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Skyline Restaurant (formerly The Speck and nicknamed "The Skyliner") [1] [2] is a diner in northwest Portland, Oregon, in the United States. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Established in 1935, the restaurant initially sold fried chicken by a gas station .
I-82 / US 395 at Oregon state line near Plymouth: 1957 [30] current Serves the Yakima Valley and Tri-Cities regions and was completed in 1986. [42] I-90: 297.51: 478.80 SR 519 in Seattle: I-90 at Idaho state line near Liberty Lake: 1957 [26] current Main east–west corridor in Washington and the longest Interstate, completed in 1993. [48]
I-5 in Portland I-205 in Portland US 97 in Madras OR 126 in Prineville US 395 in John Day. US 20 in Vale: East end: US 20 / US 26 at the Idaho state line: Location; Country: United States: State: Oregon: Counties: Clatsop, Tillamook, Columbia, Washington, Multnomah, Clackamas, Wasco, Jefferson, Crook, Wheeler, Grant, Baker, Malheur: Highway system
I-205 functions primarily as a bypass of I-5 in the Portland metropolitan area, and serves Vancouver, Washington, and the eastern suburban areas of Portland, Oregon. [4] It is listed as part of the National Highway System, which identifies routes that are important to the national economy, defense, and mobility, and Washington state recognizes it as a Highway of Statewide Significance.
Cassidy's is a restaurant on Washington Street in southwest Portland's West End district. [1] [2] Portland Monthly has said, "For over three decades, this dimly lit downtown bar and restaurant has been serving late night crowds. Menu staples include local seafood, braised short rib, pork belly, pasta and salad."
The original restaurant was called Mueller and Meier, a saloon established in 1892 at 18th and Washington Streets. This restaurant was one of two crawfish houses in Portland at the turn of the century. Mueller and Meier moved to the Whitney & Gray Building in 1911, where it operated as a saloon until 1913, when it became Mueller and Meier Cafe.
The wide main channel of the Columbia (and the Washington–Oregon state line) passes north of the island. To the south, sheltered by the island, is a smaller channel known as North Portland Harbor. Much of Hayden Island (and connected Tomahawk Island to the east) is within Portland city limits, and recognized as one of its 95 neighborhoods. [2]
The Oregon state government initially proposed numbering the auxiliary Interstates using lettered suffixes, but were denied in 1958 by the American Association of State Highway Officials (forerunner to the AASHTO). [7] The last section of the Interstate Highway system to be built in Oregon, on I-82 near Hermiston, opened on September 20, 1988. [8]