River District

Founded in 1998 and home to the Pearl District and Old Town/Chinatown, the River District TIF District has experienced phenomenal growth since its inception and remains a key center for a high-density, mixed-use urban development.

  • Created

    June 1998

  • District Status

    Closed

By the Numbers

  • Total Acres

    314.8

  • Created

    1998

  • Background

    The River District Urban Renewal Area Plan focused on the creation of a high density urban residential neighborhood with a mix of multi-family housing, major office facilities, regional attractions, retail businesses, parks and open space that balances new development with existing structures.

    Objectives

    • Generate new private investment and improve the tax base on vacant and underutilized land by developing a diverse and affordable inventory of new housing units, new commercial opportunities and open space
    • Foster a “24-hour,” self-sufficient city environment for residents, visitors, and workers
    • Promote linkages with adjacent neighborhoods and the Willamette River

     

    Public investment was focused on job creation and neighborhood district vitality. Expansion of the River District boundaries in 2009 included portions of Old Town/Chinatown to help meet community goals and objectives for the area.

    Twenty years ago, what we know as the Pearl District was a derelict, underused railroad yard and warehousing area. Today, it’s an internationally recognized success story. Our work in the River District included public investment in an array of neighborhood parks, new roads and parking facilities, affordable and market-rate housing and innovative projects that maintained the vibrancy of Portland’s downtown core. Much of the District’s 350 acres has been transformed into a high density urban neighborhood with a lively mix of residents and businesses, major office spaces, regional attractions, retail, parks and open spaces.

    That transformation has also included redevelopment of the historic Meier & Frank department store in the retail core south of Burnside and supporting the important connection between the River District and downtown Portland.

    Prosper Portland’s role was to put in place the appropriate infrastructure that would allow private development to go forward. Private sources have provided 90 percent of the funding for River District development. Since the inception of the district in FY 1999-2000, its assessed value grew by $1.7 billion.

    Key outstanding initiatives of the River District include:

Documents

Explore Projects Citywide

  • OHSU Knight Cancer Research Building

    Located on Portland’s South Waterfront, this seven-story, 320K SF building includes a conference center, research laboratory space, research support functions, ground level retail and offices

  • OHSU Center for Health and Healing South

    Two buildings that mark an important milestone for OHSU's expansion in the South Waterfront.

Explore Grants

  • Local Small Business Expanded Repair/Restore Grants

    Provides funding to small businesses that have sustained physical and economic damage due to break-ins and vandalism

  • Affordable Commercial Tenanting Grant

    Provides funding to property owners and small business owners who are in the process of negotiating a lease. Grant funds may be used for tenant improvements, space-related soft costs, and permitting support to ready space to open for business.

Explore Districts

  • Sumner–Parkrose–Argay–Columbia Corridor

    A diverse, historic district established for equitable growth in connecting communities, industry, and nature.

  • 82nd Avenue Area

    Focus on community-led development to help stabilize existing residents, businesses, and support inclusive long-term growth and wealth-building.