PortlandOnline

POL Government Elected Officials Commissioner Nick Fish

 

 

Welcome!

 

 

Commissioner

Nick Fish

 

1221 S.W. Fourth Avenue

Room 240 

Portland OR 97204  

(503) 823-3589


Contact Nick

 

 


  

   

In the spring of 2007, Transition Projects, Inc. asked residents of TPI shelters to photograph where they slept while living on the streets. Equipped with just disposable cameras, they delivered the photographs in this book in a matter of days.


 

 

 

Visit our new 'Video' tab for clips of Nick out and about and other videos we're interested in.

 


   

  

We've posted lots of new pictures in our Photo Gallery - click here to check them out!

 


 

 Check out our friends on the web!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Commissioner Fish supports President Obama's United We Serve campaign.

 

 

Portland's ReUse Week 2009, sponsored by Commissioners Nick Fish and Jeff Cogen, continues with reusepdx.org.

 

 


 

 

 

Oregon Cultural Trust logo

 

 

 

 


 

 


 

 




211info and Housing Connections are incredible resources for information about housing, health, and human services.

 

They can help you find an apartment, answer questions about employment resources, tell you where to find health care or emergency shelter, and much much more.



 


 

Multnomah County Vital Aging Task Force 2008 Report 


More than 100,000 residents of Multnomah County are over the age of 65; older adults will make up an increasing share of our population in coming years - see how in this report.



  



Looking for the Commissioner's calendar?

 

Click here to access current and past schedules. 

 

Want to request time on the Commissioner's calendar? Click here for our schedule request form.

 


     

Celebrating a visionary landscape architect who shaped public spaces across Portland - Printable Version

 

Thanks to Flickr user anne.oeldorfhirsch for the photo of Ira Keller fountain

 

What do Ira Keller Fountain, Lovejoy Fountain, Pettygrove Park, Source Fountain, and downtown's original transit mall have in common? They were all designed by world-renowned landscape architect Lawrene Halprin, who passed away on Sunday at the age of 93.

 

In addition to his landscape design work for the City, Halprin was also instrumental in shaping our region's land use policies, writes Steven Ames in the November 2 Oregonian. In the 1970s, Lawrence Halprin and Associates was commissioned by Oregon Governor Tom McCall to imagine the future of Willamette Valley as it faced a new wave of growth and development. The end product of that study was a landmark examination of urban sprawl, environmental protection, and principles of livability.

 

In addition to leaving his mark across Portland, Halprin also designed public spaces in Washington, D.C., Yosemite National Park, and San Francisco, writes Katy Muldoon in the Tuesday Oregonian.

 

Portlanders have celebrated the work of Lawrence Halprin in a variety of ways. The Halprin Landscape Conservancy, founded by Portland architects Steve Koch and Marcy McInelly in 2001, works to maintain Halprin's spaces while increasing awareness of parks as "a cultural resource on par with museums."

 

Randy Gragg, Editor-in-Chief of Portland Monthly, along with Janice Ross and John Beardsley, will publish an exploration of Halprin's work in "Where the Revolution Began: Lawrence and Anna Halprin and the Reinvention of Public Space."

 

At the dedication of the Ira Keller fountain nearly 40 years ago, Halprin said "I hope this will help us live together as a community, both here and all over this planet Earth."

 

Those words are as true today as they were then.