Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Lombard Automobile Buildings, located in northwest Portland, ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
North Lombard Transit Center is a light rail station on the MAX Yellow Line in Portland, Oregon. It is the 7th stop northbound on the Interstate MAX extension. The station is located in the median of Interstate Avenue near the intersection with N Lombard Street. It has staggered side platforms, which sit on either side of the cross street ...
Line 44 runs between Portland Community College's Sylvania campus and Pier Park, with stops on Lombard between the park and N Richmond Avenue. Line 75 runs between Milwaukie and St. Johns, with stops on Lombard from Pier Park to N Williams Avenue. It also provides a MAX connection at the North Lombard Transit Center. [3]
Lake Oswego Transit Center: Lake Oswego: 4th St. and A Ave. 1984 North Lombard Transit Center: Portland: N Interstate and Lombard 2004 Oregon City Transit Center: Oregon City: 1035 Main St. 1991 [4] Parkrose/Sumner Transit Center: Portland: 9481 NE Sandy Blvd. 2001 Rose Quarter Transit Center (originally called Coliseum TC) Portland: 47 NE ...
Arbor Lodge is a neighborhood in the North section of Portland, Oregon. Interstate 5 forms the eastern boundary of the neighborhood. The south boundary is formed by Ainsworth Street, the west boundary is formed by a combination of Willamette Boulevard and Chataqua Boulevard, and the north boundary is formed by Lombard Street.
The St. Johns Signal Tower Gas Station, located in the St. Johns neighborhood of north Portland, Oregon, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2] It was built and opened in 1939 as a gas station for the Signal Oil Company .
Much of the U. S. city of Portland, Oregon is built to a grid plan oriented north/south and east/west. However, the streets in the central downtown area are aligned to magnetic north—presumably at the time the area was platted—and so is oriented about 19.25° eastward. [1]
The center of downtown was called Fareless Square (later the "Free Rail Zone") and included the area from the Library and Galleria stations to the Old Town/Chinatown Station. This was later expanded across the Steel Bridge into the Lloyd District as far as the Lloyd Center/NE 11th Ave station, and the Interstate/Rose Quarter station.