The PPM sure was a great asset to the city. Maverick's, the sports bar located on the first floor, was where I had my first beer. I loved eating there because you can look right out on to the street and see the ever-present riff-raffs that you spoke of, bostonian. I dont know why, but I like seeing them, makes me more interested than when I was in burlington and all I saw were other college kids or my professors walking the streets. It is also terrible that the public market is closing because the condo tower planned for a block away will now have trouble marketing itself because other than the public market, that area of the city is plagued with crime and violence...not attractive to homebuyers, inother words, without the PPM. There is talk of the library expanding into the vacant space if their offer is acceptable to the corporation that just bought the building. Oh yeah, and the PPM will be survivng in a newer and smaller location right next to Henry VIII's beginning sometime soon. What is truly tragic is the fact that where the PPM building is located was originally a site designated for the construction of a 15-story office tower to be an addition to the maine bank and trust building on congress street. Now we have neither that nor the market. shame on you, portland!
I am glad you got to see so many of our attractions...victorian mansion, longfellow house, courthouse, custom house etc are always favorites for urban enthusiasts...I just didnt know how to explain them or how to get to them to you over the internet,,,so im glad you found them on your own. Portland High School is the second oldest public learning institution in the nation. In the basement there are still remains of the old concrete wall that used to separate the boys half from the girls hsalf.
The reason you saw so many historic homes in the area by the hospital is because in the 19th century a fire destroyed all of the older structures in the city and the rich women of the city (so the story goes) demanded their husbands build them new, sturdier brick homes on the west side of our peninsula. The closer to the western promenade you get, the bigger and more historic looking they get. sadly, in between the hospital and the western prom is a ghetto of 24,000 people per square mile where nothing but trouble goes down...there is this street called brackett street which parallels a school and there is always drug dealing, shootings, stabbing etc taking place there...sad for the children.
Im not sure what you mean by the studio deistrict...never heard of it. Unless you mean the "arts district" in which case you were in the wrong place. the arts district is along congress street from the triangular shaped building where congress and free streets split all the way down to the maine college of art. The area behind congress street as you head toward the old port is kind of a no-go zone with not much happening there except for a few night clubs and the civic center (if you can call that anything much at all).
What chain stores did you notice downtown? Subway? i think there is currently a ban against all chain restaurants and chain outlet stores downtown (they're all out at the maine mall in south portland instead, because the city realizes no one wants to come to portland and see what they already have in their own city) so i dont know how subway snuck in, or dunkin donuts or quiznos for that matter.
the murals you spoke of are favorites of mine, too, id much rather see them than a blank wall. did you catch the whale wall on the waterfront by any chance? the portland reagency is nice, i agree.
for some reason, if you are from out of town everyone in portland is your best friend. very friendly and helpful. but if you are a local and wanna bum a smoke from someone on the street forget about it you'd have better luck winning the lottery. people in this city are assholes if you live here. some one cut me off yesterday and then flipped me off for no apparent reason, shortly before two guys pulled up next to me in bayside at a traffic light and asked me what the F*** i was looking at once i turned to see what they were looking at (they were staring at me for like 30 seconds, i could see from the corner of my eye).
riff-raffs dont overwhelm the city in the summer, but man oh man you should see the place in the winter.
I am glad that you think we have a downtown that survived urban renewal, it shows how good of a job we did at hiding the fact that exactly the opposit is true. Franklin arterial which lets into the city from I-295, cut through old italian working class neighborhoods, forever displacing one of the most culturally significant areas of the city. and our downtown (congress square, near henry VIII's) used to not have more than one high rise before the 1950s, and not more than two before the 1980s. There were olf trolly tracks along congress street that have been paved over, and the two or three tall buildings between downtown and the old port replaced some really historic structures, im not sure what the library replaced, but it is being replaced itself in about a year with a new more modern exterior and a cafe.
I like the fact that you called us sister cities with providence, the fact that an outsider has that perception of us means we are headed in the right direction, in my mind. Also, speaking of our welcoming urban fabric, the city is currently in the process of transforming the industrial section of town that you have to drive through from the interstate to downtown into a new urban gateway with parks and high rises. should be interesting to see how it turns out. anyhow, glad you enjoyed your trip, post some pics when you get a chancem im looking forward to them.