Pine Street Market

“Pine Street Market’s ongoing success shows how thoughtful design pursued by locals with stakes in Portland’s future can breathe new life into an entire neighborhood.”

Pine Street Market is an award-winning, culinary-themed marketplace and food hall located in the historic Carriage & Baggage Building in the downtown Market District of Portland, Oregon.

Doors opened in the Spring of 2016 and feature eight of Portland's best chefs and purveyors, all under one roof. The Market offers visitors a variety of dining options, craft beers, and signature cocktails in a casual, open layout that is perfect for lunch, happy hour, and dinner.

AWARDS

  • 2016 Preservation in Design by the Demuro Award

  • 2016 NAIOP, Retail Development of the Year, for excellence in Retail

  • 2016 Top Projects Energy Performance Award from Energy Trust of Oregon

  • 2016 Top Projects Renovation Award – Energy Trust of Oregon

History of the Carriage & Baggage Building

Built-in 1886, the Carriage & Baggage Building was originally used as a livery and horse-drawn carriage storage facility until the early 1900s. With horse stalls on the second floor and four massive tanks on the roof that provided water to wash the stalls, the building was essentially a horse and carriage parking garage. 

When the automobile replaced the horse-drawn carriage, the building was used as storage and retail for Mallory Logging and Contractors Supplies for decades. From 1969 to 1981, the building was home to the original Portland’s Old Spaghetti Factory. Since the early 80’s, the ground floor housed a string of infamous Portland nightclubs.

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Carriage & Baggage Building is one of the few examples of a Portland livery. The massive Doug Fir timber frame structure has been retrofitted to modern seismic requirements and has retained the original skylight at the roof.

 


Pine Street Market, Est. 2016

Original FB Mallory business, early 1900’s

Source: University of Oregon Collection

Portlands Old Spaghetti Factory, circa 1969

Source: Wes Guderian, The Oregonian