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Neighborhood associations serve as the liaison between residents and the city government, as coordinated by the city's Office of Community & Civic Life,<ref>[https://www.portlandoregon.gov/civic/77242 Office of Civic & Community Life], City of Portland. Accessed 2018-08-26.</ref> which was created in 1974 and known as the Office of Neighborhood Involvement until July 2018.<ref>[https://efiles.portlandoregon.gov/Record/12094968/?_ga=2.220362968.151555658.1535337685-188938758.1350986247 City council ordinance 189078], passed on July 18, 2018. Auditor's Office, City of Portland.</ref> The city subsequently provides funding to this "network of neighborhoods" through district coalitions, which are groupings of neighborhood associations. A few areas of Portland are "unclaimed" by any of the 95 neighborhood associations in Portland.
Neighborhood associations serve as the liaison between residents and the city government, as coordinated by the city's Office of Community & Civic Life,<ref>[https://www.portlandoregon.gov/civic/77242 Office of Civic & Community Life], City of Portland. Accessed 2018-08-26.</ref> which was created in 1974 and known as the Office of Neighborhood Involvement until July 2018.<ref>[https://efiles.portlandoregon.gov/Record/12094968/?_ga=2.220362968.151555658.1535337685-188938758.1350986247 City council ordinance 189078], passed on July 18, 2018. Auditor's Office, City of Portland.</ref> The city subsequently provides funding to this "network of neighborhoods" through district coalitions, which are groupings of neighborhood associations. A few areas of Portland are "unclaimed" by any of the 95 neighborhood associations in Portland.

==Sections==

===Southwest===

{{see also|National Register of Historic Places listings in Southwest Portland, Oregon}}


==Neighborhoods==
==Neighborhoods==

Revision as of 23:54, 30 April 2020

Map of Portland, Oregon's five sections, prior to the creation of South Portland in 2020.

Portland, Oregon is divided into six sections, as of May 1, 2020: North Portland, Northeast Portland, Northwest Portland, South Portland, Southeast Portland, and Southwest Portland. There are 95 officially recognized neighborhoods, each of which is represented by a volunteer-based neighborhood association. No neighborhood associations overlap the Willamette River, but a few overlap the addressing sextants. For example, most addresses in the South Portland Neighborhood Association are South, but a portion of the neighborhood is west of SW View Point Terrace where addresses have a SW prefix. Similarly the Buckman Neighborhood Association spans both NE and SE Portland.

Neighborhood associations serve as the liaison between residents and the city government, as coordinated by the city's Office of Community & Civic Life,[1] which was created in 1974 and known as the Office of Neighborhood Involvement until July 2018.[2] The city subsequently provides funding to this "network of neighborhoods" through district coalitions, which are groupings of neighborhood associations. A few areas of Portland are "unclaimed" by any of the 95 neighborhood associations in Portland.

Neighborhoods

Each neighborhood association defines its own boundaries, which may include areas outside of Portland city limits and (if mutually agreed) areas that overlap with other neighborhoods. Neighborhoods may span boundaries between the five sections (N, NE, SE, SW, and NW) of the city as well. The segmentation adopted here is based on Office of Community & Civic Life's district coalition model, under which each neighborhood is part of at most one coalition (though some neighborhoods are not included in any).

Other areas and communities

  • Alberta Arts District, an art, retail, and restaurant area in the King, Vernon, and Concordia neighborhoods
  • Albina, a historical city which was consolidated into Portland in 1891
  • The Belmont Area, a retail and residential area in the Buckman, Sunnyside, and Mt. Tabor neighborhoods
  • Dunthorpe, an affluent unincorporated enclave just beyond the city limits, north of Lake Oswego
  • Unincorporated areas near Portland proper in Washington County (unincorporated neighborhoods expanding into Washington County)
  • East Portland, a historical city which was consolidated into Portland in 1891, not to be confused with the area of the same name that extends roughly east of I-205 to Portland's eastern boundary
  • East Portland, the area of Portland generally east of I-205, where approximately one quarter of residents reside, but which has historically not received adequate city services.[3][4]
  • The Hawthorne District, a retail, restaurant, and cultural district running through the Buckman, Hosford-Abernethy, Sunnyside, Richmond, and Mt. Tabor neighborhoods
  • Maywood Park, a Northeast neighborhood incorporated as a separate city that is now completely surrounded by the city of Portland
  • Peacock Lane, a quaint English village in the heart of Sunnyside Neighborhood has been treating the city of Portland to free holiday lighting displays each December since the 1940s
  • Vanport, a city located in present-day North Portland destroyed by a flood in 1948

References

  1. ^ Office of Civic & Community Life, City of Portland. Accessed 2018-08-26.
  2. ^ City council ordinance 189078, passed on July 18, 2018. Auditor's Office, City of Portland.
  3. ^ Templeton, Amelia. "Audit Finds East Portland Lags Behind In Sidewalks, Parks". www.opb.org. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  4. ^ "The Other Portland". Willamette Week. Retrieved 2018-07-27.