Visual displays often occur in the Timbers Army stands
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Former names | Multnomah Field (1893–1926) Multnomah Stadium (1926–1965) Civic Stadium (1966–2000) PGE Park (2001–2010) Jeld-Wen Field (2011–2014) |
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Address | 1844 SW Morrison |
Location | Portland, Oregon |
Coordinates | 45°31′17″N 122°41′30″W / 45.52139°N 122.69167°WCoordinates: 45°31′17″N 122°41′30″W / 45.52139°N 122.69167°W |
Public transit |
Providence Park (MAX station) SW 18th & Morrison |
Owner | City of Portland |
Operator | Peregrine Sports, LLC |
Capacity | Operational: 21,144 Expandable: 22,000 |
Field size | 110x75 yards |
Surface | FieldTurf Revolution |
Construction | |
Broke ground | May 6, 1926 |
Opened | October 9, 1926 |
Renovated | 1956, 1982, 2001, 2011 |
Construction cost | US$502,000 ($6.79 million in 2016 dollars) US$36 million (2010 Renovation) ($38.3 million in 2016 dollars) |
Architect |
A. E. Doyle Morris H. Whitehouse & Associates |
General contractor | Hansen-Hammond Company |
Tenants | |
Portland Timbers (MLS) (2011–present) |
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Website | |
http://providenceparkpdx.com/ |
Portland Timbers (MLS) (2011–present)
Portland Thorns FC (NWSL) (2013–present)
Portland Timbers 2 (USL) (2017–present)
Portland Timbers U23s (PDL) (2009–present)
Portland State Vikings football (NCAA) (1947–1999, 2001–2009, 2011–present)
Oregon Ducks football (NCAA) (partial schedule, 1894–1966)
Oregon State Beavers football (NCAA) (partial schedule, 1909–1966)
Portland Beavers (PCL)
(1956–1972, 1978–1993, 2001–2010)
Portland Mavericks (NWL) (1973–1977)
Portland Storm/Thunder (WFL) (1973–1975)
Portland Timbers (NASL) (1975–1982)
Portland Breakers (USFL) (1985)
Portland Timbers (WSA/APSL) (1985–1990)
Portland Rockies (NWL) (1995–2000)
Portland Timbers (A-League/USL-1/USSF D2) (2001–2010)