1. Interstate Bridge

    1. Interstate Bridge

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    Portland, OR

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    Tim B.

    Actually a pair of twin bridges (northbound circa 1917, southbound 1958), the Interstate Bridge was the first designed for automobiles to span the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon States. Originally a toll bridge (5¢ per car or horse), the crossing also serviced streetcars until 1940. These days the structure(s) have earned a place on the National Historic Register - and a "functionally obsolete" rating. Together the spans handle hundreds of thousands of vehicles daily, and are frequently blamed for road vehicle and river traffic congestion. Despite its practical shortcomings, the bridge is still an aging marvel and a sight to behold. A walking trail parallels the river on either side of the bridge and travels underneath the massive roadway, affording some truly spectacular views.

    Photo by --b-- on Flickr
    Don B.

    Oh the Interstate Bridge. The bane of existence for many a Vancouver-dwelling commuter. A structure that, while serving it's purpose of getting cars across the mighty Columbia from Oregon to Washington and vice-versa, is at the same time a maddening bottleneck and, in at least my opinion, an eyesore. This bridge has been the most perpetual landmarks in my life. A nomad of the Northwest, I have been traveling up and down the I-5 corridor ever since I was a baby, and of all the things on our many trips up and down the west coast, we always would see the towers of the big dirty green monster pop up on the horizon and we knew we were making progress toward our goal regardless of which direction we were headed. Now that I live in Portland, I have the distinct pleasure of crossing this bridge more and more often, and each time I do, I marvel at both the engineering prowess that created this huge, long-lasting span, and at the same time, I wonder when they're going to replace it with something bigger, wider, better, more functional, and hopefully much more æsthetically pleasing. With federal stimulus money coming down the pipe and plans in the works, it will probably be sooner than later. The impending demise of this big green bastard will be a little bittersweet for me. While I do look forward to something more versatile and less bottleneck going in, some little part of me will miss this... thing. A couple of commutes across the bridge at rush hour will probably solve that though. So how do you rate a bridge? 1 star for the looks, 2 stars for the functionality, 5 for the memories. In my fuzzy math, that works out to a 3.

    SB

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    2 years ago

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    1 year ago

    Its a bridge. It got me over the Columbian River w/ no issues. 10/10 would drive over it again.

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    Ask the Community - Interstate Bridge

    Review Highlights - Interstate Bridge

    The Interstate Bridge carries I-5 over the Columbia river and joins Portland Oregon with Vancouver Washington.

    Mentioned in 6 reviews

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    Lovejoy Columns - Before the Pearl District

    Lovejoy Columns

    4.6(10 reviews)
    6.4 miPearl District

    The Lovejoy Columns are an interesting little piece of Portland's history. There are many articles…read moreavailable if you want to read the full story of the columns. Once upon a time the Lovejoy Columns supported the Lovejoy Ramp which was a viaduct connecting NW 14th Ave and Lovejoy Street to the Broadway Bridge. This viaduct ran above railroad freight tracks in the area that is now known as the Pearl District. From 1948-1952 a Greek immigrant, who worked as a night watchman for the railroad, drew wonderful pictures on the columns in chalk and later painted them. When the viaduct was demolished in 1999 to make way for all the condos and businesses that make up the Pearl District, several of the original columns were saved and stored beneath the Fremont Bridge. Two of those original columns have been restored and relocated here. The columns are beautiful to behold and definitely worth visiting.

    Everyone deserves to pursue their dreams. Carpe diem. Athanasios Efthimiou Stefopoulos is not a…read morename that rolls off the tongue unless you're a cast member of "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" nor unfortunately is it a name you'll see in an art museum as much as he must have dreamed of that. Early in the last century, he was a railroad watchman who happened to be a talented, proto-graffiti artist. He went by the name Tom to his friends and painted the Broadway Bridge Lovejoy overpass columns with fanciful images of mythical gods and wild animals. Several endured over the years though most are in some abandoned lot awaiting funding for restoration. Two of them have been refurbished and placed in a courtyard on NW 10th Avenue near Everett. If you're walking into the Pearl District from the western part of the city, it's likely the first landmark you'll see. Check 'em out. RELATED - Going to Portland? Here are the places I visited and reviewed: bit.ly/2B0haJD

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    Lovejoy Columns - Elliot Smith Film

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    Today

    Interstate Bridge - landmarks - Updated July 2026

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