ABOUT DISTRICT 3

District 3 covers most of inner SE Portland. Its northern boundary is roughly I-84 and NE Sandy Blvd, its eastern boundary is roughly I-205 and SE 82nd Blvd, its southern boundary is the Portland city line and parts of SE Holgate Blvd, and the western boundary is SE César E. Chávez Blvd and the Willamette River.

High Schools

Benson
Cleveland
Franklin
Marshall Campus
McDaniel

Bridges

Earl Blumenauer Bicycle and Pedestrian Bridge
Tillikum Crossing

Entertainment

Aladdin Theater
Avalon Theatre
Bagdad Theatre and Pub
Clinton Street Theater
Doug Fir Lounge
Hawthorne Theatre
Revolution Hall

Food Cart Pods

Cartopia
Hawthorne Asylum
Portland Mercado
Hinterland Food Carts

Neighborhoods

Brentwood-Darlington
Brooklyn
Buckman
Creston-Kenilworth
Foster-Powell
Hosford-Abernethy
Kerns
Laurelhurst
Madiston South
Montavilla
Mt. Tabor
Mt. Scott-Arleta
Richmond
Rose City Park
Roseway
South Tabor
Sunnyside
Woodstock

Local Icons

Distillery Row
The Grotto
Hippo Hardware
Le Pigeon
Movie Madness
Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI)
Oregon Rail Heritage Center
Peacock Lane
Quarterworld

Parks

Burnside Skatepark
Eastbank Esplanade
Laurelhurst Park
Lone Fir Pioneer Cemetery
Mt. Tabor Park

Elementary Schools

Abernethy
Arleta
Atkinson
Buckman
Clark
Creston
Glencoe
Lee
Lewis
Marysville
Richmond
Rose City Park
Scott
Vestal
Whitman
Woodmere
Woodstock

K-8 Schools

Bridger
Da Vinci Arts
Holladay Center
Laurelhurst
Sunnyside
Winterhaven

Middle Schools

Harrison Park
Kellogg
Lane
Mt. Tabor
Roseway Heights
Sellwood
Youngson

FIND YOUR DISTRICT!

What City Council district do you live in? If you live in the City of Portland, put your address into the map and find out what district you live in and which candidates you can vote for!

Remember: you can vote for your top six candidates in each district due to the new ranked-choice voting system! You do not have to live in Portland or in District 3 in order to donate to or volunteer for Angelita’s campaign.

Map data and map tool courtesy of the City of Portland, the Oregon Metro Data Resource Center, and The Oregonian.