Lake Oswego

Lake Oswego, Clackamas County, Oregon, United States
category: boundary — type: administrative — OSM: relation 186576

Items with no match found in OSM

8 items

The Marylhurst Art Gym (Q7750509)
item type: art gallery
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Art Gym is a nonprofit, noncollecting contemporary arts exhibition space at Marylhurst University in Marylhurst, Oregon near Portland, United States. The Art Gym is devoted to the artwork of the Pacific Northwest supporting retrospectives, mid-career surveys, experimental, and large-scale exhibitions. Since 1980, The Art Gym, has shown the work of more than 300 artists, produced more than 80 exhibition catalogs, and sponsored numerous artist roundtables and public forums.

website: http://www.artgym.marylhurst.edu/

West Portland Park (Q7986285)
item type: neighborhood
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

West Portland Park is a neighborhood in the Southwest section of Portland, Oregon. It lies between SW 53rd Ave. in the west and SW 35th Ave. in the east, and I-5 in the north and SW Stephenson St. (Portland city limits) in the south. (Two small sections extend further south, a parcel at the end of SW 47th Ave. and the "Kerr Site" between SW 39th Ave. and SW 37th Ave., following irregularities in Portland's southern border.) South of SW Pomona St., the western border is SW 49th Ave. The neighborhood borders Crestwood and Far Southwest to the west, Multnomah to the north, Markham and Arnold Creek to the east, and the city of Lake Oswego to the south.

USGS GNIS ID: 1136890

Angkor I (Q16251249)
item type: sculpture
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Angkor I is an outdoor stainless steel sculpture by Lee Kelly, located at Millennium Plaza Park in Lake Oswego, Oregon, in the United States. The 1994 sculpture stands 14 feet (4.3 m) tall and weighs 1,000 pounds (450 kg), and was influenced by his visit to Southeast Asia one year prior. In 2010, Angkor I appeared in an exhibition of Kelly's work at the Portland Art Museum. In 2011, it was installed at Millennium Plaza Park on loan from the Portland-based Elizabeth Leach Gallery. The Arts Council of Lake Oswego began soliciting donations in 2013 in an attempt to keep the sculpture as part of the city's permanent public art collection, Gallery Without Walls. The fundraising campaign was successful; donations from more than 40 patrons, including major contributions from the Ford Family Foundation and the Oregon Arts Commission, made purchase of the sculpture possible. Angkor I has been called a "recognizable icon" and a "gateway" to the park's lake.

Westside Christian High School (Q7989679)
item type: high school
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Westside Christian High School is a private Christian High School located in Tigard, Oregon, United States.

website: http://www.wchsonline.org/

Oregon Route 43 (Q2494488)
item type: state highway
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Oregon Route 43 is an Oregon state highway that runs between the cities of Oregon City and Portland, mostly along the western flank of the Willamette River. While it is technically known by the Oregon Department of Transportation as the Oswego Highway No. 3 (see Oregon highways and routes), on maps it is referred to by its route number or by the various street names it has been given.

George Rogers House (Q5544013)
item type: single-family detached home
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

George Rogers House is a private home in Lake Oswego, Oregon, United States. Located at the corner of Durham Street and Wilbur Street, the house was the home of George Rogers, who donated the land to the City of Lake Oswego that became George Rogers Park. During the time that Lake Oswego was an industrial town, the park was the location of Lake Oswego's China Town district. Built in 1929, the two-story craftsman house was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places listings in 1996.

NRHP reference number: 96001068

Brainstorm NW (Q4955927)
item type: magazine
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Brainstorm NW was a magazine published out of Lake Oswego, Oregon. Its motto was "The magazine for northwest decision makers" and it covered political issues, feature stories and art and entertainment. The magazine was politically conservative and published for 12 years starting in 1997 and ending February 2009.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 2009 disestablishments in Oregon, Defunct magazines of the United States, Defunct political magazines
Lake Oswego Odd Fellows Hall (Q6477240)
item type: commercial building / fraternal hall
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Lake Oswego Odd Fellows Hall, in Lake Oswego, Oregon, was built in 1890. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. It served historically as a meeting hall of the local Independent Order of Odd Fellows chapter, which formed in 1888. It also has served as a specialty store and in other uses.

NRHP reference number: 79002042