A walk to Modern Domestic

My summer schedule has me walking to work on Thursdays, and I am trying to keep to that schedule during vacations, too.  I needed to pick up some Wonder Tape at Modern Domestic, and I combined that errand with a goodly hour’s worth of walking.  As there are many paths to Modern Domestic, my strategy is to set off in the general direction (southeast) and turn onto whatever streets I encounter that look interesting.  Here’s what I saw.
Remember how they took down that house?  Well, I can say I’m sorry it’s gone.  Before it was a boarded up house that bums sat on the steps of now and again.  Now, it’s a foundation and a chimney and a very ugly chain link fence.  I thought they were going to level the lot, but no. This is not an improvement.

However, a local artist has left us some art in the empty fireplace.

Remember that house and lot I loved and had  plans for? Well, now it’s four large houses.  One is still for sale if you are interested.  It’s very close to Fred Meyer, the Lombard Transit center and I-5.  It also has no yard.

However, across the street I was surprised to see this fella popping up on the long-empty cul-de-sac that I thought would never be developed because half of abuts the Fred Meyer parking lot.  I guess that house in front opted not to have a backyard.

Speaking of that house in front, here’s a way to get your sunflowers to behave.  Stick them to the wall with painter’s tape.

I love this neighborhood, and wouldn’t mind buying a house.  Here’s one for $240,000.  (Note that I wouldn’t buy this house because the yard is too small and the house is too big.  But there are some candidates on this street.  I have my eye on them.)

The stealthy I-5 crossing.

Which has been decorated by mirrors and someone has added a decoration to one of the mirrors.

At the other end is this very fun traffic mural.

This kid on the bike kind of weirds me out, but I like him.

Nice wrap around roof and brick detail on this cottage.

Look at this compost bin!

I think this makes it harder to get the compost out of the bin, but it sure is pretty.

Nice art.  Made from bicycle parts.

From the compost bin on down were all part of this place, which is a “transit and bike oriented community in N. Portland.”

Big tree.  Also with tree house.

This sign pulled me over.  Portland Community College is not far from where I stood to take the picture.

Oh real estate agents.  Not only are your ads rife with misspellings (and yet English Majors abound who would proof them quickly and thoroughly) but you also don’t really understand that a home that was built this year can’t be vintage for a good fifty to sixty more years.  

Lovely turrets.

In the yard of the lovely turret house, some concrete swans float among some cloth.

This apartment unit seems to be at the end of its days.  There was a house next door that was also boarded up.  I wondered if the Salvation Army, which owns property adjacent, had purchased the lots.

Across the street from each other we have two classic styles of Portland apartments.  The stacked building in a u-shape.  These tend to be downtown (although my former residence, Rosefriend Apartments, was torn down to build “luxury apartments”) and major thoroughfares like Williams Street, where this one lives.

Across the street is the one story cottage style which are everywhere.

Massive columns caught my eye.

This looks like a good find.

And oh, my lord, it is!  What a gorgeous house that sits about two blocks off MLK.  I have never seen it before, which is strange because I’m not unfamiliar with this neighborhood.

The light was not fabulous so you can’t see what I was getting at, so I will tell you.  I appreciate, since they probably tore down a bunch of houses to build these row houses, that they made them all a little different and used different colors to paint them.

Clad your home in metal?  Why not. This isn’t a home, though, it’s a real estate business.

The organic hippie in me finds these disgusting, and the lover of any food with cheese inside is intrigued.

Kitten!  This kitten was totally a kitten, constantly ADD-ing all over the place.  

Methinks the pots are too small for the plants to come, but perhaps not.

Look past the graffiti to see the mark of a certain caped crusader.

Just so you know, the world cup is happening.  This bar was open before 10am.

And here is my destination.  Where I not only successfully purchased Wonder Tape, I also helped sell something.  A woman popped in, asking if the dress in the window was for sale.  The clerk said, no, it’s an advertisement for a class.  The woman said, alas, she was from out of town.  I said, “you could buy the pattern and have someone make it for you.”  The woman left, but returned about a minute later.  I felt successful.

A break from work: Lan Su Chinese Garden

I was done with work at 1:30 on Friday like usual, but I had to come back at 3:30 for a meeting.  What to do for two hours?  A coworker suggested I visit the Chinese Garden.  I’d never been, I’m ashamed to admit, so I thought that was a brilliant suggestion and took myself.
Beautiful stones in the courtyard.  

The garden is designed so you are constantly looking at different frames.

Beautiful carved wood.

Overlooking the water and the Moon Locking Pavilion.

More beautiful carving.

More beautiful paths.

Peeking out onto the city street.  The garden takes up one full block, but it seems much bigger, from the inside.

Nothing makes me want to enter like a “do not enter” sign.
A small courtyard with more great stonework.

The plastic horses in this arrangement amused me.

The fabulous roof tiles are shaped like bats.

Six panels carved from ginkgo wood.  The fourth one says “Most cherished in this mundane world is a place without traffic; truly in the midst of a city there can be mountain and forest.”  Wen Zhengming.

This floor pattern is called “plum blossoms on cracked ice.”  So pretty!

The scholar’s study.

The tea house.

Steps across the water.

A beautiful waterfall.

Though all of the materials came from China, the plants came from the US.  This tree came from a house in Southeast Portland. The men working on the garden found it and asked the owner if it could be transplanted to the garden because the trees take so long to grow.  The owner said if his neighbors (who also loved the tree) agreed it could move.  It did.

This is a Lake Tai rock which is formed underwater over many decades in Lake Tai.  These are meditative rocks and viewing it from bottom to top is akin to venturing up a mountain peak.  It is now not allowed to export Lake Tai rock, so the garden is very happy to have been created at at time when export was still possible.

Keyhole framing.

Our great tour guide.

Nice “oasis in the city” photo.  That’s Big Pink, the tallest building in downtown Portland, peering over the garden wall.

More oasis stuff.

Yet more “oasis in the city”.

Here I got to tell my fortune.  I shook the can of sticks until one presented itself to me.  Then I looked at the number and opened the corresponding drawer to find my fortune.

Mine was “a long sought position in life will soon be yours.”  Sounds good to me.

Beautiful entrance to the Scholar’s private garden.

Nice detail here.

Here is the upper floor of the tea house.  If I had more time I would have gotten some tea.

Overall, this was a great way to spend a few hours before returning to work.  It is peaceful and calm and really is an oasis in the middle of the city.

A walk through Southeast

I had a class at the Attic Institute, so I walked from the Pearl all the way there.  It was a great day for a walk.  Here’s what I saw.
Inappropriate use of an apostrophe. 

The approach to the Burnside Bridge.  When I lived downtown and Matt lived at 29th & Stark, I would walk this bridge often, going between our two places.

Boy playing in the fountain.

Nice chalk graffiti on the bridge.

This establishment which advertised low-cost legal services and did not advertise with words all the plants for sale.  But the display spoke for itself.

Nice tiny little house.

I swung past the shuttered Washington High School, built at a time when they knew how to make high schools look awesome.

Including quotes over the doors. Ahem, Oregon legislature.  Ahem.

I was intrigued by this roof which does not match the Victorian-style house at all.

And then discovered that the tiny building itself is something of interest.

I saw a sign painter plying her trade.

This part of town has some really great facades.

Don’t those columns inspire awe?  The other nice part about the neighborhood is that the lots are small, so you can get very close to these houses.  And the houses get very close to each other.

There was a little bit of painting.  Some craft (the bookshelf) some art (the canvas).

These type of houses, with the hipped roof, are fairly rare in Portland.  When you see them, they are almost always sideways in the lot, like these.

Nice stonework on this church.

There was a farmers market open.

A helpful sign.

An attempt to capture the rose and the colorful bush behind it.

A good paint job begun.  But not finished.

Trees removed.  I bet the light changed dramatically in these houses.

Should you want to purchase a “garden condo” this one is for sale. It’s one bedroom, one bath, 997 square feet.  No parking.  $245,900.  Yeah.  That’s why I don’t live in this neck of the woods.  Sorry people who used to live in complex when it was an apartment.  People with WAY more money than you are eager to move in.

It wouldn’t be a walk on Hawthorne without a picture of the Ecoroof on the Hostel.  

Sewing machine not working?  Why not use a few of them as weights to hold the awning for a food cart.?

The food cart in question.

Don’t forget that “Gift Certificates Always Fit.”

Once upon a time it was the Sunnyside Lodge.

Now?  The Hawthorne Theater.

This sign made me giggle.