Peninsula Park & Rose Garden
700 N Rosa Parks Way
Portland's oldest public rose garden (1913); sunken garden with 8,900+ roses and a 1913 bandstand.
PIEDMONT · PORTLAND
0 spots to discover in this neighborhood 5,200 residents · 0.58 sq mi
“Portland's evergreen suburb, city's first rose garden”
NEIGHBORHOOD IDENTITY
“Portland's evergreen suburb, city's first rose garden”
“Portland's evergreen suburb, city's first rose garden”
— Piedmont, Portland
About
Piedmont was platted in 1889 by Edward Quackenbush and promoted in early marketing materials as "The Emerald, Portland's Evergreen Suburb, Devoted Exclusively to Dwellings, A Place of Homes." The name evokes the Piedmont region of Italy, reflecting the aspirational character of late 19th-century subdivision naming. By 1909, over 140 dwellings had been erected, occupied primarily by upper-middle class professionals who owned their own homes. Quackenbush's deed restrictions explicitly prohibited businesses within the plat, a condition that shaped the neighborhood's residential character for more than a century.
The construction of Peninsula Park in 1909–1913 transformed the neighborhood's civic identity. Designed by landscape architect Emanuel Mische and featuring Portland's first public rose garden and first community center, the park anchored Piedmont as a destination of civic pride. World War II brought significant demographic change when workers relocated to the area to be near Kaiser Shipbuilding Corporation on Swan Island, and the postwar decades saw the neighborhood transition from upper-middle to working-class households.
Today Piedmont remains predominantly residential, with most commercial activity occurring along the boundaries of N Interstate Ave, N Killingsworth St, and N Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Peninsula Park's sunken rose garden — with over 8,900 rose plants representing 65 varieties — continues to draw visitors from across the region. The neighborhood is served by the Yellow MAX line on Interstate Ave and has seen steady reinvestment in historic housing stock over the past two decades.
Boundaries: Bounded by N Killingsworth St to the north, N Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd to the east, N Ainsworth St to the south, and N Interstate Ave to the west. Adjacent to Woodlawn (northeast), King (east), Humboldt (southeast), Boise (south), and Overlook (west).
Landmarks
700 N Rosa Parks Way
Portland's oldest public rose garden (1913); sunken garden with 8,900+ roses and a 1913 bandstand.
700 N Rosa Parks Way
Portland's first community center building (1913); hosts meetings, classes, and events.
N Borthwick Ave & N Jessup St area
Concentration of intact 1910s–1920s Craftsman bungalows and early Portland residential architecture.
N Denver Ave corridor
Greenway trail connecting Peninsula Park to the Columbia River along a former rail corridor.
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