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Director Park

Director Park
Director Park - towards Paramount 20100228 - Portland Oregon.jpg
The park in February 2010; Fox Tower is on left
Director Park is located in Portland, Oregon
Director Park
Type Urban park
Location Portland, Oregon
Coordinates 45°31′07″N 122°40′53″W / 45.518624°N 122.681389°W / 45.518624; -122.681389Coordinates: 45°31′07″N 122°40′53″W / 45.518624°N 122.681389°W / 45.518624; -122.681389
Area 0.46 acres (0.19 ha)
Created 2009
Operated by Portland Parks & Recreation
Open 5 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily
Parking 700-space underground parking garage

Director Park (officially Simon and Helen Director Park) is a city park in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon. Opened in 2009 at a cost of $9.5 million, it covers a 700-space underground parking garage, which connects underground to the Fox Tower and the Park Avenue West Tower. Located in downtown on Southwest Park Avenue, the nearly half-acre urban park lacks any natural areas and contains little vegetation.

Features at the park include a fountain, artworks, a cafe, and a distinctive glass canopy. Director Park was designed by Laurie Olin of the design firm OLIN, and the Portland-based architectural firm ZGF Architects. The park is part of what had originally been planned as a corridor of consecutive public parks stretching across downtown Portland. This plan included what are today the South Park Blocks and the North Park Blocks. Proposals to connect the two sets of park blocks arose in the 1970s, and in 1998 businessman Tom Moyer made a proposal for what became Director Park. Planning began in the mid-2000s, and construction began in 2008.

Daniel H. Lownsdale reserved the Park Blocks for public use in his 1848 platting of Portland, but didn't actually donate land to the city. As historian E. Kimbark MacColl stated, "By no stretch of the imagination could he be cited as a 'philanthropist.' He was greedy like most of his partners.... The record is clear: Daniel Lownsdale was a visionary but shifty character whose land speculation helped to spawn more litigation in Portland than in any other western city of comparable size."Chet Orloff wrote an editorial in 2001 stating "six crucial blocks were lost to greed, government reluctance, poor estate planning and an adverse court decision."

The park land was previously used for surface parking, and contained an early "food cart institution", the Snow White House crêperie.


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