America’s Best Cities - Portland, Oregon No. 7
While we love to hear the hype and appreciation Oregon, the Portland Area and even towns like Sherwood get, living here it really comes as no surprise to me. I’ve written countless blog’s in the last year about what our area has to offer and I’m very excited to share what’s just been said this month about Portland!
The August issue of Outdoor Magazine features America’s Best Cities and among them the City of Portland Oregon is named among the few. It reads…
KEY STATS
2.2 million: Population (metro)
$248,000: Median home price
A: Multisport grade
2 million: Number of volumes at Powell’s, the largest bookstore in the world
“Or, as we like to call it, Velo City. With cycling advocates in high places, the highest concentration of custom bicycle builders anywhere, and a 300-mile bike-route network set to triple in length over the next two decades, Oregon’s biggest city definitely lives up to its rep as the most cycle-friendly place in the U.S. But it’s not just about bikes. Indeed, the assorted natural playgrounds of PDX’s Pacific Northwest setting have long lured multisport types in search of a temperate paradise. Mount Hood, centerpiece of a million-plus-acre national forest with year-round skiing, is only 30 miles away; the Columbia and Willamette rivers border and bisect the city, respectively; the coast is 80 miles east; and 5,000-acre Forest Park is just one of 250 green spaces in town. But Portland’s coolness draws coveted creative-classers like freshmen to free beer (there are 29 breweries within city limits, by the way), and that magnetism is partly responsible for the relatively high unemployment rate, with competition tough in liberal-arts fields. So look before you leap. The biggest employers are in technology, health care, education, and sportswear (Nike, Columbia, et al.), and home prices post-crash are on the rise again. But you get what you pay for: fertile arts and music scenes, world-class food and drink, and an extensive public-transit system amid plenty of wilderness, big water, and mountains.”
