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Portland is a Sanctuary City

Parklane Park Grand Reopening Event On June 12 - Free for Everyone

News Article
Food, face painting, basketball, arts activities, music, and more at Portland's largest developed park east of I-205!
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(Portland, OR) –  

Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) has completed the long-awaited expansion of outer Southeast Portland’s Parklane Park. Following a five-and-a-half-year design and construction process, the park is now open and has been transformed from five acres to an impressive 25 acres of recreational space in District 1. It is now Portland’s largest developed park east of I-205.   

The new playground at 25-acre Parklane Park on a recent sunny day.
The new playground at 25-acre Parklane Park on a recent sunny day.

Join the Parklane Park Reopening Celebration 

Thursday, June 12, 3pm to 6pm, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 3:30pm.

The ceremony will include Portland Parks & Recreation Director Adena Long, District 1 Councilors Loretta Smith and Jamie Dunphy, and other community partners.

Enjoy family-friendly activities in the new park after the final bell on the last day of school for Parklane Elementary and Oliver Middle School students just next door.  

The splash pad at Parklane Park, perfect for cooling off on a hot day; open now.
The splash pad at Parklane Park, perfect for cooling off on a hot day; open now.

Activities include a Native American blessing of the land, the Centennial High School drumline, a Ballet Papalotl performance, Street Soccer USA and Eastside Timbers skills area, Trail Blazers Youth Basketball, Dream Big City skate activities, food, drinks, dessert, arts and crafts activities, and face painting. 

For more information on Parklane Park and the grand reopening event, please visit the project page at portland.gov/parks/construction/parklane-park-project

Portland Trail Blazers and Nike conclude basketball court revitalization at Parklane Park, other parks

The Portland Basketball Courts Revitalization Project is a Portland Parks & Recreation public/private partnership with the Portland Trail Blazers and Nike, with its final year being 2024 (construction finished at Parklane Park in 2025).

 The endeavor refreshed and improved numerous courts throughout the Portland area. The project supported various PP&R programs in Portland including the bureau’s Goldenball Youth Basketball League, which celebrated its 85th season in 2022.

The Portland Basketball Courts Revitalization Project was funded by $750,000 from Nike and $300,000 from the Portland Trail Blazers. It continued Nike’s 2002 commitment to the Portland Parks Foundation to resurface outdoor basketball courts. 

This public/private partnership was originally conceived by the late Parks Commissioner Nick Fish.

A huge investment in East Portland

The new Parklane Park features a new playground, splash pad, basketball and tennis courts, soccer fields, pavilion for community events, covered picnic areas, community garden, skate park, dog off-leash area, paved walking paths, additional restrooms, parking, public art, and hundreds of new trees.

“The expanded Parklane Park is a community centerpiece,” says PP&R Director Adena Long. “It helps address the significant lack of parks, open spaces, and recreation in the Centennial neighborhood. With so many new amenities on 25 acres, this is a major investment in East Portland, an exciting project that will benefit Portland for generations.”

Parklane Park serves 2,824 nearby residential units. Of those, 828 did not have ready access to any parks or natural areas prior to this project. The park’s immediate neighbors to the east are Oliver Middle School and Parklane Elementary School in the Centennial School District, with a combined enrollment of nearly 900 students ranging from kindergarten students to 8th graders.

System Development Charge (SDCs), not tax dollars, funded the park project. SDCs are one-time fees from new developments that support Portland's growing infrastructure.

The park was designed by local landscape architecture firm, Walker Macy, and constructed by Stacy Witbeck. A Local Improvement District (LID) funded by the park project and managed by the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) created street and sidewalk improvements that improves access to and around the new park.

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