Tag: PBOT

Pavement Repairs on SE 85th Part of Sidewalk Infill

On January 27th, contractors working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation laid new asphalt along a segment of SE 85th Avenue behind the Fubonn Shopping Center, temporarily closing the street to through traffic. This work is part of the Jade and Montavilla Multimodal Improvements Project, which created sidewalks from SE Division Street to SE Powell Boulevard along SE 85th Avenue. This segment was previously only partially paved with a pot-hole-laden gravel shoulder. Now cyclists, pedestrians, and drivers have a consistently reliable north-south route away from the busy 82nd Avenue main street.

This repaving work between SE Clinton and Brooklyn Streets adds to previous work that created new sidewalks on SE Clinton Street from SE 84th to 87th Avenues, with crews converting the existing gravel road to a modern street surface from SE 84th Place to 87th Avenue. West of 82nd Avenue, SE Tibbetts Street is receiving sidewalk infill, with some blocks lacking consistent pedestrian pavement down to SE 78th Avenue. Most sidewalks in the project area will receive updated Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant curb ramps.

Construction site featuring two multi-story buildings with yellow siding, blue tarps on the roof, and exposed windows. Heavy machinery and building materials are visible in the foreground, along with a red car parked nearby.
40-unit Jade Apartments at 2905 SE 89th Avenue

The new street infrastructure connects to a secondary entrance to the Fubonn Shopping Center, which contractors constructed in April 2025, providing access to the east side of the grocery store and retail site from SE 85th Avenue. Designers located the new entrance on the northeastern corner of the shopping complex. These updates were part of a long-term plan to improve multimodal access in a section of Portland’s Jade District that has the capacity for significant housing development on large, underdeveloped properties. Crews are currently wrapping up external construction on the 40-unit Jade Apartments at 2905 SE 89th Avenue, and Oregon Metro recently purchased a 1.46-acre property at the intersection of SE 90th Place and SE 89th Avenue for housing development.

Construction workers operating heavy machinery on a street, with a large truck parked nearby and bare trees lining the sidewalk.
Crews laying new pavement along SE 85th Ave connecting the roadway between new sidewalks

Other developers are similarly looking to increase housing density in the area as private and public projects create the infrastructure needed to support the new people walking, driving, and rolling through this area bordered by SE Division Street, SE 82nd Avenue, SE Powell Boulevard, and Interstate-205. Look for work to be completed on SE 85th Avenue in the coming weeks, along with increased usage as people discover this improved route in the Jade District.


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Crews Complete 1st Half of NE Halsey Mini-roundabout

Crews recently completed half of a new mini-roundabout along NE Halsey Street as they work to reopen NE 80th and NE 81st Avenues to car traffic. Contractors working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation installed underground stormwater management pipes that connect with relocated catch basins as part of this street reconfiguration, which includes reconstructed sidewalks and curbs. NE Halsey remains open for east-west through traffic.

Map of a roundabout intersection featuring NE Halsey Street, NE 80th Street, and NE 81st Street, alongside the I-84 Eastbound off-ramp.
PBOT provided illustration showing the NE Halsey, NE 80th, and 81st junction with mini roundabout

This work is part of the NE Halsey Street (68th to 92nd Avenues) – Safety and Access to Transit Project. It builds on substantial street safety improvements undertaken in 2024, when roadwork reconfigured NE Halsey Street between 68th and 81st Avenues, removing a lane in each direction while adding painted buffered bike lanes and a center turn lane. In this section of the project, the new mini-roundabout at NE 80th Avenue and Halsey Street will address a notoriously confusing intersection, located just before one of the three NE Halsey Street freeway overpasses. Renderings posted show that people will have access to high-visibility pedestrian and bike crossings. Rebuilt and extended corners will also shorten the crossing distance, and new sidewalk segments will guide users to pathways that lead to transit connections. When contractors complete work at NE 81st Avenue, cyclists will have access to a bi-directional buffered bike track on the south side of NE Halsey Street, extending up to NE 92nd Avenue.

Construction site showing orange traffic cones, wooden forms, and marker flags in a partially paved area during sunset.
NE 80th Ave at NE Halsey looking east on January 15, 2026

PBOT chose this intersection design to reduce crashes while keeping traffic flowing. The roundabout will slow drivers and reduce conflict points, without requiring drivers to come to a complete stop unless a cyclist, pedestrian, or other vehicle has the right of way. The infrastructure should have a lower lifecycle cost because it does not rely on electric traffic signal equipment. Buses and fire trucks can easily drive through the center of the roundabout to make tight turns when needed, improving safety without impacting critical travel routes.

Construction site with heavy machinery, traffic cones, and barriers blocking the sidewalk and road.
NE 81st Ave looking northwest on January 15, 2026

The next phase of work will restore the road surface around the new raised concrete infrastructure so eastbound traffic can travel around the southern half of the mini-roundabout and access NE 80th and NE 81st Avenues. Then, contractors can build the northern half of the mini-roundabout. Crews will continue to work at the site from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. All driveways on these blocks will remain open for people traveling to or from the worksite. However, street users should anticipate detours and follow all instructions from crews working in the area.

A construction site featuring a newly poured concrete sidewalk, traffic cones, and road construction barriers in front of a commercial building.
NE 80th Ave at NE Halsey looking east on January 23, 2026

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Reconstructed Sidewalk Corners Planned on NE Glisan

Crews working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) will update sidewalk corners along NE Glisan Street as part of the planned NE Glisan Pave and Paint Project, which will use pavement maintenance to restripe and reconfigure the roadway from NE 82nd to 92nd avenues. Ahead of the planned summer work, contractors will begin rebuilding crossing points to Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant standards for curb ramps and updating stormwater catch basin placement to match the new ramps and better handle rainwater runoff.

A sidewalk marked with white chalk lines and symbols, resembling a hopscotch game, alongside a grassy area and a playground in the background.
Future site of mid-block curb ramp at NE 83rd Ave leading to Montavilla Park playground

Recently added pavement markings at the “T” intersection of NE Glisan Street and 83rd Avenue indicate the placement of new curb ramps at the south corners and two mid-block ramps on the north alignment for the unmarked crosswalk. Montavilla Park and the Multnomah University campus create a long, uninterrupted block on the northern edge of NE Glisan. Up to now, anyone crossing the busy east-west roadway had limited curb ramp options. PBOT will need to enhance most crossing points along the work site that are not already updated to modern standards before major roadwork takes place, as the repaving project repairs the cuts made by the sidewalk corner and stormwater system installation at the street’s edge. People can expect that work to take place this Spring.

Sidewalk with chalk markings and numbers, adjacent to a road lined with trees and shrubs.

PBOT planners anticipate that much of the in-traffic lane work will take place in the Summer of 2026, when crews use heavy equipment to grind down old asphalt and spread a new layer of aggregate bound with bitumen to create a smoother driving surface. Contractors will repaint the lane markings in a new configuration to support painted buffered-bike lanes along the curb for much of the project length. This section of NE Glisan Street implemented alternating outer lanes used for parking or an auxiliary travel lane, depending on the time of day. Collisions occurred on this street where cars were parked, but drivers may have assumed the outer lane was clear. PBOT engineers anticipate that removing that conflict point will yield significant safety improvements with minimal impact on vehicle throughput. This work will also increase safer bike and pedestrian infrastructure in the area this year, while later project work can build on the new configuration with hardened street elements for greater safety.

Proposed cross-section diagram for 80th Ave to I-205 segment, showing lane widths for vehicles and bike lanes.
Illustration of the existing four travel and one turn lane over proposed configuration from PBOT’s NE Glisan St – 82nd Avenue Multimodal Safety and Access 2028-2030 RFFA Project Factsheet. Courtesy Oregon Metro

This stretch of NE Glisan received an Oregon Metro Regional Flexible Funds Allocation grant to add physically protected bike infrastructure sometime in 2030. The work included in the Northeast Glisan St: 82nd Avenue Multimodal Safety and Access project would require lane reconfiguration and repainting. PBOT Planners feel that this 2026 road surface maintenance presents an opportunity to save public funds by reconfiguring the street during the post-asphalt-work painting process ahead of the larger safety improvement project. By doing road marking work now in the new configuration, post-repaving, PBOT can save taxpayer funds by lessening the reconfiguration costs four years later.

A suburban street view showing parked cars on both sides, with a street sign for 'E Glisan' visible. Trees and houses line the street, and a cloudy sky is overhead.
NE 83rd Ave looking south from NE Glisan

Travelers should anticipate seeing more pavement markings on the sidewalk along NE Glisan Street from NE 82nd to 92nd avenues as planners ready the area for the rebuilt pedestrian and stormwater infrastructure. People walking in the area should anticipate detours when demolition and construction work start in the spring. Drivers in the area should expect temporary outer lane closures on NE Glisan during construction, followed by permanent outer lane closures after crews paint new lane markings. Details are available on the project website.


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City Gravel Street Service Returns to Montavilla

Starting in the middle of December, Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) maintenance crews will return to the Montavilla area to grade and re-gravel unpaved residential streets as part of the City’s Gravel Street Service enacted in 2018. The program rotates crews on a three-year cycle between areas of the city, working from November through February, mostly on weekdays, from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. PBOT last restored the gravel streets in this area during the 2022-2023 season. However, this time, workers have one less street to service since contractors working for PBOT paved NE Everett Street from NE 76th Avenue to NE 78th Avenue, reopening the roadway and new sidewalks in September 2023.

Map showing unpaved residential streets marked in a Portland area, indicating locations for maintenance by the Portland Bureau of Transportation.
Portland Gravel Street Service 2025-2026 Map

Portland has over 50 miles of gravel streets, which the City is not obligated to maintain because they were never built to the required standards for transfer of responsibility. Those neglected streets are in poor condition but remain part of the public right-of-way. PBOT offers the service without cost to adjacent residents. This program aims to keep the street grid connected without forcing the costly paving of streets that often require property owners to contribute substantial funds to a Local Improvement District. The Fixing Our Streets program is funded by a voter-approved 10-cent-per-gallon gas tax that Portlanders renewed for an additional four years in the May 2024 election. Residents living along the unmaintained gravel roads will receive a letter informing them when road crews will start work. City staff will drop off door hangers and “No Parking” signs a few days before work begins. Parking in the work area may be limited, and traffic restrictions are often necessary.

A side view of a Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) maintenance truck parked on a residential street.

PBOT’s Gravel Street Service crews will fill ruts and potholes or completely regrade and gravel streets to create a smoother surface. In severe cases, workers need to remove the top layer of gravel down below the potholes. Then lay and compact new gravel on the flat base just created. However, project leaders will assess each street’s need and may not place new gravel. Most segments take about two days, but could take longer depending on the length and condition of the road. Nearby residents should prepare for dust and noise at times. However, people will always have access to their homes during the project. Crews will start the 2025-2026 graveling season in the Richmond, Hosford-Abernethy, Buckman, and Sunnyside area, before moving northward to Southeast neighborhoods north of Division Street, including Montavilla.

PBOT asks residents and drivers to look for crews working in the roadway and obey instructions on signs and from flaggers while they are re-graveling. Although the project is scheduled during business hours, in some cases, they may need to do some weekend work. Despite any short-term inconvenience, the outcome is a more functional street that should hold up for another three years until crews return in 2028.


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NE Halsey Roundabout Construction

Crews began work at the site of a new mini-roundabout along NE Halsey Street on Monday, December 8th, blocking NE 80th and NE 81st Avenues to car traffic. NE Halsey remains open for east-west through traffic, with some delays while flaggers pause vehicle flow to allow heavy construction equipment to navigate the in-street job site. Contractors working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) are installing underground stormwater management pipes to connect with relocated catch basins as part of this street reconfiguration, which should improve the flow of rainwater runoff in the area. Work will then progress to sidewalks and curbs.

Construction site for a mini-roundabout on NE Halsey Street with heavy machinery and traffic cones, alongside an office building.

This work is part of the NE Halsey Street (68th to 92nd Avenues) – Safety and Access to Transit Project. It builds on substantial street safety improvements undertaken in 2024, when roadwork reconfigured NE Halsey Street between 68th and 81st Avenues, removing a lane in each direction while adding painted buffered bike lanes and a center turn lane. In this section of the project, the new mini-roundabout at NE 80th Avenue and Halsey Street will address a notoriously confusing intersection, located just before one of the three NE Halsey Street freeway overpasses. Renderings posted show that people will have access to high-visibility pedestrian and bike crossings. Rebuilt and extended corners will also shorten the crossing distance, and new sidewalk segments will guide users to pathways that lead to transit connections. When contractors complete work at NE 81st Avenue, cyclists will have access to a bi-directional buffered bike track on the south side of NE Halsey Street, extending up to NE 92nd Avenue.

Map layout of a new mini-roundabout at NE Halsey Street, showing traffic flow and blocked NE 80th and 81st Avenues.
PBOT provided illustration showing the NE Halsey, NE 80th, and 81st junction with mini roundabout

PBOT chose this intersection design to reduce crashes while keeping traffic flowing. The roundabout will slow drivers and reduce conflict points, without requiring drivers to come to a complete stop unless a cyclist, pedestrian, or other vehicle has the right of way. The infrastructure should have a lower lifecycle cost because it does not rely on electric traffic signal equipment. Buses and fire trucks can easily drive through the center of the roundabout to make tight turns when needed, improving safety without impacting critical travel routes.

Road closed sign at a construction site, with barricades and construction materials visible on a wet road.
NE 81st Ave closed near NE Halsey St

Project planners anticipate up to four weeks of construction during this phase, with crews working from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. All driveways on these blocks will remain open for people traveling to or from the worksite. However, street users accustomed to accessing NE 80th and NE 81st Avenues at NE Halsey Street should anticipate detours and follow all instructions by crews working in the area.


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Traffic Citation Camera Equipment Returns to 82nd Ave

Crews recently replaced the speed and red-light enforcement cameras on 82nd Avenue after Portland City officials switched vendors this summer. The pole-mounted equipment appears inactive, with the Tuffak polycarbonate lens covers still donning its logoed protective film. However, drivers can anticipate the system’s activation, with a period of warning letters issued before the City switches to issuing citations for excessive speeds or failing to stop for a red traffic signal.

Nov 18, 2025, equipment installation on NE 82nd Ave facing E Burnside St (Weston Ruter)

Around the beginning of August 2025, crews working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) removed the newer intersection safety camera systems the City of Portland installed along 82nd Avenue the previous year. In summer 2024, crews installed new cameras along 82nd Avenue and in other areas of the City to deter speeding and running red lights in crash-prone areas. The camera system installed at 82nd Avenue at E Burnside Street monitored an intersection where a speeding vehicle killed an area resident in October 2023. Cameras at NE 82nd Avenue and Glisan Street monitored multiple directions of traffic where a driver hit and killed a wheelchair user in April 2023. The equipment removal was not an effort to reduce automated enforcement but instead supported a citywide effort to replace camera equipment with newer systems developed by NovoaGlobal, making that company the sole supplier and operator of the City’s speed and intersection safety camera program.

Left image shows original equipment on NE 82nd Ave near E Burnside St and then post removal condition (Jacob Loeb)

The City had 32 camera positions before the vendor switch, and the Portland Police Bureau operates two mobile Traffic Division speed enforcement vans that the City will also upgrade with NovoaGlobal equipment. For some City leaders, that is too few to reduce risky driving behavior adequately, and they advocate expanding the program. This summer, Portland City Councilor Steve Novick said in a KOIN News interview that he is interested in emulating other jurisdictions with fewer traffic fatalities per capita that have substantially more cameras in use. However, some residents oppose the automated cameras used in issuing citations. Objections voiced include concerns about excessive government surveillance, fining drivers instead of building infrastructure that encourages safety, and the inequitable distribution of cameras across the City that could penalize poorer communities.

NovoaGlobal equipment on NE 82nd Ave facing E Burnside St (Jacob Loeb)

The City will add three intersections to the safety camera network as part of the vendor switch-out work, increasing PBOT’s tools to support its goal of eliminating vehicular-related deaths and serious injuries on city streets. Those locations include southbound monitoring on NE 82nd Avenue at Fremont Street and northbound NE 82nd Avenue at Klickitat Street near Glenhaven Park and Leodis V. McDaniel High School. Other nearby network expansions will focus on SE Powell Boulevard.

PBOT notes that incidents involving speeds above posted limits are a top contributing factor to deadly crashes across the Portland region. Additionally, ignoring traffic signals causes a significant number of crashes. Some street safety advocates in favor of citation-based deterrents stress the importance of changing harmful road behavior through a variety of methods, including fines. Camera citations are not the only solution needed for safer streets. However, a majority of surveyed Portland residents support the expanded use of traffic cameras.

NovoaGlobal equipment on NE 82nd Ave facing NE Glisan St (Jacob Loeb)

Opponents of automated camera-based systems worry about privacy implications that could track drivers across Portland and the danger that city budgets will become dependent on fines, favoring revenue growth over correcting harmful behavior. Rules on camera placement and revenue use can limit the potential for misuse. PBOT’s website indicates that the program will only retain video footage not used in a citation for 30 days. Additionally, State law requires municipalities to spend the money collected from speeding tickets to cover the program’s costs or to pay for safety improvements and programs on the High Crash Network.

Drivers in Portland can expect to see up to 35 cameras operational by the end of 2025 if installation crews keep to schedule. Motorists should anticipate system activation at any time and travel cautiously.

Correction: Updated to indicate Intersection safety cameras issue citations for speeding and red light running and removed yellow light running. PBOT notes that going through a yellow light in Oregon is a violation if you are able to stop prior to entering the intersection.


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A Tree-Lined Walk to School

Recently, crews working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) added a new line of street trees along NE 82nd Avenue adjacent to Glenhaven Park’s parking area. The new plantings occupy a 600-foot-long planting strip created by shifting the formerly curb-tight sidewalk west, closer to a mature tree line on the city park’s edge. This pedestrian update will improve the daily walk many schoolchildren take on their commute to Leodis V. McDaniel High School and Roseway Heights Middle School, eventually providing them with a tree-canopy-buffered pathway along a fast-paced road.

Parents of students walking along 82nd Avenue have expressed many concerns for safety over the years. The former State Highway has several long, uninterrupted blocks near McDaniel. Those stretches include two vehicle travel lanes in each direction, with no curbside parking to buffer sidewalk users from the heavy automotive flow. Updates to the public high school completed in September 2021 added wide sidewalks with a planting strip buffer between NE 82nd Avenue’s curb and the pedestrian zone. However, the school shares part of the frontage with Portland Parks & Recreation-owned property that was not updated in 2021. It featured narrow sidewalks pushed to the edge right next to the roadway, where wind can whip off passing vehicles and tire spray soaks walkers on rainy days.

A view of NE 82nd Avenue with a speed indicator sign showing 32 mph, a red truck parked on the side, and newly planted trees in the background.
Previous sidewalk’s curb tight alignment January 2023 (Jacob Loeb)

The sidewalk’s previous location close to the street did not seem necessary, with nearly 25 feet between the road’s edge and the tree line. Portland acquired the park in 1948 as a primarily open green space without sidewalks. In 82nd Avenue’s earlier years, it supported street parking until widening and left turn safety efforts removed parking along the road in favor of two travel lanes in each direction and a center turn lane. Aerial photos up to 1978 show a visible parking strip between the sidewalk and curb. The sidewalk’s curb-tight placement likely occurred after street widening shifted the curb west.

Aerial view of Leodis V. McDaniel High School and surrounding area, showing the school building, nearby sports field, and residential neighborhoods.
December 1957 Aerial view of Madison (now McDaniel) High School under construction with park visible (City Archives)

This sidewalk replacement project rectified a decades-old deficiency in pedestrian infrastructure around a park and school where residents value safe sidewalks. The improvement work is part of the Building a Better 82nd initiative, created to address deferred maintenance issues identified after the jurisdictional transfer of 82nd Avenue from the Oregon Department of Transportation to PBOT on June 1st, 2022. People can already use the set-back sidewalks, and as the trees mature, the pedestrian space should become a more comfortable place to walk to the park or school. NE 82nd Avenue construction in this area is ongoing with lane closures for raised median installations in some sections and sidewalk corner reconstruction. During working hours, pedestrians may need to cross the street to avoid work-site blockages. Drivers will retain access to at least one lane of travel in all directions.


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Sidewalk Network Grows on NE Halsey

Over the last several months, crews working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) have created new segments of sidewalk along NE Halsey Street between NE 84th and 92nd Avenues as part of the NE Halsey Street (68th to 92nd Avenues) – Safety and Access to Transit Project. This infrastructure work aims to enhance biking and walkability on the busy roadway, which was previously made hostile to non-automotive travel due to freeway construction projects decades ago. This long-anticipated update builds upon substantial street safety improvements undertaken in 2024, when roadwork reconfigured NE Halsey Street between 68th and 81st Avenues, removing a lane in each direction while adding painted buffered bike lanes and a center turn lane.

Construction site on NE Halsey Street with workers in safety vests and traffic cones, alongside residential houses.
Contractors finishing new curb cuts leading to driveways on NE Halsey

Although currently non-contiguous, the sidewalks will soon provide a consistent pedestrian walkway along NE Halsey Street from NE 92nd to the MAX light-rail and bus transfer station at 82nd Avenue. Cyclists will gain a bidirectional pathway on the south side of the overpass, continuing up NE Halsey Street with a connection via NE Jonesmore Street to the transit junction point on NE 82nd Avenue.

An illustration showing the design of a mini-roundabout at the intersection of NE 80th and Halsey Street, including details for sidewalk construction scheduled to begin in December.
PBOT provided illustration showing the NE Halsey Jonesmore junction with new bike track

In December, PBOT anticipates that crews will begin work on installing a small roundabout at NE 80th Avenue and Halsey Street to address a notoriously confusing intersection, located just before the east-most NE Halsey Street Bridge over I-84. Posted renderings show people will have access to high-visibility crossings for pedestrians and bikes. Rebuilt and extended corners will also shorten the crossing distance, and new sidewalk segments will guide users to pathways that lead to transit connections. When contractors complete work at NE 81st Avenue, cyclists will have access to a bi-directional buffered bike track on the south side of NE Halsey Street, extending up to NE 92nd Avenue. PBOT plans to remove some parking spaces on the south side of NE Halsey Street to accommodate the bike route east of NE 86th Avenue.

Illustration of a mini-roundabout at NE 80th and Halsey Street, showing road layout and planned sidewalk construction.
PBOT provided illustration showing the NE Halsey, NE 80th, and 81st junction with mini roundabout
Intersection view showing a newly constructed roundabout at NE 80th Avenue and Halsey Street, with completed curbs and lane markings; vehicles approaching a stop sign in the foreground.
NE Halsey and 81st junction looking east from NE 80th Ave

Contractors are actively installing new sidewalks, curbs, and driveways, with lane closures in place adjacent to the work site. One lane in each direction remains open to drivers and TriMet vehicles. Riders may need to board westbound bus service on NE Halsey at 90th (Stop ID 2459) and 86th (Stop ID 2457) from the street due to construction. PBOT anticipates minimal impact on vehicle traffic, and the Interstate 84 eastbound onramp remains open for drivers. People interested in following this project can subscribe to updates on the PBOT project website. Federal money, Transportation System Development funds, General Transportation Revenue, ODOT Bridge Program funds, and Bureau of Environmental Services funds are covering the $8,646,720 project costs.

A sign indicating the NE Halsey Street project, showing project details and timeline for improvements between 68th and 92nd Avenues, with a nearby bus stop.

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Stark and Washington Safety Project Open House

Portland transportation officials have begun public outreach and project development for the SE Stark and Washington Street Safety Project, with an expected groundbreaking in 2028. The streetscape improvement work will focus on the SE Stark and Washington one-way couplet, from 92nd to 108th Avenues, adding protected bike lanes with enhanced pedestrian crossing points and updates to transit stops. The Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) also plans to upgrade traffic signal systems at six intersections. Early design ideas consider reducing travel lanes while adding more street trees and improving pedestrian space, building on the work west of this project as part of the Jade and Montavilla Multimodal Improvements Project, which is already underway. An online Open House features detailed information on potential project elements, accompanied by a survey that will remain open through November 2025.

Map illustrating the SE Stark and Washington Street Safety Project, highlighting types of improvements such as protected bike lanes, signal upgrades, and enhanced bus stops.
Project area map courtesy PBOT

According to the posted project information, PBOT states that the four lanes of one-way traffic on both SE Stark and Washington currently accommodate approximately 2,800 vehicles per hour. However, traffic volumes during peak times do not exceed 1,700 vehicles per hour, resulting in the wide roadway being at 60% utilization. City traffic engineers consider 90% utilization on a roadway as “major congestion,” meaning these streets have excess capacity even for the Bureau’s projected 5 to 15% increase in area traffic by 2045. PBOT believes that this anticipated excess capacity will enable lane reconfigurations that reduce vehicle capacity without negatively impacting drive times beyond moderate congestion during peak usage periods. The street adjustments make way for adding curbside amenities such as concrete and parking-protected bike lanes, street trees, and shorter crosswalks.

Map indicating Vision Zero crash data along SE Stark and Washington Streets, featuring markers with numerical values representing crash incidents at various intersections.
PBOT provided graphic showing the number of serious injury crashes along the corridor from 2015 to 2022

Proposed bus platforms in the project area could receive bike lane updates similar to the ones created for the SE Division FX Bus Rapid Transit system. They may implement the same bike ramp system, which allows cyclists to travel over the extended nose of the rider loading area when not in use. This design enables the platform to extend out to the bus travel lane at a nearly level boarding height, while still allowing bike riders to maintain a relatively straight path unblocked by the transit vehicle shouldered at the stop. The area may also utilize bus-only lanes to keep buses running on time and increase transit reliability.

A section of SE Stark Street featuring newly designed curb extensions, marked bike lanes, and a bus stop. The sidewalk is wide with pedestrian crossing signage and street amenities, indicative of improvements aimed at enhancing safety for cyclists and pedestrians.
SE Division St FX Bus Rapid Transit platform with bike over lane (Jacob Loeb)

The project area includes two freeway passovers, and PBOT will need to maintain and add turn lanes required for Interstate 205 access ramps while implementing new safety features. Signal updates would replace several of the remaining cable-hung traffic lights with modern pole- and mast-arm-mounted signals that also support new bike signals. Updated signal control systems would utilize “pedestrian head start” timing to give pedestrians the walk signal several seconds ahead of vehicles, thereby reducing conflicts caused by both street users trying to enter the crosswalk at the same time. New curb extensions that push out into the parking lanes of an intersection will enhance pedestrian visibility while waiting to cross and reduce on-street crossing time. Those updated sidewalk corners will include curb ramps and pedestrian push buttons that comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) standards.

Illustration of proposed streetscape improvements for SE Stark and Washington streets, featuring enhanced bike lanes, pedestrian crossings, traffic signals, and urban landscaping.
Rendering of possible road configuration at SE Washington St and SE Stark St at 102nd Ave. Courtesy PBOT

PBOT expects the street reconfiguration to add more amenities for transit riders, pedestrians, and cyclists. However, drivers heading to destinations in the area will gain added on-street parking on SE Washington Street and SE Stark Street based on current early designs. Planners estimate that businesses could acquire approximately 47 additional parking spaces along this corridor under a Main Street configuration. Visible curbside parking and an expanded tree canopy will help attract visitors to the area and encourage property owners to reconfigure their street frontages, placing more structures closer to the sidewalk.

Map showing recommended improvements for the SE Stark and Washington Street Safety Project, including crossing, traffic safety, bike lane, and bus stop locations, along with nearby schools and parks.
Map from the July 2017 Growing Transit Communities Plan

Project funding for this work comes from multiple sources, including $5,332,000 from Metro’s Regional Flexible Fund Allocation (RFFA), $5,030,000 from Fixing Our Streets, and $727,000 from the Portland Clean Energy Community Benefits Fund (PCEF). General Transportation Revenues, primarily sourced from user-based fees, will contribute $511,629 for ADA Ramps and $200,000 from Quick Build funds.

PBOT invites individuals interested in learning more about the Stark and Washington Safety Project to visit the online Open House and then share their perspectives via the survey by the end of November 2025.


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New 82nd Ave Signal Allows Left onto SE Washington

Crews working with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) activated the new left-turn signal at SE 82nd Avenue and Washington Street on November 12th, allowing left turns at this high-traffic intersection for the first time in decades. This change is part of work underway on SE 82nd Avenue around the SE Stark Washington couplet, where PBOT added center lane medians with space for street trees and raised concrete turn lane separators.

View of SE 82nd Avenue featuring road construction with orange traffic barrels, a newly activated left-turn signal, and vehicles on the road.
New SE 82nd Ave left turn lane for southbound drivers wanting to head east on SE Washington St

The newly activated traffic light permits southbound drivers on 82nd Avenue to turn eastbound at a signal-controlled intersection where they previously needed to use an unsignalized intersection further south and navigate back to SE Washington Street. Alternatively, those motorists could head westbound on the one-way SE Stark and loop a block over to the one-way SE Washington Street, which travels eastbound. This change reduced the queue depth for northbound 82nd Avenue drivers turning west to accommodate the opposing traffic’s left turn. This compromise could create a more intuitive driving experience with well-defined left turns, road elements, and minimize the prior confusion some motorists experienced when using the one-way street couplet from 82nd Avenue.

Traffic signal at the intersection of SE 82nd Avenue and Washington Street, showing a new left-turn signal for southbound drivers.

Road crews recently completed raised center lane medians on SE 82nd Avenue north of SE Stark Street and south of SE Washington Street. These new medians provide protection for the new turn lane configuration between them and block the potential wrong-way left turns on the one-way streets. Tree wells, located in the center medians, enable the planting of up to ten new trees or other vegetation along the roadway, thereby increasing the urban tree canopy and reducing summer temperatures in the area. Cement masons finished the median concrete surface between the tree wells with red coloring and a brick pattern, which delivers a cost-effective and decorative aesthetic.

Close-up view of newly installed raised center lane medians on SE 82nd Avenue, featuring a textured red concrete surface and yellow painted edges, alongside road traffic.
New SE 82nd Ave raised center median north of Stark St with brick pattern treatment

Drivers can already use the new 82nd Avenue left turn signal to drive eastbound on SE Washington Street. PBOT will implement other signal improvements at the intersection, including bike and bus lights, as well as updates to some through traffic signals for safer right turns from eastbound Washington Street, which is part of the Jade and Montavilla Multimodal Improvements Project. Look for continued work in the area, and street users should anticipate minor traffic pattern updates at impacted intersections.


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