Will Portland Bury its Historic Reservoir?

Readers seek help for preservation emergencies
/ Apr. 22, 2003

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Mt. Tabor Park
reservoir overlooks downtown Portland (Swami Photo)
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Dear Preservation 911,
We are having a preservation emergency here in Portland,
Ore.
I am a member of a grassroots organization known
as the Friends
of the Reservoirs, which is attempting to save our city's
100-year old open reservoirs from destruction by the city's Water
Bureau. These reservoirs have been used for over 100 years for
Portland's drinking water. Not only are they an integral part
of the water system, they also serve as focal points within Mount
Tabor Park. This unique interaction of water and public space
was first identified by the Olmsteds in 1903.
Citing terrorism fears in the shadow of Sept. 11, the city wants
to replace the reservoirs with buried storage tanks and develop
new park space in their place. A public advisory committee is
currently helping decide "what goes on top."
The Friends
of the Reservoirs strongly opposes the current public process
and the city council's decision in May 2002 to bury the reservoirs.
We feel that the public was unfairly excluded from discussing
alternatives to reservoir burial. Furthermore, there is very little
public support for this project.
Our group, the Friends
of the Reservoirs, have nominated the reservoirs for National
Register consideration.
We need all the help we can get from all available sources. Right
now, we are raising money for our pending legal case against the
city. We are also trying to raise public awareness of this project.
But we need more help.
Please feel free to contact me. Thank you!
Sincerely,
Kevin Bond
Secretary of Friends of the Reservoirs
Portland, Ore.
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