There are parks, and then there are parks that feel like the living room of an entire city. Tom McCall Waterfront Park, stretching nearly two miles along the west bank of the Willamette River in downtown Portland, is firmly in that second category. Named for the Oregon governor who championed the removal of a six-lane expressway to reclaim this land for the public back in 1978, the park is one of Portland’s most triumphant civic decisions — and one of its most rewarding places to spend a few unhurried hours.
I first walked the park on a crisp October morning, coffee in hand, with no particular agenda. The Hawthorne Bridge anchored one end of my view, the Steel Bridge the other, and in between, the Willamette moved quietly past in that grey-green way it does in autumn. Joggers looped around me. A father taught his daughter to ride a bike on the wide riverside path. A couple sat on the lawn reading, their dog stretched out between them like a footnote. Nothing felt performative. This is a place where Portlanders actually live their lives, not just pose for photographs.
The park runs from the Marquam Bridge in the south all the way up to the Steel Bridge in the north, putting it within easy walking distance of the Pearl District, Old Town, and the South Park Blocks. You can access it from nearly any east-west street downtown, and once you’re there, the paved esplanade makes it simple to stroll as far as your legs will carry you. Rent a bike from one of the nearby stations and you can cover the full length in a comfortable twenty minutes, then loop back across the Hawthorne Bridge and continue south along the east bank for a proper Portland river loop.
What makes this park genuinely special — beyond the obvious beauty of a riverside greenway — is how much it holds without ever feeling crowded or commercial. The Salmon Street Springs fountain at the park’s southern end draws kids in the summer months, its water jets programmed in patterns that seem almost musical. The Japanese American Historical Plaza near the Steel Bridge is quiet and sobering, its stone columns etched with poems of internment that deserve more than a passing glance. And throughout the year, the park hosts some of Portland’s most beloved events: the Rose Festival’s waterfront village, the Portland Saturday Market overflow, and the beloved Blues Festival in July, which draws tens of thousands of people to the lawn for a long weekend of music and good-natured revelry.
Even on an ordinary Tuesday, though, the park earns its place on any Portland itinerary. Pack a sandwich from one of the nearby delis, find a bench facing the river, and watch the bridges do what Portland bridges do best — frame a skyline that somehow manages to feel both ambitious and approachable. The views across to the East Side, with Mount Hood occasionally ghosting into view on a clear day, are the kind that remind you why people move here and never quite manage to leave.
Tom McCall Waterfront Park is free, always open, and entirely without pretense. In a city that can sometimes feel overly curated, that’s more refreshing than you might expect.