User:Victorcmyk/Lovejoy Fountain Park

Coordinates: 45°30′34″N 122°40′47″W / 45.509318°N 122.67974°W / 45.509318; -122.67974
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Lovejoy Fountain Park
Lovejoy Fountain Park
TypeUrban park
LocationPortland, Oregon
Coordinates45°30′34″N 122°40′47″W / 45.509318°N 122.67974°W / 45.509318; -122.67974[1]
Created1966
Operated byPortland Parks & Recreation
StatusOpen 5 a.m. to midnight daily


Lovejoy Fountain Park is a city park in downtown Portland, Oregon.[2] Completed in 1966, the park was designed by American landscape architect Lawrence Halprin. The park was the first in a series of fountains and open space designed by Halprin in the South Auditorium District urban renewal area.[3] The park is bounded by tree-lined pedestrian malls that connect to other parks, including Keller Fountain Park. [4]

In addition to the fountain, the park also features a large copper-clad pavilion designed by Halprin's collaborator, American architect Charles Willard Moore.[3]

Shortly after opening, Life Magazine published a three-page pictorial titled, "Mid-City Mountain Stream" which described the Park as a "piece of wilderness transplanted—wet and dry, glittering and static—which effectively invites wading and clambering and contemplation." [5]

The Halprin Landscape Conservancy was formed in 2001 to "spruce up and protect Lovejoy Plaza, Ira Keller Fountain, and Pettygrove Park, an ensemble considered to be one of Mr. Halprin's masterpieces."[6]


References[edit]

  1. ^ "Lovejoy Fountain". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
  2. ^ "Lovejoy Fountain Park". Portland Parks & Recreation. Retrieved September 10, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Halprin, Lawrence (2009). Randy Gragg (ed.). Where the revolution began. Washington, D.C.: Spacemaker Press. ISBN 9780982439210. OCLC 449857189.
  4. ^ Carr, Stephen (1993). Public Space. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521359603.
  5. ^ "Mid-City Mountain Stream". Life Magazine. 65 (3). Time, Inc: 72–74. 1968.
  6. ^ Patricia Leigh Brown (July 10, 2003). "For a Shaper Of Landscapes, A Cliffhanger". The New York Times. Retrieved September 10, 2010.

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