Arlington
Heights, one of Portland's most scenic neighborhoods, is near city center,
giving residents easy access to the spectacular Portland International Rose
Test Gardens and all of Washington Park (Hoyt Arboretum, Japanese Garden,
Oregon Zoo). Just a 5-minute drive from downtown, Arlington Heights
is a veritable museum of architectural styles. Ranging from Victorian
cottage to the latest contemporary dwellings, these homes are graced by
lovely gardens and spectacular views. This is an old neighborhood
with 60 percent of the homes built before 1939.
Arlington Heights is a small area (103 acres) with about
700 residents. Many of the streets offer a convenient access to the
ten miles of trails in the 183 acre Hoyt Arboretum. Walk to the Japanese
Gardens as well as to the Oregon Zoo. Arlington Heights residents
can walk to work (all downhill) and take the bus home. Some even ride
their bike to work. If you're up for it, you can hike down to one
of the many restaurants on Northwest 21st and 23rd Avenue and enjoy an evening
meal. You just have to remember the uphill walk home.
History of Arlington Heights: A Neighborhood in the Park
Arlington Heights is situated on the Tualatin mountain
range. It was once part of a conifer forest, mainly composed of Western
hemlock. The presence of broad-leafed deciduous trees, not to mention roads
and houses, is evidence that the area has been disturbed within the last
hundred years. The landscape is hilly, dissected, and fairly steep, yet
not quite steep enough to be regarded as a mountain.
What was true of the hill on which Portland Heights is
now located, as described by pioneer John Talbot's daughter in a 1914
The Oregonian interview, almost certainly was true of Arlington Heights
just to the north. When Portland became a city in 1851, the hill was "forest
land, with cougar and panther waiting to drop down out of the dark firs."
By 1890, due to the "great wind of 1880 and the labors of Chinese logging
gangs," it was no longer a forest. Arlington Heights was logged of its conifers
in the late 1890s and into the early 1900s.
Jane Hofmann, a resident of Arlington Heights for many
years, wrote the history of the neighborhood in the late 70s. Click
here
to download the document.
Origin of the Name Arlington Heights
The derivation of the name Arlington Heights is not known
for certain but we can speculate. Arlington had previously been applied
to an 1889 plat of a tract that's now the site of the Westgate Office Complex
at Sylvan. In 1905, that Arlington Heights was renamed Concord Heights.
The Arlington Club's present building in Goose Hollow was completed in 1910.
In 1910, Dorr Keasey and his wife, Evalyn, purchased a large tract of land
in present day Arlington Heights and they may have wished to avail themselves
of the prestige that Arlington conveyed. A third possibility is that Keasey
wanted to honor his wife's Virginia family roots where a community by the
name of Arlington is located just across the Potomac River from Washington
DC .
The community was originally called Melina Heights.
In about 1888 the King Real Estate Association platted an area from SW Tichner
Drive to the tennis courts by the Rose Garden and from SW Wright Avenue
to SW Champlain Drive. They named it Melinda Heights as Amos King's
wife was named Melina. Amos was the founder of the King Real Estate Association.
Reservoirs 3 and 4 are in a Historic District
Washington Park's two reservoirs and its gatehouse were built in the late
1800s as major facilities of the water system that first provided Portland
drinking water from the Bull Run Watershed. The structures were
designated as a historic district in 2004. Mount Tabor Park also has
reservoirs to supply the eastside neighborhoods with water and Reservoirs
1, 5 and 6 are in a separate historic district. The Washington Park 95 acre
historic district has five buildings, four structures, and the two reservoirs
which are known as Reservoir 3 and 4. The style of the structures
is Romanesque.
Approaching the neighborhood by foot or from a motor vehicle
from the east (SW Park Place), Reservoir 3 can be seen from the road or paths. The
reservoir makes a striking impression as seen in the photo. There
are stairs leading down to the reservoir and walkers are allowed to hike
around the reservoir which is about a quarter-mile in length. A wrought
iron fence was installed in 2008 which adds to the beauty of the
reservoir.
All of the Portland reservoirs are open. After 9-11,
the federal government wanted all open water sources to be covered or buried.
Portland city officials went along with the proposal but the citizens of
Portland mobilized and fought the idea − they
wanted to keep the reservoirs open. Today the reservoirs still remain
open and undergo a constant, 24/7 surveillance by armed guards. But the
struggle goes on as the city and federal government are convinced that
open reservoirs are unsafe.
You will find Cottage, English, Tudors, and a few ranch
homes that were built in the 50s and 60s. Stilt homes have been built
on steep hills in the last 20-30 years. The neighborhood has a number
of homes on the National Register of Historic Places. This is the list as
of 2009:
A.H. Maegly House at 226 SW Kingston Street. This
is a Prairie style home.
Abraham Tichner House at 114 SW Kingston Avenue. The
architectural style of this home is Classical Revival.
2910 SW Canterbury Lane: Canterbury Castle (also known
as the Arlington Castle) J.O. Frye was the architect of this home as
well as the J.O. Frye House. The Castle was demolished in 2009 due
to structural damages.
2959 SW Bennington Drive: Digman-Zidell House. The
architectural style of this home is Mission/Spanish Revival.
2997 SW Fairview Boulevard: J.O. Frye House (also
known as the Fariss House as well as the “Spider House” because of the
leaded windows resembling a spider web).
337 SW Kingston Avenue: Matthew and Florence Lynch
House and Garden. The architectural style is Colonial Revival.
From 1911-1919, only nineteen houses were built in the
neighborhood. During the post-war boom years, 1920-1929, one hundred houses
were built. The Depression caused a big drop in construction: only twenty-three
houses were built from 1930-1939. Even today, new homes are being
constructed on hillsides that in years past would have been too steep to
build on but modern technology allows for construction.
1Arlington Heights 2008 Home Prices
Number of homes sold in Arlington Heights in 2008:
11.
Average price for homes sold in Arlington Heights
in 2008: $688,000.
Median price for homes sold in Arlington Heights in
2008: $694,900.
Average sales price change in 2008 from 2007 in
Arlington Heights:
-15%.
5-year average sales price growth in Arlington
Heights:
16%.
2008 metro area average home price: $330,300
(-3.7% sales price change from 2007).
2008 metro area median home price: $278,000 (-4% sales
price change from 2007).
Please be aware that the above figures are subject to
error and are intended as guidelines only. To view Arlington
Heights homes currently for sale click
here.
Parks and Gardens in the Neighborhood
Located just minutes west of downtown,
Washington Park
(130 acres)
is one of the most used parks in Portland. The city purchased the
original 40.78 acres in 1871 from Amos N. King for $32,624. Many people questioned the purchase given that the
population of Portland at the time was only 8,000 and the site was thick
with brush and timber, and cougars roamed the hills. The site was
inaccessible until years later when logging and the installation of a
cable car made the park accessible. Early in the 1900s, sentiment began
to change and Portland's forefathers were heralded for their long-range
vision.
A bronze statue of Sacajawea holding her son Jean-Baptiste
is located near the east entrance to the park. In commemoration of the
heroic Shoshone Indian woman who helped lead the Lewis and Clark
explorers through the mountains of the west, the statue was unveiled on
July 7, 1905 at the Lewis and Clark Centennial. Among those present at
the event were Susan B. Anthony, Abigail Scott Duniway, and Eva Emery
Dye. Hidden among the trees, the Coming of the White Man statue
was completed in
1904. The bronze statue, sculpted by Hermon A. MacNeil and cast by
Bureau Brothers Foundry in Los Angeles, features two Native Americans
standing on a block of rough-hewn native stone. Facing eastward, they
look down upon the route that ox teams trudged bringing settlers to this
part of the country.
Entering the park's east entrance via SW Park Place/SW
Lewis Clark Way are these two
attractions:
Reservoirs There are stairs leading down to Reservoir3 and
walkers are allowed to hike around the reservoir which is about a
quarter-mile in length. The reservoirs are a historic
district.
Holocaust Memorial The memorial is the park newest
attraction and it was dedicated on August 29, 2004. The memorial
features a stone bench adorned with wrought-iron gating, screened
from the street by rhododendron bushes. The bench sits behind a
circular, cobblestoned area simulating a town square.
These are the attractions all within the area of the
International Rose Garden:
International Rose Garden With over 8,000 rose plantings,
the garden attracts about 750,000 visitors annually. Many come
to the Rose Garden to marry and to have their wedding pictures
taken. The Rose Garden offers a magnificent view point overlooking
the city and Cascade Range.
Rose Garden
Store Portland's very own rose-themed specialty shop. In
order to qualify to be in the shop, each piece of merchandise must
"look like a rose, smell like a rose, taste like a rose, have a rose
on it, hold a rose in it, or be for or about growing roses."
Children Playground The popular, accessible play area
(sand boxes, swings, jungle jims, etc.) was built in 1995 by the
Portland Rotary Club. It is located just around the corner from the
International Rose Garden and on the original site of the Oregon
Zoo.
Train to the Zoo The Washington Park Run goes through the forests
of Washington Park to a station above the International Rose Test
Garden and back to the zoo. In the early 50s, hundreds of volunteers built five miles of track and kids bought zoo-railway
shares for a dollar each and copies of the book, Clickety Clack and the
Bandits. Watch a
video of the train ride.
Japanese Garden
At the heart of a Japanese garden is harmony with nature. These
peaceful spots in the Garden lend themselves to meditation and
contemplation. The 5.5 acre Japanese Garden is composed of five
distinct garden styles. View a video of the garden by clicking
here.
These are found all within a few blocks of each other
and located at the far west side of Washington Park:
Oregon Zoo
The Zoo celebrated its 100th birthday in 1987.
Packy
put Portland on the map in 1962 when he made international news for
being the first elephant born in the Western Hemisphere in over 44
years.
Portland Children
Museum The mission of Portland Children's Museum is to
inspire imagination, creativity and the wonder of learning in
children and adults by inviting moments of shared discovery. The
Museum is now the sixth oldest children’s museum in the country, and
each year the Museum welcomes more than 245,000 children from birth
to age ten and their caregivers.
Forestry Discovery
Center Founded in 1964, the World Forestry Center's
mission is to educate and inform people about the world's forests
and trees, and their importance to all life, in order to promote a
balanced and sustainable future.
Vietnam Memorial
The curved black granite wall lists the names of all Oregon
residents who died in Vietnam or who are missing in action. The wall
also chronicles three years of the conflict and concurrent local
events, providing a poignant contrast.
Hoyt Arboretum lies
on the west side of the Arlington Heights neighborhood. The 232
acre wooded site possesses the largest group of distinct species of any
arboretum in the U.S. Its plant collection contains 10,000 individual
trees and shrubs, representing nearly 1,000 different species from
around the world. The arboretum is a favorite place for hikers and
runners with its 10 miles of trails. The Wildwood Trail is part of the
40-Mile Loop and
passes through Hoyt Arboretum. The Wildwood leads into Forest Park
on the north side and into the Council Crest Trail by the Oregon Zoo.
Go to
Forest Park Conservancy for Forest Park trail information.
The park also includes an archery range, soccer field,
amphitheatre, tennis courts, picnic sites, and restrooms. During the summer months,
TriMet, the
regional public transportation organization, operates a shuttle bus that
circles through the park. Click
here
to view a map of the park.
Zoo Bombers
On children's bikes that have been customized
− banana seats,
swooping handle bars, mini-wheels − "Zoo Bombers" whoosh
down SW Fairview Boulevard from the zoo and into the Arlington Heights neighborhood.
After passing through the neighborhood, they enter the Goose Hollow neighborhood
where they catch a ride on the MAX Light Rail line back to the zoo and repeat
their performance. It's downhill all the way from the zoo to the Goose
Hollow MAX stop - a drop of about 500 feet or so in a two mile run.
The bombers' make their appearance every Sunday evening
and continue their rides well into the night. Arlington Heights residents
are divided about the disturbance along with the entertainment that the bombers create but all are in
agreement that the noise (whooping and hollowing) the bombers make are upsetting.
Especially those that live on SW Fairview Boulevard.
Hoyt Arboretum
with 10 miles of walking trails is in the middle of the neighborhood
and most residents can be on the trails within 1-3 blocks of their homes.
Walkers also
find many exciting opportunities to get off the concrete and blacktop
and pursue walking on more natural and yielding surfaces, such as sand,
grass, gravel, snow, and mud. The Wildwood Trail in Hoyt Arboretum (also
in Forest Park)
boasts some of the finest mud around for a few months of the year before
turning to hard-packed dirt, making for some amazing and ever-changing
walking terrain. Click here
for a trail map. Other neighborhood walks include:
Reservoir 3 is nestles in the quiet, scenic hills of Washington
Park. Enjoy a quarter-mile walk around this tranquil resource.
Come early April, you will want to catch the first Magnolias in
bloom. Click
here
to download the guide.
Laura Foster's Portland Hill Walks book is
available from
Timber Press here in Portland. The book has a walk through
the streets of Arlington Heights.
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 Arlington Heights neighborhood.
Rose Garden Summer Concerts
During August the Portland Parks Department presents a
series of concerts in the amphitheatre at the International Rose Garden.
Many of the Arlington Heights residents pack up a picnic dinner and head
for the concert. The program runs the gamut from Brazilian, jazz,
cowboy, and classical. You'll see kids dancing (many with their
older sibling or parents) in front of the performers under the warm
August Portland skies. Below is a video of one of the
performances, the Portland Festival Orchestra.
Location of Neighborhood West
of downtown - it takes about 5-6 minutes to cross I-405 and
be downtown. A five minute drive to be in the Northwest shopping
area.
2Drive
Time to Downtown 8-9 minutes.
Topography Moderate to steep
hills and winding streets. Mature trees and woods.
Street and Sidewalks All
the side streets are narrow and many cars park partially on
the sidewalks. Most of the streets have sidewalks although
the walks are narrow on the side streets.
Livability Study 96.4% of
Arlington Heights residents rated their neighborhood "good"
or "very good." See
Livability Study.
Public Transportation
Bus route 63 connects downtown with Washington Park and
Arlington Heights. No MAX light rail or streetcar lines
in Arlington Heights. Residents living on the west side of the
neighborhood can walk over to the MAX light rail stop at the
Oregon Zoo and catch a ride to work. You have to walk
as Metro (regional government in charge of the Zoo and MAX)
does not allow commuters to park in the Zoo lots.
3Demographics
Population: 691. Area in acres: 103. Average
population density: 6 persons per acre (includes vacant spaces).
Number of households: 278. Diversity: 7.3% non-Caucasian.
Crime
Stats 2008: no violent crimes, 12
residential burglaries, and 1 auto thefts. Total
crimes per 1,000 residents was 45. For the latest crime statistics for the
Arlington Heights 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. Arlington Heights zip code: 97205.
4Shopping
and Services The only retail establishments are the
Rose Garden gift shop, Hoyt Arboretum gift shop, and the Japanese
Garden gift shop. If residents want to shop, it means
getting into your car and driving a few minutes to the Northwest
District or downtown. Or you can do what 78-year-old Arlington
Heights resident Annie does. She walks down to Trader Joe's
or Fred Meyer, does her shopping and takes the number 63 bus
back home.
Eating Out Its means getting
into the family car and driving a few minutes to the Northwest
District or downtown. If you're a walker, you can make
it down to the Northwest District (10-12 restaurants) in 15-20
minutes but it will take much longer to walk back as an elevation
gain of 300 - 500 feet.
Public Library You have
to go downtown to the
Multnomah
County Central Library or to the Northwest District branch
located at 2300 NW Thurman Street. Both are a 8-9 minute
drive.
Who Lives in Arlington Heights
Married couples in their 30s and upward, couples with teen-age
children, about 20 percent of the households have children under
18.
Cars in the Neighborhood
View homes will have an luxury sedan such as a Audi, BMW, Mercedes,
or Volvo. The second car is an SUV. Pickups are rare
except for the local Chevy dealer as he has his choice for the
"Vehicle of the Day" and one occasion he will take a pickup
off the lot and drives it home. I counted 6-7 Toyota hybrids
driving through the neighborhood one day.
School Report Card Grades
Elementary school: A. Middle school: A. High school:
A. Click
here for report card details.
___________________________________
1Real
Estate Values Data on real estate values provided by Graphical
Data, Homequest, and RMLS™.
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.
4Shopping
and Services Numbers were determined from local directory
listings and county/municipal library systems. 5Real
Estate Values Data on real estate values provided by Graphical
Data, Homequest, and RMLS™.
To learn more about the
Arlington Heights neighborhood
visit Portland Maps.
It will provide you with a list of businesses, demographic data,
crime stats, parks, schools, aerial photos, maps,
elevation, etc.
All you need is a property address − use
"611 SW Kingston Avenue"
Learn More
About
the
Arlington Heights Neighborhood
Aaron H. Maegly House
This Prairie School style home was designed
by architect John V. Bennes. It is located at 226 SW Kingston Street
in the Arlington Heights neighborhood.
Susan Marthens
Principal Real Estate Broker, CRS, GRI
(503) 497-2984
Fax (503) 220-1131