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three paths to 103 peaceful places
ОглавлениеIn Peaceful Places: Portland, Paul Gerald serves up 103 locales for a few hours of quiet time in the greater metro area and farther afield. To make it easy for you to find an entry that suits your mood and desired neighborhood or type of place, we’ve organized the sites in three different ways:
the path ALPHANUMERICALLY
Beginning on Annie Bloom’s Books, each entry unfolds in the main text in alphabetical order and is numbered in sequence. That number travels with that entry throughout the book—in the Peaceful Places Alphanumerically guide, in the Peaceful Places by Category guide (described in the next section and shown), in the Peaceful Places by Area guide, and on the maps.
the path BY CATEGORY
The Peaceful Places by Category guide organizes the sites into 12 different groups, as listed below. The full text for each destination also includes its category at the top of that individual entry. In many cases it was difficult to classify a place, as it might be a historic site in an outdoor habitat with a scenic vista that feels like a spiritual enclave that’s an urban surprise where you can take an enchanting walk! But we’ve tagged each site as it seems most fitting for the focus of the author’s description.
Day Trips & Overnights
Enchanting Walks
Historic Sites
Museums & Galleries
Outdoor Habitats
Parks & Gardens
Quiet Tables
Reading Rooms
Scenic Vistas
Shops & Services
Spiritual Enclaves
Urban Surprises
the path BY AREA
The Peaceful Places by Area guide and the maps locate sites according to the following eight geographic divisions:
Central Portland (MAP 1)
Includes Downtown, the Pearl District, Old Town, and Riverplace.
North Portland (Map 2)
Includes Boise, Delta Park, Hayden Island, and St. Johns.
Northeast Portland (MAP 3)
Includes Alberta Arts/Concordia, Cully, the Columbia Corridor, Irvington, Kerns, the Lloyd Center District, Rose City Park, and Roseway.
Southeast Portland (MAP 4)
Includes Belmont, Buckman, Division/Clinton, Eastmoreland, Hawthorne, Lents, Milwaukie, Midway, Mount Tabor, Oregon City, Sellwood, Sunnyside, and Woodstock.
Southwest Portland (MAP 5)
Includes Bridlemile, Collins View, Corbett–Lair Hill, Goose Hollow, Hillsdale, Johns Landing, Multnomah Village, Sylvan, West Hills, and West Linn.
Northwest Portland (MAP 6)
Includes the Alphabet District, Forest Park, Hillside, Nob Hill, the Outer Pearl District, and West Hills.
Outer Northwest Portland (MAP 7)
Includes Sauvie Island.
Farther Afield (MAP 8)
Oregon: Includes Arch Cape, Beaverton, Carlton, the Columbia River Gorge, Corbett, Detroit, Dundee, Gervais, Hood River, Lafayette, Lincoln City, Mount Hood National Forest, Seaside, Sherwood, Sublimity, Tillamook, Troutdale, Wilsonville, and Zigzag.
Washington State: Includes Carson, Ilwaco, Stevenson, Vancouver, and Washougal.
PEACEFULNESS RATINGS
Preceding the main text for each profile, listed information notes the entry’s category and area. This capsule information also includes the author’s rating for the site, on a scale of one to three stars, as follows:
ESSENTIALS
At the end of each entry, you’ll find the destination’s full address, phone number, website address, any fees for entry (or a range of prices for menu items or other expenses), hours, and public-transportation choices. For those using GPS units, zip codes are included with street addresses. Where no street addresses exist, we’ve included driving directions (or websites listing them) and/or GPS coordinates. Hours and prices are subject to change, so call ahead to verify.
Regarding public transportation: “n/a” (not applicable) denotes destinations not reachable or easily accessible using such services. And as all Portland and other urban dwellers know, public-transportation schedules and routes are subject to change. The routes and connections provided are up-to-date at press time, but please check the appropriate websites to be sure you have the latest information for your own journeys.
Throughout Portland, your leading choices for public transportation are MAX Light Rail, the Portland Streetcar, and TriMet Buses. For more information, visit trimet.org.
—The Publisher