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Former names | Multnomah Field (1893–1926)[1] Multnomah Stadium (1926–1965) Civic Stadium (1966–2000) PGE Park (2001–2010) Jeld-Wen Field (2011–2014) |
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Address | 1844 SW Morrison |
Location | Portland, Oregon |
Coordinates | 45°31′17″N122°41′30″W / 45.52139°N 122.69167°W /45.52139; -122.69167 |
Public transit | ![]() ![]() ■ Red Line ■ Blue Line atProvidence Park ![]() |
Owner | City of Portland |
Operator | Peregrine Sports, LLC |
Capacity | 25,218 |
Field size | 110 yd × 75 yd (100.58 m × 68.58 m)[2] |
Surface | FieldTurf Revolution |
Construction | |
Broke ground | May 6, 1926[3] |
Opened | October 9, 1926[7] |
Renovated | 1956, 1982, 2001, 2011, 2019 |
Construction cost | $502,000 ($8.92 million in 2024 dollars[4]) Other: |
Architect | A. E. Doyle Morris H. Whitehouse & Associates |
General contractor | Hansen-Hammond Company[6] |
Tenants | |
Former tenants
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Website | |
timbers.com/providencepark |
Providence Park (formerlyJeld-Wen Field;PGE Park;Civic Stadium; originallyMultnomah Stadium; and from 1893 until the stadium was built,Multnomah Field)[1] is an outdoorsoccer venue located in theGoose Hollow neighborhood ofPortland, Oregon. It is the home of thePortland Timbers ofMajor League Soccer (MLS) andPortland Thorns FC of theNational Women's Soccer League (NWSL). Providence Park is currently the oldest facility to be configured as asoccer-specific stadium for use by an MLS team, and is one of the most historic grounds used by any United States professional soccer team. It has existed in rudimentary form since 1893, and as a complete stadium since 1926.
Providence Park has been the home of the Timbers since 1975. The stadium has been host to several major United States soccer events includingU.S. national team matches,Soccer Bowl '77, the1999 and2003 FIFA Women's World Cup, the2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, the2014 MLS All-Star Game, the2015 NWSL Championship Game, andMLS Cup 2021.
The Portland-basedMultnomah Athletic Club was founded in 1891 and soon constructed the stadium for their amateur sports teams beginning in 1893. In 1926, the facility was expanded into a complete stadium, including the upper seating bowl and the wooden benches which can still be found in the park. In 1956, the stadium was renovated in earnest for the first time to reflect its growing usage in the community. In 1966 the City of Portland purchased the park and renamed itCivic Stadium.
It was renovated in 2001 to accommodate the Timbers and thePortland Beavers, while the naming rights of the stadium were purchased byPortland General Electric and it was renamedPGE Park. In 2011, the park underwent renovations again, this time so it could accommodate the Portland Timbers MLS franchise and a year later the stadium name rights were sold, this time toJeld-Wen (Jeld-Wen Field). In 2014, the name was changed again toProvidence Park afterProvidence Health & Services bought the naming rights.[8]
A 2019 expansion raised the capacity to 25,218 and added a multi-level facade to the East End. The Portland Timbers have sold out every game at Providence Park since moving to MLS in 2011, and the Thorns set asingle-game National Women's Soccer League attendance record in August 2019 with a sell-out crowd of the same capacity.[9] In 2019, both clubs ranked among the top ten in attendance among professional soccer teams (men's or women's) in the United States and Canada.[9]
Providence Park is an outdoor soccer stadium which houses theMLSPortland Timbers andNWSLPortland Thorns. The stadium is owned by the City of Portland, and is managed by Peregrine Sports, LLC, the entity that owns the Timbers and Thorns.
The stadium sits on a rectangular block bounded by Southwest Morrison Street, Southwest 18th Avenue, the Multnomah Athletic Club building and Southwest Salmon Street, and Southwest 20th Avenue.[10][11]
TheMultnomah Athletic Club (MAC), anathletic club in downtown Portland which originally constructed the venue, stands next door; the windows of the north side of the club's building overlook the field.
TheInterstate 405 freeway in Portland is also known locally as the Stadium Freeway and travels near the stadium. In addition, theProvidence ParkMAX Light Rail station is across the street. The property slopes significantly downhill from the south end to the north end, with the result that the playing surface sits well below street level. Theelevation at street level is approximately 110 feet (35 m) abovesea level.
Since 1893, the site had been home to Multnomah Field, which consisted of sports fields with variousgrandstands.[12][13] Before the MAC developed the site as an athletic field, it was a large Chinese vegetable garden, supplying produce to much of Portland.[14] In 1912, the distinctive Multnomah Athletic Club, which currently borders the south end of the stadium, was constructed. The overarching stadium was completed in 1926 for $502,000, and named "Multnomah Civic Stadium" after the club.[15]
The site was used for college football (including sevenCivil War games between theUniversity of Oregon andOregon State University), cricket matches andgreyhound racing. Well into the 1960s, most significant football games hosted by Oregon and Oregon State were held at this site because of its capacity. Oregon played in107 games at Multnomah/Civic Stadium between 1894 and 1970. TheUniversity of Washington played all its road games against Oregon and Oregon State at Multnomah Field/Multnomah Stadium between 1923 (OSU) and 1924 (Oregon) until 1966 (OSU) and 1967 (Oregon). The site also hosted thePortland Rose Festival.[12]
In 1956, thePortland Beavers moved to the stadium after their original field,Vaughn Street Park, was condemned. After two attempts for anew domed stadium inDelta Park were defeated by voters in 1964,[16][17] the city looked to purchase what was already in existence. In 1966, the Multnomah Athletic Club sold the stadium for $2.1 million to the city of Portland, which renamed it "Civic Stadium".[12][15][18] The city government rejected several proposed renovation plans, including construction of a 57,000-seat domed stadium,[19] and adding a second deck supported by helium-filled balloons.[20] Prior to the 2011 MLS season, the stadium was renamed "Jeld-Wen Field" from "PGE Park", in a partnership withKlamath Falls-based company Jeld-Wen. Jeld-Wen is a manufacturer of windows and doors, leading to the stadium's nickname, "The House of Pane." In 2014, the stadium was renamed "Providence Park" after a partnership withProvidence Health & Services was announced.[8]
Kerry Tymchuk, executive director of theOregon Historical Society, summarized the stadium's history: "Providence Park has been home to some of the most iconic moments in Oregon sports history. It also ranks with such classic venues asWrigley Field andFenway Park as a stadium that has stood the test of time and that is uniquely part and parcel of the city in which it resides. ... Portland is a city that prides itself on its uniqueness. While many major cities have chosen to replace historic sports stadiums with modern domes or complexes, Portland has chosen to retain much of the original architecture and charm of one of architectA.E. Doyle's most beloved creations."[21]
The first major renovation to Providence Park after its full construction in 1926 came in 1956, when the Portland Beavers moved to what was then called "Multnomah Stadium", from the dilapidated cross-town Vaughn Street Park. For the first time, permanent East End seating was constructed, as well as a large ticketed section in the southeast corner of the stadium. The East End seats were all constructed above an outfield wall, and box seats were built in the stadium for the first time. Along with the expansion came the demolition of the greyhound racing track, which was constructed in 1933.[22]
In November 1980, Portland voters passed a ballot measure that provided the city (who had owned the stadium since 1966) with a much-needed $9.5 million to improve the foundation, concourse and replace the roof.[23] The money allowed the city to replace the aging roof, adding an extended roofline out of laminated Oregon timber. The new roof covered a much higher percentage of seats and included the construction of a new press box, which was finished by winter 1982.
In November 2000, the Portland City Council authorized bonds to finance a renovation of then-Civic Stadium.[24] A $38.5 million renovation took place in 2001, upgrading the seating and concourse area, and adding newluxury suites and club seats. The renovation improved the structural soundness of the facility by adding over 750 tons of steel, and introduced a new sound system. The renovation also included someretro-features, such as a manually operatedscoreboard. At that point,PGE bought the naming rights and it became "PGE Park".[18]
The 2001 renovation also removed the remaining seats along 18th Avenue and added in the first electronic video board in the park, modernizing the park for soccer and minor-league baseball.[25] The stadium was temporarily expanded for the2003 FIFA Women's World Cup with bleachers along the east and south ends to bring soccer capacity from 19,556 to over 28,000. A grass surface was also installed for the tournament over the existing NeXturf artificial surface.[26][27]
In July 2009, after attempts to both find a new home for an MLS franchise and identify asite for a new home for the Portland Beavers, thePortland City Council approved a $31 million renovation to make PGE Park ready for the2011 Major League Soccer season, by reconfiguring the stadium primarily for soccer and football.[28][29] The decision led to the departure of the Beavers.
A presentation to the Portland Design Commission indicated that 5,000 seats would be added, bringing capacity to about 22,000, but with only about 18,000 available for use on a regular basis.[30]
The renovation met Major League Soccer standards, introduced a new playing surface, which shifted west and north, and added space on the east and south sides, with new seating areas and new amenities. The Lighthouse Impact 16 main video screen was designed by Anthony James Partners and features over 74 square meters (800 sq ft) of LED video. A Lighthouse B10 pitchside display runs the length of the East End and portions of the north and south ends and is over 152 meters (499 ft) long.[31] As the project was nearing completion, it was revealed to be $5 million over budget, making the total cost of the renovation $36 million.[32] The agreement between the city and Portland Timbers owner Merritt Paulson meant that Paulson was responsible for any cost overruns larger than $1 million.
The newly renovated stadium made its début on April 14, 2011, when Major League Soccer's Timbers defeated theChicago Fire, 4–2.[33] The announced attendance at Timbers games in 2011 was 18,627, a sell-out.
A few thousand seats were added for two games late in the 2011 season to bring the capacity to 20,323.[34] About 2,000 seats were opened up for the 2012 season, bringing capacity up to 20,438. Following the 2012 season in which the Timbers' average attendance was 20,438, during the 2012–13 off-season the Timbers widened the pitch for the 2013 season, adding 2 yards (1.8 m) on each side to achieve a width of 74 yards (68 m).[35] The team widened the pitch by another yard in 2014, for a total pitch size of 110 by 75 yards (101 m × 69 m).[2]
In April 2017, the Portland Timbers unveiled aUS$85 million renovation plan which would add roughly 4,000 new seats to the East End.[36] Timbers' President of Business Mike Golub stated that "We felt it was imperative to see how we could transform the stadium and add capacity to both meet the demand that we have for tickets and also position the club to be viable and competitive for years to come", referencing the Timbers' current season ticket waitlist of approximately 13,000. The renovation was privately funded and brought the stadium to a capacity of 25,218, which was the 4th-highest of any soccer-specific venue in MLS.
The club partnered with Portland-based Allied Works Architecture to design the expansion,[37] and began construction in late 2017,[38] with the goal of having the renovated stadium ready in late May or early June of the 2019 MLS season.[39][37]
The expanded Providence Park opened for the first time on June 1, 2019, as the Timbers hostedLAFC, selling out the capacity of 25,218. Included in the $85 million renovation were the addition of three decks of new seats, two new video boards and a modern edge-to-edge roof, as well as updated LED lighting throughout the park.[40] The lowest tier of the new addition is a premium seating section named Tanner Ridge, a reference toTanner Creek under the stadium, and includes separate food and beverage options from the rest of the stadium.[41]
The renovated stand on the East End was the largest single seat expansion in Providence Park history. The vertically stacked stand resembles theBoca Juniors' stadiumLa Bombonera and was inspired by Shakespeare'sGlobe Theatre. The new stands also resemble an original, unrealized design from 1926 for the stadium that shows 2-story stands.[42][43] White seats in the added upper decks spell out "SC USA", a reference to Portland's NASL-era nickname of "Soccer City USA."[44] This added to existing seats in the east stand that spell out "PORTLAND".
In 2019, Timbers and Thorns ownership were in discussions with Portland mayorTed Wheeler about replacing the artificial turf at Providence Park with real grass. A real grass field could make Providence Park more attractive for hosting international soccer matches.[45] As of 2023[update], Providence Park is the only soccer-specific stadium in MLS that doesn't use real grass.[46] It is also the only current or planned soccer-specific NWSL venue to use an artificial surface, and one of two NWSL venues, along with Seattle'sLumen Field, to use an artificial surface. The NWSL moved its neutral-site 2021 championship match from Portland toLynn Family Stadium inLouisville, Kentucky, a grass venue, after players publicly complained about the artificial surface and early kickoff time.[47]
The stadium is currently home to thePortland Timbers ofMLS, which the stadium has hosted in all of the club's iterations since 1975, and thePortland Thorns FC ofNWSL since 2013. Starting in 2022, the facility is also the home turf for the Oregon Onyx of theWestern Ultimate League and the Portland Nitro of theAmerican Ultimate Disc League.
The Portland Timbers hosted their first match at the stadium on May 2, 1975, against theSeattle Sounders. It was the first professional soccer match ever hosted at Providence Park.[48] The club would get their first win just 5 days later on May 7, 1975, withPeter Withe scoring the first ever home Timbers goal in a 1–0 victory overToronto Metros-Croatia. The Timbers were immediately successful at the stadium, only losing once during 1975 and setting the Timbers home attendance record of 33,503 in the NASL semifinals against theSt. Louis Stars on August 17, 1975.[49]
The team played at Providence Park (then called Civic Stadium) until 1982 before folding. However, they helped develop the soccer culture in Portland and the passionate fans at the park that still remain today.[50]
The Portland Timbers were reborn in 1985, continuing to play at Civic Stadium. The club used the stadium during their time in theWestern Soccer Alliance and theAmerican Professional Soccer League until 1990.
A new Portland Timbers franchise was founded in 2001 and began to use the park again for its home games. The naming rights were sold toPGE and the stadium became known as PG&E Park. A $38.5 million renovation was completed to allow for a more comfortable soccer experience.[51] Around this time, the Timbers established themselves as one of the best-drawing teams in theA-League, averaging attendance above 5,000 in each of their four years of existence. As they moved to the USL, the club became more successful, going unbeaten at home inthe 2007 regular season. In 2008, the club averaged 8,567 home fans, the second-highest in theUSL First Division. In 2009, Portland was selected to become aMajor League Soccer franchise, and in the same year the Timbers went unbeaten for a USL-record 24 matches in a row.
In 2011, the stadium was renovated to provide Portland with a premier location to watch the Timbers play in Major League Soccer as well as fit the standards required by the league.[52] The $36 million renovation modernized the stadium, added a high-tech video board and added new seating and amenities.[32] The park was renamed Jeld-Wen Field afterKlamath Falls-based windows and doors company Jeld-Wen purchased the naming rights.
The stadium officially opened for Major League Soccer play on April 14, 2011, when the Timbers defeated theChicago Fire, 4–2, before a sellout crowd of 18,627.[33] This was the first time top-level American soccer had been played in the city of Portland since August 22, 1982.[53]
Jeld-Wen Field was the site of the first Timbers playoff home game in their MLS history, defeating arch-rival Seattle 3–2 on November 2, 2013. This allowed the Timbers to win 5–3 on aggregate and clinch the two-game series, advancing to theConference finals. In 2014, the stadium was renamed Providence Park afterProvidence Health & Services bought the naming rights.[8] Home victories over theVancouver Whitecaps andFC Dallas in the2015 MLS Cup Playoffs provided a launch pad to the Timbers winning the 2015 MLS Cup. In 2018, Portland hosted two rounds of playoffs at Providence Park, rewarding the home support with crucial results as the Timbers defeated Seattle andSporting Kansas City to advance to theMLS Cup Final. The Timbers defeatedMinnesota United FC andReal Salt Lake in the2021 MLS Cup Playoffs, which helped the Timbers advance to and host the2021 MLS Cup Final, the first time Providence hosted the MLS championship game.
After the completion of the 2019 renovation, capacity at the park increased to 25,218.[54] The Timbers played their first game at the park on July 1, 2019, againstLAFC, selling out the expanded sections.
The Timbers have sold out every home game to date since their transition to MLS in 2011.[55] Providence Park has been consistently cited as one of the best American soccer stadiums and as one of the best places to see Major League Soccer.[56][57][58] MLS writer Charles Boehm described Timbers games at Providence Park "one of North American soccer's greatest spectacles" in 2019.[58]
The Thorns played their first season in theNational Women's Soccer League in 2013, playing in Providence Park. The team's first home match on April 21 provided the club its first victory, a 2–1 win overSeattle Reign FC.[59] In addition to setting a new league record for attendance, the opening day crowd of 16,479 was bigger than any single-game attendance fromWomen's Professional Soccer, the last women's national league before the NWSL.
Portland won the NWSL Championship in 2013 and 2017, using home victories in the playoffs to propel them to the titles. Providence Park also hosted the2015 NWSL Championship Game, whereFC Kansas City defeatedSeattle Reign FC, 1–0, to win the championship. It also hosted the2021 NWSL Championship, where Portland also won the championship againstNJ/NY Gotham FC 6–5 on penalties, with both teams scoring 1–1 in regulation.
The Thorns have had the highest average attendance in the league in each of their first seven seasons, and set a league attendance record of 25,218 at an August 11, 2019 match against the North Carolina Courage.[60][61]
In 1933, pari-mutuel betting was legalized in Oregon, and by May 23 of that year the Multnomah Kennel Club hosted its first greyhound race on the stadium's new track. The Kennel Club maintained its headquarters at the stadium until 1956, when the track was removed.[62]
ThePortland Beaversminor league baseball team of thePacific Coast League (PCL) had played some games at Multnomah Field during 1905 when theirVaughn Street Park was temporarily reconfigured to host a track and field event. They moved into Multnomah Stadium in 1956 after over a half century at Vaughn Street, a woodenballpark which was soon demolished. The sod from the field at Vaughn Street was transferred to the new venue; Civic Stadium installedartificial turf in 1969.
From 1973 to 1977 theindependentPortland Mavericks of theNorthwest League played their home games at the stadium. ActorKurt Russell was aninfielder for the Mavericks.[63] The Beavers returned to Portland in 1978 until 1993 when they were moved out of the city again. TheClass APortland Rockies were established in 1995 and played at the park until 2000 when they were moved and renamed theTri-City Dust Devils. In 2001, theAlbuquerque Dukes were moved to Portland and renamed the "Beavers" marking the third time the franchise would occupy the park for their home games.
As a baseball venue, the stadium had an unorthodox south-southeast alignment, with home plate in the northwest corner (20th and Morrison) of the property.
After it was announced thatMajor League Soccer was moving a franchise to Providence Park (then known as PGE Park) the Beavers had to start looking for anew stadium. However, the plan never came to fruition and team ownerMerritt Paulson put the Beavers up for sale. The club'smajor-league parent, theSan Diego Padres, purchased the team, which moved toTucson, Arizona as theTucson Padres. The team played its final game at the stadium on September 6, 2010.[64][65]
The stadium hosted theUSFL'sPortland Breakers, as well as thePortland Storm andPortland Thunder of theWFL.
Soccer has been hosted at Providence Park since theoriginal Portland Timbers were founded in the originalNorth American Soccer League in 1975. Various iterations of the team have called the stadium home, including the1980s version in theWestern Soccer Alliance and the2000s version in theUSL First Division before the MLS club was formed.
From 2008 to 2017, Providence Park was used as home for theTimbers U23s of theUSL2, a development platform for the club. Following the 2017 season, the Portland U23s moved to Salem, OR.
During the last few months of the 2020 MLS season, Providence Park hosted home matches forVancouver Whitecaps FC afterCOVID-19 cross-border restrictions imposed by theCanadian government prevented the team from playing matches in Canada.[66]
On August 28, 1977, the stadium was site of theNorth American Soccer LeagueSoccer Bowl '77 between theNew York Cosmos and theSeattle Sounders, the last official game of the legendaryPelé. The Cosmos won the championship.
On September 7, 1997, the stadium hosted a World Cup soccer qualifying match between theUnited States men's national team andCosta Rica. A raucous capacity crowd of 27,396 saw the U.S. squad win, 1–0, on a goal byTab Ramos in the 79th minute. A loud and knowledgeable stadium fully cheering on the USMNT in Portland created an atmosphere that "took years for any other American city to match".[67]
Providence Park has hosted the United States men's national team on 4 different occasions. Outside of tournament play in the 1998 World Cup qualifying and the 2013 Gold Cup, the stadium has hosted two friendlies: on April 4, 1985, against Canada (a 1–1 draw), and on May 28, 1998, against Kuwait (a 2–0 win).[68]
The stadium was the site of four group matches in the1999 Women's World Cup. The stadium also hosted two group matches, two quarterfinals, and both semifinals in the2003 Women's World Cup.
Providence Park hosted the2014 MLS All-Star Game.[69]
On December 11, 2021, Providence Park hosted the2021 MLS Cup after the Timbers won the Western Conference Final over Real Salt Lake and are the highest seed remaining. The stadium saw a total attendance of 25,218 spectators.
Date | Winning Team | Result | Losing Team | Tournament | Spectators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
August 28, 1977 | ![]() | 2–1 | ![]() | Soccer Bowl '77 | 35,548 |
April 4, 1985 | ![]() | 1–1 | ![]() | International Friendly | 4,181 |
September 7, 1997 | ![]() | 1–0 | ![]() | 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF) | 27,396 |
May 24, 1998 | ![]() | 2–0 | ![]() | International Friendly | 25,343 |
September 22, 2011 | ![]() | 3–0 | ![]() | Women’s International Friendly | 18,570 |
November 28, 2012 | ![]() | 5–0 | ![]() | Women’s International Friendly | 10,092 |
July 9, 2013 | ![]() | 3–0 | ![]() | 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup | 18,724 |
![]() | 6–1 | ![]() | |||
August 6, 2014 | ![]() ![]() | 2–1 | ![]() | 2014 MLS All-Star Game | 21,733 |
October 15, 2015 | ![]() | 1–0 | ![]() | 2015 NWSL Championship | 13,264 |
September 22, 2018 | ![]() | 3–0 | ![]() | 2018 NWSL Championship | 21,144 |
December 11, 2021 | ![]() | 1–1 (4–2pen.) | ![]() | 2021 MLS Cup | 25,218 |
Date | Winning Team | Result | Losing Team | Tournament | Spectators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 23, 1999 | ![]() | 5–0 | ![]() | Group C | 17,668 |
![]() | 7–0 | ![]() | Group D | ||
June 24, 1999 | ![]() | 3–1 | ![]() | Group A | 20,129 |
![]() | 6–0 | ![]() | Group B |
Date | Winning Team | Result | Losing Team | Tournament | Spectators |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
September 28, 2003 | ![]() | 2–1 | ![]() | Group D | 19,132 |
![]() | 1–0 | ![]() | |||
October 2, 2003 | ![]() | 7–1 | ![]() | Quarterfinals | 20,012 |
![]() | 1–0 | ![]() | |||
October 5, 2003 | ![]() | 3–0 | ![]() | Semifinals | 27,623 |
![]() | 2–1 | ![]() |
Known asMultnomah Stadium at the time, the venue was formally dedicated on Oct. 9, 1926, as the University of Washington's football team beat the University of Oregon, 23–9, with more than 24,000 fans in attendance.[52]
The Providence Park all-time college football attendance record was set on October 18, 1930 as 35,266 fans watched the Oregon Ducks defeat their rival the Washington Huskies by a score of 7–0.[62]
On 7 different occasions theOregon–Oregon State football rivalry game was held at Providence Park, with the last time being in 1952, where the Beavers beat the Ducks 22-19.[70]
Both Oregon and Oregon State regularly played games, especially against nearby Washington, at Providence Park up until the 1960s and 1970s. At the time, the stadium could hold or draw more fans than the schools' home fields, so it was a logical space for high-stakes games. The Ducks last played in Providence on September 12, 1970, defeating theUniversity of California 31-24. The Beavers played in Portland all the way up until 1986, with their last game until 2022 being a 49-0 blowout loss to #15UCLA on November 1, 1986.[71]
Providence Park, then known asCivic Stadium, was home to many generations of high-octane offense from the Portland State Vikings, including from 1975 to 1980 whenMouse Davis, the "godfather" of therun and shoot offense and Portland State Football Hall of Famer, was the head coach of PSU.[72] While coaching at Civic, he led the PSU football program to a 42–24 record over six seasons while averaging 38 points and nearly 500 yards of offense per game. PSU led the nation in scoring three times.[72] The unique passing game made stars out of Davis' two main quarterbacks,June Jones andNeil Lomax. In 1975, Jones threw for a Division II record 3,518 yards. Davis' next quarterback, Lomax, set NCAA records of 13,220 yards and 106 touchdowns in 42 games. Under Davis' direction, Portland State set 20 NCAA Division II offensive records[72] in addition to the Vikings being named the NCAA's all-time point producers in 1980, scoring 541 points in 11 games for 49.2 points per game, along with 434.9 yards passing and 504.3 yards of total offense per game.
During a November 9, 1980 game, Lomax threw for seven first-quarter touchdowns againstDelaware State, which the Vikings won 105–0.[52]
On October 27, 2007, the stadium hosted the highest-scoring game in modernNCAAfootball history, when theWeber State University Wildcatsdefeated the PSU Vikings, 73–68, a combined point total of 141 points. This point total eclipsed the previous NCAA record of 136 points, set in a 1968Division III game, and the previousDivision I record of 133 points, set in 2004.[73] While this record lasted only two weeks, and has been surpassed four times in all, it remained the highest-scoring game involvingNCAA Division I teams until 2018, whenTexas A&M defeated LSU in a 74–72 seven-overtime game. Coincidentally, Mouse Davis was the offensive coordinator for Portland State at the time, returning to Providence Park under the head coaching ofJerry Glanville.
Oregon State played FCSMontana State in Providence Park on September 17, 2022, due to OSU'sReser Stadium being under construction. It was the first game in the stadium hosted by an FBS team since the Beavers last did it in 1986.[74] The Beavers won the game 68–28.
Given that the stadium's primary purposes originally were track and field, football, and dog racing, it had somewhat odd dimensions for baseball. Due to the curving northern stands, foul territory along the third base line was much larger than that along the first.
During the 1970s, theJantzen swim wear company had a 3D model of the Jantzen girl attached to the left field wall in its baseball configuration. The Jantzen girl was in play because it was below the top of the wall and it was hit a couple of times over the years.[75][76] The Jantzen girl was removed from the outfield wall during renovations and is now on display in the concourse under the west stands.
On May 27, 1991, the stadium received national attention whenVancouver Canadians outfielderRodney McCray, while attempting to catch a fly ball, crashed through a wooden advertisement behind thewarning track in right-center field; a real-life version of an incident in the fictional book and film,The Natural. While McCray failed to make the out, he only suffered scrapes and bruises and remained in the game. Highlight reels of that play ran for weeks on cable channels such asCNN andESPN. On August 12, 2006, the Beavers commemorated the event with a Rodney McCray Bobblehead Night, passing outbobbleheads of McCray to fans and renaming right-center field "McCray Alley".[77]
In the mid-1990s the stadium was planned to be the home of the yet-to-be named Portland team, a charter franchise of theUnited League (UL) which was planned to be a third league ofMajor League Baseball (MLB).
On July 15, 2009, the stadium hosted theTriple-A All-Star Game, with theInternational League stars defeating the Pacific Coast league, 6–5. The game was attended by 16,637 fans, the largest crowd for a Triple-A All-Star game since 1991, and the third largest at the time.[78] Portland'sChad Huffman won theHome Run Derby.[79]
While on a four-day tour of the Pacific Northwest, September 2, 1957,Elvis Presley performed in one of the first three outdoor stadium rock concerts in music history. Presley had held the second ever in Vancouver, BC, Canada just a few days earlier, on September 1, 1957, at Empire Stadium, his first being at the Cotton Bowl, in Dallas, TX, on 11 October 1956. The concert created mass hysteria and an estimated 14,600 people attended the concert.[80][81]
In a November 8, 2013 interview with the Portland Business Journal,[80][81] Portland Timbers owner Merritt Paulson expressed his desire to host summer concerts at the stadium.
Providence Park's outside walls are covered with naturally-grown ivy.[82] The entrance billboard used to announce dates and future games is a deliberate retro replica of the old scoreboard that used to be in the same location.[82]
Multiple art installations and sculptures line the outside plazas of Providence Park. Those includeFacing the Crowd, a series of two bronze sculptures, andYou Are Here, an artistic rendition of a 12-foot wide log ring with historical artifacts of Portland's past embedded inside.
In 2010, Providence Park was a filming location of Season 2 of the television seriesLeverage. The episode depicts a fictional Massachusetts (where the series was set) minor league team also known as the Beavers.[83]
The IFC showPortlandia references Providence Park multiple times throughout the series and the lead characters Peter (Fred Armisen) and Nance (Carrie Brownstein) attend a Timbers match in a 2012 episode, bringing along a home-made sign to root for the club.[84]
Providence Park was added to the stadium rotation in theFIFA video game series for the first time in September 2020, beginning withFIFA 21.[85] Providence became the sixth Major League Soccer stadium added to the game, and the addition allowed for the access of all three Cascadia clubs' home stadiums for the first time. The Thorns' inclusion inFIFA 23 also made Providence Park one of four NWSL venues featured in the game.[86]
Since approximately 1985, the field has been home to aferal cat colony,[87] which may have been at the park before the current stadium opened in 1926.[88] There are an estimated 12–19 cats in the colony,[87] referred to as "living rat traps".[89] After a construction worker killed a feral cat in 2000,[88] the park enlisted the Feral Cat Coalition of Oregon to assist the animals during construction efforts and to run atrap-neuter-return program.[87] The cats are discussed inChuck Palahniuk's travelogue of Portland,Fugitives and Refugees.[87][88]
It was built in 1926 by what is now the Multnomah Athletic Club for $502,000 and called Multnomah Civic Stadium. In 1966, it was sold to the city of Portland for $2.1 million, and became known as Civic Stadium. In 2001, it became PGE Park and in 2011 Jeld-Wen Field.