Clatsop Butte Park
Public asset records for this park are shown as a transparency layer. Itemized repair costs remain pending until Portland Parks & Recreation provides verified estimates.
Real ways to help Clatsop Butte Park and parks like it. This site does not process donations; every link below goes to an official giving or volunteering channel.
City-published park details
Clatsop Butte Park on Portland.gov
A Basic Earthquake Emergency Communication Node (pronounced beacon) is a place to go in Portland after a major earthquake to ask for emergency assistance if phone service is down, or report severe damage or injury. More information can be found on the Basic Earthquake Emergency Communication Node page.
The Clatsop Butte Trail is an interim 8’ wide wood chip path that gently meanders atop a butte within the City of Portland while offering grand views of downtown Portland, Mt. Hood, Mt. Adams and Mount St. Helens. The project work included a 0.6-mile long wood chip trail using ADA engineered wood chips, a park site sign, trail signs and two benches located to take advantage of the great views. Project Partners Pleasant Valley Neighborhood Association
Park hours: 5:00am-midnight
All dogs must be leashed in this park.
Assessment dates are copied from the public Parks Amenities layer. Old dates mean this source does not publish a newer assessment for that asset, not that we have confirmed no newer internal inspection exists. PP&R does not publish itemized repair costs, so this ledger shows needs without dollar figures.
Public data does not currently flag repair candidates for this park. Additional PP&R maintenance exports can be added without changing the page structure.
https://parks.portlandciviclab.org/parks/clatsop-butte-park-925?utm_source=park_qr&utm_medium=sign&utm_campaign=park_925
The public asset layer includes `PictureID` and `Hyper_pic`, but those values point to PP&R internal file-share paths, not public image URLs. Asset-level inspection photos need a PP&R export or public ArcGIS attachments before this app can render them.
Public photo from the official Portland.gov park page