon Street 45°31′16″N 122°41′41″W |
||
206 | U.S. Courthouse | April 30, 1979 (#79002142) |
620 SW Main Street 45°30′58″N 122°40′51″W |
||
207 | United States National Bank Building | October 9, 1986 (#86002842) |
321–331 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′17″N 122°40′40″W |
||
208 | University Club | July 26, 1979 (#79002144) |
1225 SW 6th Avenue 45°30′55″N 122°40′52″W |
||
209 | Villa St. Clara Apartments | May 5, 2000 (#00000449) |
909 SW 12th Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°41′07″W |
||
210 | Visitors Information Center | September 24, 2010 (#10000801) |
1020 SW Naito Parkway 45°30′54″N 122°40′24″W |
In this, his only major non-residential commission, master architect John Yeon combined the principles of the International style with strong influences of the Northwest Regional style, which he pioneered. Northwest Regional elements include the naturally-inspired color scheme, the use of plywood walls and louvered ventilation panels, and concern for the site's unique views.[21] | |
211 | Vista Avenue Viaduct | April 26, 1984 (#84003093) |
1200 SW Vista Avenue 45°31′09″N 122°41′52″W |
||
212 | Waldo Block | April 29, 1982 (#82003746) |
431–433 SW 2nd Avenue 45°31′10″N 122°40′26″W |
||
213 | Washington Park Reservoirs Historic District | January 15, 2004 (#03001447) |
2403–2404 SW Jefferson Street 45°31′11″N 122°42′10″W |
||
214 | Aubrey R. Watzek House | November 1, 1974 (#74001715) |
1061 SW Skyline Boulevard 45°30′54″N 122°43′41″W |
1937 John Yeon house combined International Style with regional tastes to create Northwest Regional style | |
215 | Wells Fargo Building | October 9, 1986 (#86002839) |
309–319 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′18″N 122°40′39″W |
||
216 | William Bittle Wells House | June 16, 1989 (#89000519) |
1515 SW Clifton Street 45°30′40″N 122°41′36″W |
||
217 | Wheeldon Annex | March 4, 2020 (#100005015) |
929–935 SW Salmon Street 45°31′05″N 122°40′58″W |
||
218 | Wheeldon Apartment Building | October 25, 1990 (#90001591) |
910 SW Park Avenue 45°31′05″N 122°40′52″W |
||
219 | Cora Bryant Wheeler House | February 23, 1990 (#90000295) |
1841 SW Montgomery Drive 45°30′53″N 122°41′53″W |
Architect A. E. Doyle designed this 1923 Arts and Crafts house, with its complex lines and massing, to take full advantage of its prominent and demanding ridgetop location. The Wheeler House became an important later addition to the portfolio that made Doyle one of Portland's leading architects. Junior partner Pietro Belluschi and apprentice Richard Sundeleaf provided on-site construction supervision.[22] | |
220 | James E. Wheeler House | October 17, 1990 (#90001518) |
2417 SW 16th Avenue 45°30′31″N 122°41′44″W |
||
221 | Catherine White House | March 10, 1983 (#83002176) |
1924 SW 14th Avenue 45°30′43″N 122°41′27″W |
||
222 | Whitney and Gray Building and Jake's Famous Crawfish Restaurant | August 11, 1983 (#83002177) |
401–409 SW 12th Avenue 45°31′21″N 122°41′01″W |
||
223 | Wilcox Building | February 23, 1989 (#89000058) |
506 SW 6th Avenue 45°31′13″N 122°40′39″W |
||
224 | Woodlark Building | August 8, 2014 (#14000482) |
813–817 SW Alder Street 45°31′14″N 122°40′50″W |
||
225 | H. C. Wortman House | August 11, 1988 (#88001245) |
1111 SW Vista Avenue 45°31′13″N 122°41′55″W |
||
226 | Yeon Building | January 21, 1994 (#93001497) |
520–530 SW 5th Avenue 45°31′10″N 122°40′36″W |
||
227 | John Eben Young House | August 25, 1988 (#88001312) |
916 SW King Avenue 45°31′18″N 122°41′43″W |
||
228 | Walter S. Zimmerman House | February 28, 1991 (#91000141) |
1840 SW Hawthorne Terrace 45°30′28″N 122°41′57″W |
Architect Wade Hampton Pipes (1877–1961) was the most prominent advocate of the English Arts and Crafts movement in Oregon during his active career (beginning 1911). This 1931 house, designed for logging and railway businessman Walter Zimmerman, represents a transitional step in the evolution of Pipes's work, moving from traditional stucco walls to brick and adding other modern details.[23] | |
229 | Zion Lutheran Church | March 8, 1996 (#96000169) |
1015 SW 18th Avenue 45°31′11″N 122°41′31″W |
Master architect Pietro Belluschi employed a number of innovations in this 1950 church, a pioneering example of the application of modern architectural principles to a religious building. Using local materials, influences, and artists and craftsmen, it represents the Northwest Regional style of modern architecture, which Belluschi helped develop.[24] |
[5] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Canterbury Castle | September 8, 1987[25] (#87001509) | October 13, 2010[26] | 2910 SW Canterbury Lane (former)[25] |
This 1931 house was designed by J.O. Frye to resemble Canterbury Castle in England on the exterior, and to evoke the Art Deco styling of Hollywood of the 1920s on the interior. It was demolished in 2009 after failing to meet municipal safety codes.[27] | |
2 | Espey Boarding House | September 19, 1979 (#79002131) | April 14, 1989 | 2601-2605 SW Water Ave. |
Demolished in November 1988. | |
3 | Edward Knox Haseltine House | November 15, 1984[28][29] (#84000481) | December 28, 1994 | 1616 SW Spring Street (former)[28] |
Demolished on July 5, 1994. | |
4 | Edward C. Hochapfel House | August 11, 1983 (#83002171) | May 20, 2003[30] | 1520 SW 11th Ave. |
Demolished on November 1, 2000. | |
5 | Jefferson Substation | May 31, 1980 (#80003368) | April 5, 2021 | 37 SW Jefferson Street 45°30′50″N 122°40′31″W |
||
6 | Knights of Columbus Building | June 1, 1990[28][29] (#90000830) | March 18, 1998 | 804 SW Taylor Street (former)[28] |
Demolished in 1997. |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.