PDX Remember-When: Life Before the Eastbank Esplanade

{ PDX }

May 12, 2008

It’s a vague memory. Picking through underbrush and worrying myself over broken bottles and heaps of concrete at night, in my late-teen early-photography-phase quests to get night shots of the skyline. The east side of the Willamette River before the Eastbank Esplanade. A messy and nearly-inaccessible river bank full of tangled, malevolent vines and homeless encampments.

In May, 2001, the city officially opened the Eastbank Esplanade, the 1.5-mile segment of path and floating walkway connecting the Steel Bridge to the Hawthorne, completing a 2.8-mile (or so) loop around the waterfront (the other half being, as you may know, Tom McCall Waterfront Park on the west bank).

Where I used to work is three blocks from the promenade, and the current office is of a likewise distance. I use the path perhaps twice a week, more in the summer, for wanderings and flailing. Enough such that I can barely remember what it was like before, as those memories have all been scrubbed away and layered over with more recent, attractive ones.

Do you remember what the east bank was like before the Esplanade? Do you have any interesting memories of the construction?

Also, there was originally going to be a Phase III of the development plan: developing the path from the Hawthorne down to OMSI. That area is still fairly bedraggled. Did this phase get dropped or is it still on the horizon?

One Comment

  1. Aaron B. Hockley says:

    I don’t have a link handy, but I saw something last week about a developer that’s building on the east bank near OMSI, and developing a waterfront walkway was part of the deal.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Scipio the Computer has deemed that these might be similar in content!

Recent Comments

Book Review: “Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World” by Jack Weatherford

Newest comments regarding this post:

  • Mikeymike said I remember hearing about that closed off homeland place and it blew my mind. That sounds like something that someone would think of doing, but nobody would... (More)

My Ongoing Narrow-Rule Obsession

Newest comments regarding this post:

  • Carol Barber said For those of you hunting unruled composition books. I found a website that sells them in packs of six or by the single book and a decent price.... (More)

Today’s the day (stab stab stab)

Newest comments regarding this post:

  • Brett said What, no photos? :) (More)

Photos: Your Vote! Best photo of my goddaughter

Newest comments regarding this post:

  • Margaret Joss said I’m the very fond, very far away “Greek” (Portlander) great-Godmother (Aileen’s “Nona” (godmother)) Lovely and fun... (More)
  • Kathleen Doyle-White said I would print all three… and put the colored one in the middle. You can get three framed frames… when I did this for my grandkids... (More)

Book Review: “King, Queen, Knave” by Vladimir Nabokov

Newest comments regarding this post:

  • Mikhail Emelianov said I don’t think Martha thinks Dreyer is an idiot – that’s precisely her problem in the novel, that is, she doesn’t really know... (More)
Wonderful games with Caslon