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Where We Live: 25 years of Share-It Square

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — A southeast Portland neighborhood is celebrating 25 years of turning an ordinary intersection into a vibrant public square.

Even during the pandemic, the “Share-It Square” remains the center of their tight-knit community and a model for other neighborhoods across the nation.

The street mural at the intersection at SE 9th and SE Sherrett streets helped bring a neighborhood together. Each corner with interactive elements conceived and built by people in the neighborhood, including a children’s playhouse, a community bulletin board and even a Little Free Library built by the neighborhood kids.

Share-It Square founder Mark Lakeman said it’s been “credited as the first Little Free Library in the world.”

“What we’re seeing here is a quintessentially Portland initiative to retrofit the landscape with a sense of space and we remain national leader in that sense,” he said.

Lakeman, who is an architect and urban planner, enlisted his neighbors to embrace Share-It Square in 1996. He had visited villages in other parts of the world and saw how neighborhoods in the United States could become their own small villages.

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Lakeman founded The City Repair Project which, along with his company Communitecture, designs and promotes creative public spaces in Portland and elsewhere.

“It was kind of a thing that was so unusual that it compelled people to share stories about it,” he said.

The pandemic and winter have quieted Share-It Square for now. Even the solar-powered, 24-hour tea station is temporarily closed.

But the intersection remains the landmark meeting place — the center of the neighborhood — and proof that ordinary places can become extraordinary places.

Lakeman said Portland has passed ordinances over the years allowing other neighborhoods to retrofit their intersections as public squares for free.