Fire Station No. 2 recently |
It’s increasingly common these days for people to wonder whether
Portland will ever return to “normal” as we remembered it before the pandemic
and the surge of homeless camp that dot
many major streets. Trash abounds and
many stores downtown and in neighborhood commercial centers are vacant.
Regrettably, the short answer the question above is “no.” A couple notable examples in the past week:
1) Prosper Portland, the city government’s development agency, quickly demolished the historic clinker-brick former fire station erected in 1913 near the west end of the Steel Bridge, without bothering to provide advance public notice.
Yes, one could find the demolition permit issued June 7 if one had the inclination and savvy to scrounge on the Internet. But the agency’s PR staff never bothered to mention it. Understandably so, since the agency no doubt wanted to avoid public hand-wringing in advance.
Fire Station No. 2 now (Scott Allen Tice photo) |
Ironically, the station sat across Glisan Street from the historic Yamaguchi Hotel/Blanchet House building, which Prosper Portland could have bought for $1 and perhaps saved…but didn’t. We have written recently about the likelihood of its demolition in coming months.
All done? |
2) What has appeared for many months to be the long, slow death of the Lloyd Center shopping mall in Northeast Portland accelerated last week, when a significant fire evidently destroyed an electrical station somewhere in the basement, forcing closure of the entire mall.
A week later, the mall remained closed. Five days after the fire, a representative of the Dallas, Texas, owners said the damage was being "assessed" and that the mall would reopen. However, no prospective date was offered. The owners contended earlier this year that they planned to reconstitute the mall as a shopping destination.
However, vacancies have grown, and the fire-related shut-down, for however long it lasts, will not help. Some of the remaining retail tenants were reassessing whether to stay at Lloyd Center even before the fire.
Meanwhile, one potential option for the center’s big footprint has disappeared. There was talk that the space might become a major league baseball park if Portland could attract the Oakland A’s franchise. While the fate of the A’s in Oakland remains undetermined, Portland is no longer mentioned as a potential site. The best gamble for a new home, so to speak, is Las Vegas.
The center covers 18 square blocks in Northeast Portland. The site conceivably could become available for high-rise offices, condos or apartments if the mall were to be demolished. In any event, it is difficult to see the mall returning to its few decades of glory after it opened in 1960.
Cities are evolving, changing organisms. Those of us who want to protect the best of the past often are viewed as enemies of progress. But here is another question: Will the “new” Portland be better than the old one?
-----Fred Leeson
You can join Building on History's mailing list by writing "add me" to fredleeson@hotmail.com
I think the mall could be repurposed to be a mix of housing, food courts, and offices. It has massive amounts of parking and is centrally located.
ReplyDeleteAgree. It could be housing for seniors..full ADA accessibility. Plus shops, medical offices, meeting rooms. Public would be welcome at the shops and eateries.
ReplyDeleteWasn't there a major fire inside that fire station a few years ago? Not saying it couldn't have been saved but what was the condition of that building?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.kgw.com/mobile/article/news/local/flames-gut-historic-fire-station-in-old-town-portland/283-463616410
Actually, there were two fires there in 2017. One in September and another on Thanksgiving night. Started by squatters.
DeleteThe former main post office warehouse was right across the street next to the tall building, I watched them film the Hunted with Tommy Lee Jones from our dock.
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