place

Raven & Rose

European restaurants in Portland, OregonSouthwest Portland, Oregon
Ladd Carriage House in 2014
Ladd Carriage House in 2014

Raven & Rose is a restaurant in Portland, Oregon, with an upstairs cocktail bar called The Rookery. Both are housed in the Ladd Carriage House.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Raven & Rose (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Raven & Rose
Southwest Columbia Street, Portland Downtown

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Raven & RoseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.5149 ° E -122.6824 °
placeShow on map

Address

Ladd Carriage House

Southwest Columbia Street
97258 Portland, Downtown
Oregon, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Ladd Carriage House in 2014
Ladd Carriage House in 2014
Share experience

Nearby Places

Ladd Tower
Ladd Tower

Ladd Tower is a 23-story residential building in downtown Portland, Oregon, completed in early 2009. The construction of Ladd Tower necessitated that the Ladd Carriage House, directly adjacent the construction site, temporarily be moved from its foundation; it returned in October 2008. The building is managed by Holland Residential, which also has commercial space on the ground floor. The main residential tower also shares space on the first through third floors with an adjacent church. The tower is Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design-certified. The $80 million building stands 240 feet (73 m) tall.The tower was originally slated to sell as condominiums. Only 60 of 200 units were presold. In 2007, Opus Northwest converted the project to rental apartments, returning deposits to approximately 60 buyers. The building was redesigned, with shorter ceilings, leaving the overall building height unchanged, but going from 21 to 23 floors. The apartments were smaller, at 332 apartments, versus 189 condos in the original plan.The original design of the tower put the building flush against the South Park Blocks. A 27-foot setback beginning at the fourth story garnered "unanimous approval from the Portland Design Commission, a dramatic turnaround from icy receptions to two earlier proposals", according to The Oregonian. A local developer called it a "low-ego building".The building is named after early local politician and developer William S. Ladd.