LENTS · PORTLAND

Lents

East Portland Coalition of Neighborhoods

37 spots to discover in this neighborhood

“FoPo. The triangle hood between Powell, Foster, and Holgate.”

~20,156 residents · SE Uplift District 3 · TriMet bus 14 Hawthorne/Foster. Bus 17. Bike-priority on Holgate + Mt. Scott greenways. MAX Green Line nearby at Lents.

  • Triangle hood
  • Bike-friendly
  • Up-and-coming
  • Walkable corridor
  • Eclectic eats

LIVE ACTIVITY

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  • Auto Repair 26
  • Shops 10
  • General Contractor 2

NEIGHBORHOOD IDENTITY

What Lents Is Known For

“FoPo. The triangle hood between Powell, Foster, and Holgate.”

Foster corridor
Triangle loop
Local evening

“FoPo. The triangle hood between Powell, Foster, and Holgate.”

— Lents, Portland

The Vibe

What Lents Feels Like

Historic, diverse, working-class town center

Lents has a gritty, authentic, working-class character with deep roots and a strong sense of community identity. It blends an old town center with diverse small businesses, community gardens, and natural areas, giving it a distinctly down-to-earth feel.

The neighborhood carries a resilient, community-driven spirit, with longtime residents and newer arrivals invested in its parks, market, and revitalizing town center.

History

How Lents Came To Be

Lents is a historic neighborhood in Southeast Portland that began as an independent community long before it became part of the city. Founded in the nineteenth century around the homestead of settler Oliver P. Lent, the area grew as its own town center with a distinct main street, served in the early twentieth century by an interurban rail line connecting it to Portland and the Mount Hood region.

Lents was annexed into Portland in the early twentieth century but retained a semi-independent, small-town character for decades. In the later twentieth century the neighborhood faced disinvestment, and the construction of Interstate 205 cut directly through the community, displacing homes and reshaping its core. These pressures gave Lents a reputation as an overlooked, working-class corner of the city.

In recent years Lents has seen renewed attention and investment, including efforts centered on the Lents Town Center, the weekly farmers market, and the restoration of natural areas along Johnson Creek. The neighborhood remains one of Portland's most diverse, with significant immigrant and working-class communities, even as it navigates the pressures of change.

Character

What Defines Lents

Lents Town Center

The historic commercial core anchors the neighborhood and has been the focus of revitalization, hosting the popular Lents International Farmers Market.

Johnson Creek and Springwater

Restored natural areas along Johnson Creek and the Springwater Corridor trail give Lents access to green space and a regional cycling and walking route.

Cultural diversity

Lents is one of Portland's most diverse neighborhoods, with large immigrant and working-class communities reflected in its businesses and market.

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Landmarks

Notable Places in Lents

Lents Park icon

Lents Park

A large neighborhood park with ball fields, a playground, and Walker Stadium, home of the Portland Pickles baseball team.

Springwater Corridor icon

Springwater Corridor

A regional rail-trail for walking and biking that runs through the Lents neighborhood.

Getting Around

Lents

Schools

  • Lent School

    A Portland Public Schools K-8 school serving the Lents neighborhood of Southeast Portland.

Outdoors

Parks & Greenspaces in Lents

Lents Park

A large neighborhood park with sports fields, a playground, and the Walker Stadium baseball facility.

Real Estate

Homes & Architecture in Lents

Housing includes older early-century homes, postwar houses, and newer infill and multifamily development, historically more affordable than inner Southeast.

Old Portland farmhouse Craftsman bungalow Mid-century ranch Modern infill

Explore

Discovery Paths

Three ways to experience Lents.

Foster corridor

  1. 1 Small cafes on SE Foster Rd
  2. 2 Eclectic eateries (Stella Taco, Pieper Cafe)
  3. 3 Bike-friendly side streets

Triangle loop

  1. 1 Foster Powell Park
  2. 2 Local restaurants
  3. 3 Mt. Scott / Holgate bike greenway

Local evening

  1. 1 Bar Carlo
  2. 2 Pieper Cafe
  3. 3 Stella Taco

Civic Infrastructure

The associations, meetings and shared resources that hold Lents together.

Active associations

  • Lents Neighborhood Association (LNA) neighborhood assn

    Lents: SE Foster Rd corridor; bordered by I-205 (east), Lents Park area (west), Mt. Scott (north), Johnson Creek (south)

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Businesses in Lents

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Sources

Portland.gov · Population (20,156) from Wikipedia (Census 2010).

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