Highways past, highways yet to be

I found myself in Depoe Bay last week. As one does in sleepy coastal towns, I spent hours in the antique shops that seem to make up half of the local businesses. Most of the treasures were out of my ranges of price or interest, but there was a shelf littered with old gas station maps in one of the antique malls and I picked out a half dozen old maps of Portland and Seattle for a buck each.

The Portland maps in particular are neat, because they predate the freeway removal efforts that came to dramatically affect how Portland’s downtown developed. In the maps Harbor drive still consumes the west bank waterfront. They also date to a transitional period when many of the highways that seem to have been there forever were only beginning to carve their destructive path through the city’s fabric. The 405 and 26 are dotted double lines that end halfway and the Fremont bridge is nameless, denoted only as “proposed”.

Below are excerpts from the maps detailing the downtown area. They are in order from oldest (1968) to most recent (1970). There’s a lot of detail there, let me know in a comment what else you see that has changed in the intervening forty years!

Union 76, 1968:

Atlantic Richfield Company (better known as Arco), 1969

Chevron, 1970

Some more reading about the removal of Harbor drive and other events that shaped Portland’s core:

Removing Freeways – Restoring Cities: Portland, OR Harbor Drive

Portland’s Harbor Drive

How to Slay a Highway: Notes on the Mt. Hood Freeway and Harbor Drive

Vintage Portland posts about Harbor Drive

On the road in Portland

I’m far from an advocate of the automobile as a primary mode of transportation, but I still love me some vintage cars. Here’s some neat ones I’ve spotted in the wild.

T3 Volkswagen bus with a woody kit… As far as I know there wasn’t any kind of option for this (though you could get factory woody kits on American cars up into the 80s; there’s a factory turbocharged, woody kit, K-car wagon in one of the Portland Pick-n-pull lots). Someone put a lot of effort into this thing.

1951(pretty sure anyway) Chevrolet pickup with a utility bed. Digging the vintage visor.

Kinda doubt the bed is as old as the rest of the truck but the period tail lights are a nice touch.