KING · PORTLAND

King

Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods

10 spots to discover in this neighborhood 5,900 residents · 0.56 sq mi

“Where Alberta Avenue meets the community”

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NEIGHBORHOOD IDENTITY

What King Is Known For

“Where Alberta Avenue meets the community”

“Where Alberta Avenue meets the community”

— King, Portland

About

King

King neighborhood straddles Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard (historically Union Avenue) and takes its name from Amos King, who received a land claim in the area in the 1850s. Like neighboring Humboldt and Boise, King was part of the original City of Albina and developed rapidly after the 1883 completion of the transcontinental railroad. By the early 20th century, the neighborhood was home to working-class families and a growing commercial strip along what would become MLK Blvd.

King intersects the Alberta Arts District at its western gateway — where NE Alberta Street meets NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd — placing the neighborhood at the cultural heart of North/Northeast Portland. Alberta Street is among Portland's most celebrated commercial corridors: a two-mile stretch of independent galleries, boutiques, restaurants, and music venues that hosts the famous Last Thursday art walk every month. Peninsula Park, located just to the west of King's boundary in Piedmont, is nonetheless the neighborhood's civic anchor.

Today King is celebrated as one of Portland's most ethnically and economically diverse neighborhoods. The Portland Playhouse community theater and Alberta Abbey multi-use music venue both operate here, contributing to a genuine live-arts scene. The neighborhood is extremely bikeable (Bike Score 97), and the MLK Blvd bus corridor connects residents directly to downtown Portland and the Lloyd District.

Boundaries: Bounded by N Ainsworth St to the north, NE 15th Ave to the east, NE Fremont St to the south, and N Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd to the west. Adjacent to Humboldt (north), Concordia/Vernon (east), Sabin/Irvington (south), and Boise/Eliot (west).

The Vibe

What King Feels Like

Historic, central, evolving inner-Northeast

King is an inner-Northeast residential neighborhood with deep community roots and a mix of older homes, longstanding institutions, and newer development. It has a walkable, urban character and sits close to some of the city's liveliest commercial corridors.

The neighborhood carries a strong cultural legacy and a palpable sense of history, even as it continues to change, with residents drawn by its central location and connection to surrounding districts.

History

How King Came To Be

The King neighborhood, named for the King School and ultimately for Martin Luther King Jr., developed as a residential district in inner Northeast Portland during the early twentieth century. For much of the century it was a center of the city's African American community, a role it shared with the adjacent Albina-area neighborhoods.

King's commercial life centered on corridors including Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and the portion of Alberta Street within its bounds, which were historically anchors of Black-owned business and community institutions. The neighborhood endured the disinvestment, redlining, and disruption that affected the broader Albina district through the mid twentieth century.

In recent decades King has undergone significant change and gentrification, with rising property values and new development reshaping a historically Black neighborhood, a transformation that remains central to its identity and ongoing community conversations.

Character

What Defines King

MLK Jr. Boulevard

A major commercial corridor that anchors the neighborhood and reflects its central role in Northeast Portland.

Community legacy

King has long been a center of Portland's African American community, with deep institutional and cultural roots.

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Landmarks

Notable Places in King

Peninsula Park Rose Garden icon

Peninsula Park Rose Garden

700 N Rosa Parks Way

Portland's first public rose garden (1913) with more than 8,900 rose plants; also Portland's first community center.

Alberta Abbey icon

Alberta Abbey

126 NE Alberta St

Restored 1909 church now serving as a multi-use venue for live music, comedy, and community events.

Portland Playhouse icon

Portland Playhouse

602 NE Prescott St

Professional community theater producing nationally recognized productions in a converted church.

Alberta Arts District Gateway icon

Alberta Arts District Gateway

NE Alberta St & MLK Blvd

Western entrance to Portland's most vibrant arts and culture street corridor.

Getting Around

King

Schools

  • Martin Luther King Jr. School

    Portland Public Schools PK-8 in the King neighborhood.

Real Estate

Homes & Architecture in King

Housing is largely early-twentieth-century single-family homes interspersed with apartments and a growing share of new infill and multifamily development.

Craftsman bungalow Old Portland four-square Modern infill Multifamily

Businesses in King

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SIGNATURE FEATURE

Hidden Gems in King

Highly rated. Under the radar. The spots locals know about but tourists don't.

Only 5 sponsorship spots in King

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Sources

Portland.gov

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