Multnomah
Village is a Portland neighborhood with a small town feeling. The
village has maintained an atmosphere of good service with imaginative
establishments. Over 100 different businesses and community
services, you will find antique stores, galleries, gift and specialty
shops, distinctive restaurants and much more. There is something
for every mood, every preference, every individual. Visit
the Multnomah
Village Business Association Web site for a list of merchants.
Centered on three blocks of SW Capitol Highway, the village
is 15 minutes southwest of downtown.
Ask a booklovers for their favorite bookstore in
the Portland area and many will tell you
Annie Bloom's.
Annie Bloom's Books first opened its doors in Multnomah Village
in 1978. A neighborhood independent bookstore, they carry a broad
range of titles across many genres. Along with a strong fiction
section, Annie's excel in children's, travel, current events, and
cooking. Annie Bloom's selections include magazines, CDs, and cards.
Another favorite spot is the
Lucky Labrador
Public House. Once home to the Freemasons' Orenomah Chapter
No. 141, the setting makes a perfect place for a pub within the
community of Multnomah Village.
Multnomah Days, an annual neighborhood street fair,
takes place every year in the summer. In the morning, an endearingly
corny procession features marching bands, classic cars, clowns,
and the hugely popular Tail’s End Pooch Parade, a pack of pet dogs
dressed as cowboys, ballerinas, firefighters, and what have you.
The above photo is a group marching in the parade.
Attractions are the convenient access to the
Multnomah Arts Center (learn to paint, draw, dance, sing, play
an instrument, etc.) and the
Southwest Community Center (swimming, exercise classes, etc.)
located in the 90 acre
Gabriel Park.
A good source of information about the neighborhoods
is the
Multnomah Village Post, the local weekly newspaper.
History
The
neighborhood began as a land claim of Thomas and Polly-Anne Tice,
and through the 1800's the area remained a densely wooded area,
unnamed and home to only a few residents. H.L. Gilbert consolidated
the majority of the current village into the Wildwood Subdivision.
At this point, the site was bounded by the same physical streets,
their names were: Fulton Boulevard, Farewell Street and Gordon Avenue.
The neighborhood continued to grow and was eventually annexed to
Portland over an 8-year period beginning in 1954.
The area was a stop on the Oregon Electric Railway
as it traveled from Portland south to Salem in the early 1900s.
It was the policy of the officials to apply native names, when ever
possible, to the stations as they were established. So in 1908 when
the stop was established, they gave it the name of Multnomah.
Multnomah Village was, for a long time, home to
the world's first
wiki, WikiWikiWeb, which was physically located in an office
in the village. The Web site has since relocated. WikiWikiWeb
(also known as WardsWiki) was the first wiki application ever written.
It was developed in 1994 by
Ward Cunningham in order to make the exchange of ideas between
programmers easier and was based on the ideas developed in HyperCard
stacks that he built in the late 1980s.
For more detailed information on the history of
Multnomah Village, see the
Multnomah
Historical Association Web site.
Origin of the Name of Multnomah
According to Oregon Geographic
Names, Multnomah is an Indian (Chinookan tribe) name and the
word was first used by by Lewis and Clark in their journals with
the style 'Mulknomah,' referring to the stream now known as the
Willamette. The community of Multnomah took its name from Multnomah
County.
Multnomah Home Styles
What interesting about the community
is the variety of home styles. The predominate style is contemporary
as most of the homes were built after WWII. In the 90s, developers
started building townhomes around the village area and that trend
has continued. Condos have been built within the last few
years.
1Multnomah
Home Prices
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Number of homes sold in Multnomah in 2010:
68. Distressed properties sales were 7%.
-
Median price for homes sold in Multnomah:
$279,900 in 2010; $276,300 in 2009; $300,000 in 2008; $326,000
in 2007.
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1-year median sales price change in 2010 from
2009 in Multnomah: -2%.
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5-year median sales price change in Multnomah:
-1%.
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Metro area median home prices: $239,900
in 2010; $247,000 in 2009; $278,000 in 2008; $290,000 in 2007.
-
Metro area average home prices: $282,100
in 2010; $289,900 in 2009; $330,300 in 2008; $342,000 in 2007.
Please be aware that the above figures are subject
to error and are intended as guidelines only. To view
homes currently for sale in the Multnomah neighborhood, click
here.
Parks and Community Centers in the Multnomah
Neighborhood
The 90-acre
Gabriel Park has a wide assortment of facilities for all kinds
of activities. This includes a play ground, tennis courts,
off-lease dog area, trails, and large fields for soccer and baseball/software.
In a corner of the park is the
Southwest Community Center. It includes a basketball
court, fitness room, gymnasium, kitchen, meeting room, party room,
indoor swimming pool, and weight room.
The
Sprout
Academy is an educational preschool with a 'green' focus offered
by Portland Parks & Recreation's Southwest Community Center, located
in the Southwest Community Center. "Sprout" students acquire the
foundations of learning, including math, science, language development,
art, music, and social skills. All the while, children experience
nature and learn about ecosystems, sustainable living, and caring
for the environment through developmentally appropriate activities
in and out of the classroom.
The Portland Parks and Recreation Department also
has an
Arts Center in the village area. The
Multnomah
Arts Center facility includes classrooms, weaving rooms with
over 60 looms, a darkroom, printmaking studio with presses, dance
studio, music rooms, a ceramics studio with pottery wheels, slab
roller, and kilns, and an applied arts studio with sculpture and
jewelry making equipment. Rentable areas include an auditorium and
stage, gymnasium, dance studio, classrooms, kitchen, and kitchenette.
Outdoor grounds include a covered basketball court, playground,
courtyard, and parking.
Multnomah has 101 acres of park land and
open spaces according to Metro and the Portland Department of Parks
and Recreation.
Walking in Multnomah
The
SW
Trails Group is a committee of Southwest neighborhoods that
uses volunteer efforts to make trail improvements, lead walks, work
with Safe
Routes to School, plan and advocate for pedestrian and bicycle
safety and other improvements in Southwest Portland. Their walks
are the second Saturday of each month.
Gabriel Park has some great trails for either a run or a walk.
Some of the trails go through a wooded section of the park and others
through open areas.
Walk Score ranks 2,508 neighborhoods
in the largest 40 U.S. cities to help you find a walkable place
to live. Below is a Walk Score for an address in the center of the
neighborhood. Living close to the village center will get you a
score in the 70s (very walkable).
More About Multnomah
-
Neighborhood
Association Web site The neighborhood has one page
on the SW Neighborhoods
Web site. The SW Capitol Road neighborhood is on
Facebook.
-
Neighborhood
News A good source of information about the neighborhoods
is the
Multnomah Village Post, the local weekly newspaper.
-
Location
About four miles south on I-5 and where the freeway jogs to
the southwest − Multnomah is just
to the west.
-
2Drive
Time to Downtown 15 minutes.
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Topography
Moderate rolling hills and wooded.
-
Streets and
Sidewalks Winding streets along with some grid patterns.
Some of the blocks have sidewalks.
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Livability
Study 94.1% of the Multnomah residents rated their
neighborhood "good" or "very good." See
Livability Study.
-
Public Transportation
TriMet
has about ten bus routes. The neighborhood does not have access
to MAX light rail or the streetcar line.
Transit
Score provides a 0-100 rating indicating how well an address
is served by public transportation. Ratings range from "Rider's
Paradises" to areas with limited or no nearby public transportation.
-
3Demographics
Population: 6,625. Area size: 924 acres. Average
population density: 7 persons per acre. Number of households:
3,196. Median household income: $55,933. Percent of home
owners: 47. Percent of renters: 53. Diversity: 16.6% non-Caucasian:
28%.
-
4Crime
Stats 2009: 10 violent crimes. Total crimes
per 1,000 residents was 23. For the latest crime statistics
for the Multnomah neighborhood, click
here.
-
Sex Offenders
Click
here
for the State of Oregon Sex Offender Inquiry System. After
agreeing to the "Conditions of Use Statement" you will be redirected
to a "Enter Search Criteria" page. Insert a zip code in
the "Zip" field and click on the "Query" button. Multnomah zip
code: 97219.
-
5Shopping
and Services Number of supermarkets: 1. Number
of health clubs: 2. Number of coffee shops: 4.
The Village Center − main
street and side streets - is like living in a small town. The
village has numerous small shops and eating places. If
you're a reader, visit
Annie Bloom's
Books - comfy armchairs, a house cat, and a complimentary
cup of tea make you feel at home. You can also head over
the next neighborhood, Hillsdale, to purchase anything you need
but can't find in the village.
-
Eating Out
Any local will point in the direction of Marco's Cafe and Espresso
Bar. Another favorite is the Lucky Labrador Public House and
O'Connors Pub. The Fat City Cafe's walls are adorned with
interesting pieces of history.
-
Public Library The closest
library is a short drive to the east - the
Hillsdale Library.
-
Who Lives
in Multnomah People who enjoy a sense of community
with a range of housing (single family, townhomes, a few apartments).
The median age in Multnomah is 37.
-
Cars in the
Neighborhood Small cars - Subarus are common.
-
6Biking
Quality is low. Multnomah has 12 miles of bike lanes.
-
Schools
Elementary schools:
Rieke
Elementary and
Maplewood Elementary. Middle school:
Gray
Middle. High school:
Wilson High School.
-
7School
Report Card Grades Elementary schools: O/S. Middle
schools: O. High school: O. Click
here for report card details.
Map of Multnomah Neighborhood
View Larger Map
Fly to the Multnomah Neighborhood via Google
Earth
___________________________________
1Real Estate Values
Data on real estate values provided by RMLStm.
Distressed properties refer to the percentage of total homes
sold that were short sales and bank-owned properties.
2Drive Time to
Downtown Estimated commuting time obtained from Yahoo
Maps and Google Maps. Drive time was calculated from a central
intersection in each neighborhood to Pioneer Courthouse Square during
the morning peak commute time.
3Demographics Data
Numbers
were obtained from Census 2000 and
www.portlandmaps.com.
4Crime
Statistics Numbers on crime represent total crimes for
2010 and were obtained from Portland Police Bureau. Violent
crimes are defined as murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault.
Crimes per 1,000 are based on reported incidents of violent crime,
as well as burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft.
5Shopping and Services
Numbers were determined from local directory listings
and county/municipal library systems.
6Biking Quality
rating based on the 2007 Cycle Zone Analysis conducted by the City
of Portland Office of Transportation. The six-tier ratings have
been reduced to three levels: High, Fair, and Low.
7School Report Card Grades
Schools ratings from the Oregon Department of Education 2009-2010
performance assessment. "O" = Outstanding; "S" = Satisfactory;
"I" = In Need of Improvement; NR = Not Rated.