NYC STREETS RENAISSANCE

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Portland: Celebrating America’s Most Livable City (30 minutes)

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Last Fall, many members of the Portland Office of Transportation and city administration were gracious enough to talk with me and show off some of the amazing features that make Portland, Oregon one of America’s most livable places to reside.

You’ve previously seen bits and pieces of that trip here on StreetFilms, but we’ve never posted the entire half hour adventure which contains over 12 minutes of additional footage. And with the incredible turn in leadership in the past months and the speed at which changes are coming, it gives me hope that NYC could one day become as livable as Portland!

This is our first video posting over 15 minutes so we’ve tried to keep the file size as small as possible. Thus, the quality is a smidgen lower. Please send us feedback on how it looks and if your computer is able to play it.

43 Comments (leave a comment)

  1. Thanks for posting this 30 min vid. I’ve been hearing so much about Portland, but this was the most comprehensive look I’ve had. The quality was very watchable by the way.

    - Dan (Sacramento, CA)
    PS they should be saying “Speed Humps” not “Bumps”…
    http://www.trafficcalming.org/

    Comment by Dan — August 16, 2007 @ 2:51 pm | Link

  2. […] Portland: Celebrating America’s Most Livable CityA StreetFilm by Clarence Eckerson Jr.Running time: 30:00 […]

    Pingback by Streetsblog » For Your Weekend Viewing Pleasure: Portland! — August 17, 2007 @ 3:02 pm | Link

  3. I was interested to hear that per capita VMT in Portland has declined from 23 to 19. Do we have more information on that: is that vmt per day? what time frame has that decline happened in? Is there a reference we can include in a footnote?

    This statistic refutes the claim of Randal O’Toole and others that Portland’s planning has not reduced auto use, so it would be great to have a good reference for it.

    Of course, it is easier to get people to walk and bicycle in Portland than in most places, because you don’t have to worry about getting a sunburn in Portland.

    Comment by Charles Siegel — August 17, 2007 @ 5:43 pm | Link

  4. That statistic was given by Rex Burkholder. He is an elected offical who leads Metro, our regional government. Rex is the chair of the Joint Policy Advisory Committee on Transportation which leads regional transportation policy.

    Metro, as an agency, is also responsible for tracking VMT in the region. So, Rex reporting the number is a cite within itself because he is the agency head that tracks VMT. If you want more detail, you can find it on their web page at http://www.metro-region.org/. There is also a link there to email Rex if you need more info.

    I am not involved in the VMT modeling and can not give more detail.

    Thanks.
    Greg Raisman
    Community and School Traffic Safety Partnership
    Portland Office of Transportation
    (503) 823-1052

    Comment by Greg Raisman — August 17, 2007 @ 6:00 pm | Link

  5. thanks for that video, we could need such improvements for bikes and pedestrians here in vienna (austria, europe) too.

    and thumbs up for posting with a creative commons license!

    Comment by flo — August 18, 2007 @ 4:11 am | Link

  6. That’s the kind of stuff I wish we’d see in Brisbane, Australia. Unfortunately, our city council is borrowing billions of dollars to build a network of tunnels with no filtering on the emissions stack.

    I think the best way to beat congestion in Brisbane is to dig up Portland and put it where Brisbane is.

    Comment by Sam Clifford — August 18, 2007 @ 7:50 pm | Link

  7. Inspirational. Provides perspective on how embryonic things are. Lots of work for everyone.

    Comment by gecko — August 19, 2007 @ 10:34 am | Link

  8. This Portlander says thanks for showing everyone else some of what makes our city so wonderful — it’s why I moved to Portland, and plenty of others are doing the same precisely because they want to live in a livable place where they have choices in transportation. I hope that creates a critical mass of people who will continue to vote for leaders and policies that make Portland so attractive.

    Two cautions: first, none of this happened by luck; it took hard work by visionary leaders and informed citizens willing to vote for long term investments and against politicians offering nostrums (e.g. “no new taxes” and “government is the problem”) instead of progressive solutions, like the urban growth boundary and other tough political choices that make the policies shown here feasible. We still fight these battles in almost every election. Second, I’m posting this from the Netherlands, which has invested far more in bike and pedestrian facilities (e.g. separated bike/ped lanes). As a result, biking and walking are much more a part of daily life for most citizens, rather than a relatively small (though growing) minority, as in Portland, and that makes Holland a delightful place to live. We’ve done some great things in Portland, but the Dutch show that there’s still a lot more we and other American cities can do to create really livable communities.

    Comment by brett — August 21, 2007 @ 7:33 pm | Link

  9. […] You’ve probably seen bits of this before, but here it is all together in a 30 minute production. […]

    Pingback by StreetFilms extolls Portland transportation planning for 30 minutes — August 22, 2007 @ 9:06 pm | Link

  10. […] Delta Park Project. I haven’t seen it with sound yet, but I trust it’s an okay video. Portland: Celebrating America’s Most Livable City (30 minute video) [?] Share […]

    Pingback by Netninja » Blog Archive » Big Daddy Protects The Triopolis — August 23, 2007 @ 12:39 pm | Link

  11. I have lived in Milwaukie and Hillsboro, OR. for a total of 65 years. I love all of the Pacific Northwest & esp Portland. To me this has always been “The City” . b/c…its very clean and easy to get around to different areas of the city esp when using MAX. Most people are extremely friendly and the views of the mtns. can not be overlooked. Mayor Bud and Mayor Vera did a lot to move the city in the ‘green’ direction. Kudo’s for them as they had a clear vision and made it happen. Now that I have retired to another state the spirit of the city lives within me and I long to return for a visit with friends and to find a fir tree to hug. In my heart I am an Oregonian, proud and liberal.
    Barb

    Comment by Barb — August 30, 2007 @ 9:32 am | Link

  12. […] Portland - America’s most livable city […]

    Pingback by Placerea nu se refuza » Critical Mass in Cluj-Napoca 2 — September 2, 2007 @ 11:03 am | Link

  13. Really nice ! I am a french worker in Paris, and my city is experiencing the “Vélib’” bikeshare system for a few weeks, its a big succes which is aimed to change the face of the city, I am glad to see that Portland bikers can have breakfast on their arrival, it would be a great idea to support responsible transportation, especially during the winter, when biking is harder !

    Comment by Sabri — September 4, 2007 @ 3:44 am | Link

  14. Love to see Portland in such a great light, and there is much more to be done than transportation.

    Comment by Randy White — September 4, 2007 @ 10:26 am | Link

  15. As a bike commuter and member of an acitve transportation advocacy group in Columbia, Missouri, (www.pednet.org) we hold Portland as a model community. This film is a great feature of what’s happening on the street with individual citizens, and the friendly face of their local transportation officials (they even receive love letters for their work!?!).
    Many innovations like what Portland has done can be done to some degree in many other communities, but is great time and effort. But is well worth it. Great film.

    Comment by Steve Spellman — September 8, 2007 @ 1:30 pm | Link

  16. I’m movin’ to Portland!!! AWESOME video!!!

    Comment by Mary ALice — September 21, 2007 @ 10:05 am | Link

  17. […] number of bikes using the four bridges jumped 21 percent. (Check Clarence Eckerson’s StreetFilm, Portland: America’s Most Livable City, if you want to see what these heavily-biked bridges look like for […]

    Pingback by Streetsblog » Portland Sees Explosive Growth in Bicycling — September 28, 2007 @ 3:53 pm | Link

  18. This is a great video. Now I really want to visit Portland. More importantly, now I can see what _is_ possible for a city to be more pedestrian and bicycle friendly. I hope that this will inspire NY to take action.

    Comment by James — September 30, 2007 @ 12:47 am | Link

  19. I’m shocked I wasn’t in any of the footage!
    Seriously, I have been absolutely ecstatic about the increase in bike commuting I have witnessed in the past three years. Having migrated here from Carroll Gardens Brooklyn I was looking for the urban excitement I found in NYC and I have really found it being a bike commuter. Carroll Gardens was very much a Euro sort of feeling, with all the small businesses and deep sense of community, but riding a bike in NYC ( at least back in the nid 90’s ) was like dropping into a warzone ( which had it’s own sort of fun and allure, but four taxi collisions later seemed a bit life threatening.
    Now I drive only when I’m lazy. I ride my bike into the city every day and interact with my fellow cyclists and revel in my non-petroleum dependence. The sense of security and well being this activity generates is beyond value, and I recommend it to everyone. You can advocate for bicycle transportation in your own community, or move to Portland, there’s still lot’s of cheap real estate!(compared to NYC anyway)

    Comment by Patrick Finn — October 9, 2007 @ 2:57 am | Link

  20. I live in Austin, Texas, and I hope that someday we can make this a more bicycle-friendly community. Progress is slow. Great video!

    Comment by mike — October 9, 2007 @ 12:26 pm | Link

  21. I live in Raleigh, NC and am working hard to promote walkability and the urban living revolution here. I want you to know that this video has provided a lot of inspiration for folks here. I tell people I would pay $100 to see it if it wasn’t free. Thank you for your generosity in making it available at no cost.
    P.S. Raleigh and Cary had an election yesterday that replaced several anti-downtown mayors and council members with civic leaders who support growth management. That was the defining issue in the elections here, and I am working hard to point out that walkability is the answer to the myriad problems concomitant with urban sprawl.

    Comment by Steven Waters — October 10, 2007 @ 11:06 pm | Link

  22. […] hearings roll around, assuming they ever see (and can read) the notices.COMMENT OF THE WEEK: From Steven Waters, via StreetFilms: "I live in Raleigh, NC and am working hard to promote walkability and the […]

    Pingback by Streetsblog » The Week in Review — October 12, 2007 @ 4:39 pm | Link

  23. go clarence! the world is watching!

    Comment by Anne (www.sustainableflatbush.org) — October 12, 2007 @ 8:25 pm | Link

  24. […] siamo in sosta, dall’usare i mezzi pubblici o le proprie gambe (streetfilm ha un ottimo documentario su Portland, che ha saputo reinventarsi completamente come città, favorendo il trasporto pubblico e […]

    Pingback by Blog Action Day ovvero “perchè non stai facendo nulla?” « piccole cose — October 15, 2007 @ 9:35 am | Link

  25. I moved away from Portland a year ago and watching this video brought tears to my eyes. While there, I biked around 300 miles a month, daughter in tow, to work, to school, to the grocery store, and so on. I miss you Portland!!!

    Comment by Elisa — October 16, 2007 @ 12:22 pm | Link

  26. THANK YOU! Excellent work. Very persuasive. As a member of the city Pathways Commission here in Oxford Mississippi, this is just the sort of inspiration we need. I am sending a link to our Mayor and city planners.

    Comment by Mike — October 24, 2007 @ 5:07 am | Link

  27. As a Portlander, I too enjoyed looking at what has been accomplished.But, as a city,we bo where close to the finish line.

    But don’t feel inclined to chuck living where you do and move to Portland for its transportation rep. We still have huge gridlock on the freeways, we still violate clean air standards,etc. Not as freqently as other cities,but still we do. Someone once remarked to me that its not a case of Portland being so great, its just that > sucks so badly.

    The challenge is to bring your community into the fold. The economics of transit will do a lot more for that cause than all the activism and attitude.

    Comment by local yokel — November 21, 2007 @ 7:03 pm | Link

  28. […]  http://www.streetfilms.org/archives/portland-celebrating-americas-most-livable-city/ […]

    Pingback by Whoa!! « Citizens for Halifax — November 22, 2007 @ 9:06 am | Link

  29. […] Portland - America’s most livable city […]

    Pingback by Critical Mass in Cluj-Napoca » Portland - America’s most livable city — December 4, 2007 @ 4:28 pm | Link

  30. That was fantastic!

    I am wondering is how do cyclists and pedestrians cope with the weather in Portland? I noticed in the video many were wearing special jackets and gloves. I would have liked to see a little section of this video that demonstrates how you can stay comfortable, warm, and dry while not in car.

    Comment by JP — December 29, 2007 @ 3:16 pm | Link

  31. That was fantastic!

    I am wondering is how do cyclists and pedestrians cope with the weather in Portland? I noticed in the video many were wearing special jackets and gloves. I would have liked to see a little section of this video that demonstrates ways you can stay comfortable, warm, and dry without a car.

    Comment by JP — December 29, 2007 @ 3:16 pm | Link

  32. […] pm on February 7, 2008 | # | Celebrating America’s Most Livable CityVideo about Portland. […]

    Pingback by Celebrating America’s Most Livable City « Cycling Edinburgh’s Short Items — February 7, 2008 @ 1:11 pm | Link

  33. Great video on a great city. Portland is a model other cities should follow.

    That being said, I would like to know if you checked out the suburbs much? Do people outside of the core city bike as much, or ride transit? Or is it just more an inner city thing?

    No doubt Portland is a great model. Just one thing I would like to see improve, is the transit situation. Something like only 6%(approx 12% in Portland City) of metro wide work trips are made on transit.
    For a city doing great things I am sure they can bring the transit useage up higher.

    Keep up the good work.

    Comment by Mike B — February 12, 2008 @ 7:46 pm | Link

  34. America’s most dydfunctional city. You’ve been drinking the kool aid.

    Comment by RedFlyer — February 14, 2008 @ 8:15 pm | Link

  35. […] in Prospect Hts., Brooklyn Portland, Oregon, which has ascended the ranks of cities judged most walkable, bikable, and urbane, benefits mightily from its small 200-foot square blocks, which provide businesses more street […]

    Pingback by Streetsblog » Let’s Chop Up Superblocks — February 22, 2008 @ 11:05 am | Link

  36. […] Oregon, a city about the same size of Toronto, has one of the most bike and pedestrian friendly cities in the world and has some amazing programs in place. London, England just announced that they are going to […]

    Pingback by undertones » Blog Archive » Velo — March 3, 2008 @ 11:03 pm | Link

  37. omg @ 12:14 ayleen and sam = hot

    Comment by revphil — March 7, 2008 @ 11:24 pm | Link

  38. Oh good rev, you are right as usual. That is hot.

    Comment by Greg Raisman — March 8, 2008 @ 4:50 pm | Link

  39. This was a great clip! I encountered your video clip on moving by bike on NAU - the collective - loved that too! My sister lives in Portland and I find myself continually impressed with the level of creativity and action that inhabits this city. I am inspired - Thank you!!! :)

    Comment by Arianna — March 12, 2008 @ 2:35 pm | Link

  40. […] Go Portland! Here’s a list of videos that show why Portland is “the most liveable city America.” My favorite is the first one on the list. […]

    Pingback by One of the Wolves » Shout out to my hometown! (and my company) — March 18, 2008 @ 1:35 pm | Link

  41. […] http://www.streetfilms.org/archives/portland-celebrating-americas-most-livable-city/ […]

    Pingback by Everyone Wants to Be Portland! « DATA Dirt! — April 9, 2008 @ 6:57 am | Link

  42. […] We see a clip from the Streetsblog video, Portland: Celebrating America’s Most Livable City. […]

    Pingback by Google Maps ‘Bike There’ | Portland Bicycling on Democracy Now! — April 16, 2008 @ 2:59 am | Link

  43. […] from the Berkeley Bicycle Boulevards video) Portland: Celebrating America’s Most Livable City (full version here) was played in the middle of the two interviews featuring Portland’s Mayor Tom Potter, […]

    Pingback by Portland Transportation Activists/Organizers on Democracy Now! « Mikey Wally — April 17, 2008 @ 3:01 pm | Link

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