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No Pool, No Playroom, In Search of Community

The Oregonian's Steve Beaven has written an article about community building and Zimmerman Community Center. He also references the launch of Isobel's Clubhouse and I Love Portland's Kids Marching Band. It's in todays InPortland, or you can read it here.

The Zimmerman Community Center has no pool, no basketball court and no playroom. A plan to relocate to a proposed apartment building fell apart, and the part-time executive director recently left for Canada.

But neighborhood leaders hope a new location and direction for the 8-year-old community center leads to more togetherness in and around the Pearl District, an area where vertical buildings with security codes can make isolation a way of life.

The community center, now at 816 N.W. Hoyt St., plans to move at the end of this month and will reopen as a small clubhouse in the 300 block of Northwest 10th Avenue, between Cupcake Jones and Hanna Andersson.

A part-time community organizer has been hired, and the new focus will be on family-friendly events for people from different generations and social classes. The center won't, however, include the traditional trappings found in other neighborhood facilities.

"When someone uses the phrase 'community center,' people tend to think really big, like a basketball court and a pool," says Nancy Davis, the community organizer. "And we're not going to have that."

Instead, the center will include a play space for kids and their parents, and may have a new name.

The Zimmerman Community Center was created with a $1 million bequest from the estate of Isobel Zimmerman, a former Franklin High School teacher who died in 1992.

Over the years, it has bounced from one site to another in the River District, which includes the Pearl and Old Town/Chinatown. The new space will be the community center's fourth location.

The new incarnation comes after plans to move into a proposed apartment building at Northwest Ninth Avenue and Overton Street fell through because of a funding shortage. That facility would have included an indoor play center, after-school programming and other amenities.

It's been difficult to establish a permanent home for the center in or near the Pearl because developers and the city have not made it a priority, says Joan McNamara, a longtime member of the Zimmerman Community Center board.

Much of the ground-level real estate in the area that has not been used for housing has been leased to high-end retailers, she says, leaving no room for a community gathering space.

Davis is the co-founder of Central Portland Families, a group that helps kids and their parents connect with neighbors through play dates and other events.

She wants to do the same thing with the community center, only with a broader reach that will include older residents and low-income families. Although the programming remains in the planning stages, Davis says she'd like to start crafts classes or a kids' marching band.

Creating gatherings where neighbors can meet and mingle is important, says George Meier, the center's former executive director.

"Community space and intentional programming are critical," Meier says. "It's not enough to provide people a room they can rent somewhere. You need skilled staff to provide the opportunity to build those social bonds."

about the author...

Nancy Davis

Nancy Davis

Nancy and her husband Jason moved to the Pearl in 2001. They loved it so much that in 2002 they moved their business to the neighborhood. Their son was born in 2003, and he enjoys scouting and sharing the kid-friendly aspects of the neighborhood. Nancy is the Executive Director of Zimmerman Community Center.

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    have heard that this link doesn't work, or doesn't always work? Here's another way to get to the story.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/portland_news/121513472859060.xml&coll=7

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