Pier Park Pool Closed

Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R)’s Pier Pool is closed temporarily due to a significant water line failure. The 84-year-old outdoor pool is located at N Seneca Street and N St. Johns Avenue in North Portland. A reopening date is yet to be determined pending further assessment of the needed repairs.

A large portion of Pier Pool’s inner mechanical workings are original parts dating from as far back as 1940. On June 27, 2024, it became clear that the water level in the pool was dropping rapidly and that refilling it was ineffective. Crews determined that Pier Pool has a broken pipe in its water circulation system. Water is draining from the pool and the remaining water cannot be circulated, chemically treated, nor heated. 

PP&R will be working with contractors to determine the nature of the needed work, which will involve digging under the concrete pool deck, doing the plumbing work, and replacing the concrete surfacing. The pool will then be refilled with approximately 180,000 gallons of water which will then be heated.

Fortunately, no swim lessons will be canceled due to this unforeseen maintenance issue. Portland Parks & Recreation Aquatics staff have swiftly moved to notify registered participants that the Bureau is moving Pier Pool staff, swim lessons, and swim team practices to Peninsula Pool, located at 700 N Rosa Parks.

Portland Parks & Recreation will continue to provide updates to the community as more information is available. For schedules and information on other City swimming pools and programs, please visit www.portland.gov/parks/recreation/pools.

Major maintenance needs across the Portland park system

Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) has identified more than $600 million in major maintenance repairs needed to park infrastructure across the park and recreation system. This amount has been identified but remains unfunded. In recent years, several assets have failed and had to be closed or removed to protect the public. Without new, stable funding, the bureau predicts that one in five PP&R assets will fail in the next 15 years. To that end, at this time PP&R is committed to investing available resources in the most critical needs – focusing on addressing inequities in our system.

PP&R continues to work on the Bureau’s Sustainable Future program.

For more information about PP&R funding, visit: www.portland.gov/parks/funding-sources 

Source: Portland Parks and Recreation

 


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