The Chinatown in Portland, Oregon comprises the streets between Burnside Avenue and Union Station along the Willamette River. The entrance is marked by a pair of lions at the corner of 4th and Burnside. Portland skyline. ... The Willamette River (pronounced wil-LAM-met) is a tributary of the Columbia, approximately 240 mi (386 km) long, in northwestern Oregon in the United States. ...
When compared to the more well-known Chinatowns of Oakland and San Francisco in California and Vancouver, British Columbia, Portland's Chinatown is smaller and less active. It has more than two dozen Chinese-owned businesses, including restaurants such as a nostalgic 1940s-era chop suey restaurant, gift and import shops, club houses, an herbal medicine store and an Asian food market. Oaklands Chinatown in California is frequently referred to as Oakland Chinatown in order to distinguish it from nearby San Franciscos Chinatown. ... An interesection of Chinatown in San Francisco. ... The Chinatown of Vancouver, British Columbia is the second largest Chinatown in North America. ... This article is about the food dish known as chop suey. ...
The neighborhood is also home to the Portland Classical Chinese Garden. Portland Classical Chinese Garden is a Suzhou-style walled garden enclosing a full city block in the Chinatown neighborhood of Portland, Oregon. ...
The area has long been home to many elderly and mentally disabled residents living in turn of the century hotels and boarding houses. As urbanization of the area continues, the question of where these residents will go remains unanswered as does how to relocate the civic and private social service organizations located there.
Portland's blocks are 200 feet squarean exceedingly small dimension and shape for a city in the western United States, if not all of North America.
Several local plant growers and collectors contributed rare and exotic plants." In one case, a resident of a neighborhood in another part of the city allowed a mature treea 100-year-old holly leaf osmanthusto be transplanted from her front lawn.
Suzhou and Portland became sister cities in the late 1980s, and the garden is the result of collective efforts and contributions by organizations and citizens in both communities.
Chinatown is home to several family and regional associations and general service organizations for old-timer immigrants (called in Cantonese lo wal cue) as well as ones founded by and for the new immigrants from Southeast Asia.
From 1960s-1980s, Boston's Chinatown was located near the Combat Zone, which served as Boston's red light district, but sandwiched between the dual expansions of Chinatown from the East and Emerson College from the West, the Combat Zone has shrunk to almost nothing.
Currently, Boston's Chinatown is experiencing a threat from gentrification policies as large luxury residential towers are built in and surrounding an area that was overwhelmingly three, four, and five-story small apartment buildings intermixed with retail and light-industrial spaces.