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New education center at Tryon Creek State Natural Area honors Northwest Indigenous cultures
New education center at Tryon Creek State Natural Area honors Northwest Indigenous cultures
New education center at Tryon Creek State Natural Area honors Northwest Indigenous cultures

Published on: 09/18/2025

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

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The nonprofit Friends of Tryon Creek is opening on Sep. 20, 2025 a new education pavilion to provide year-round programming, including field trips, day camps and community events at the Tryon Creek State Natural Area in SW Portland. Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships poses for a portrait on Sep. 13,  2025, outside of the new pavilion which features a design based on traditional plankhouses used by Indigenous Northwest tribes for potlatches, ceremonies and other events.

As first reported by Oregon ArtsWatch, a new education pavilion is opening on Sep. 20 at Tryon Creek State Natural Area, located in Southwest Portland, near Lake Oswego. The new education center allows the nonprofit Friends of Tryon Creek to hold community events and educational programming year-round for students to gather for classes, day camps and field trips inside the roughly 660-acre day use area.

The nonprofit Friends of Tryon Creek is opening on Sep. 20, 2025 a new education pavilion to provide year-round programming, including field trips, day camps and community events at the Tryon Creek State Natural Area in SW Portland. This photo taken on Sep. 13, 2025, shows a view of the pavilion which was built to resemble plankhouses used by Northwest Indigenous tribes. A total of six western red cedar lodge poles were used to build the roughly 2,900-square-foot structure.

Friends of Tryon Creek is also leading the fundraising and construction of the $2.6 million education pavilion, which was built on the forest floor and features a design based on traditional plankhouses used by Indigenous Northwest tribes as communal gathering spaces for ceremonies, potlatches and other events. Four Indigenous Northwest artists have also been commissioned to create artwork that will be put on permanent display inside the pavilion. Six western red cedar lodgepoles were sustainably harvested from local forests and used for the new construction, along with bluestone that was used for the interior hallway to represent Columbia River basalt preserved in the landscape.

Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships is Cayuse and Walla Walla and a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. Artist Shirod Younker is Coos, Miluk, Umpqua and a citizen of the Coquille Indian Tribe. They join us to share how they hope the new education pavilion will help students and visitors appreciate the pre-colonial history of Tryon Creek and the surrounding region.

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News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2025/09/18/tyron-creek-state-park-education-pavillion-indigenous/

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