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Home » The WIRED Guide to Portland for Business Travelers
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The WIRED Guide to Portland for Business Travelers

By technologistmag.com1 November 20258 Mins Read
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As a tech city, Portland often feels like a lifestyle destination for wayward engineers. Though nearly 10 percent of Portland works in tech, Stumptown’s business scene can sometimes seem to be in hiding, operating as a comfortable “third place” between the FAANG capitals to the north and the south. Portland is a tree-filled place of sometimes startling natural beauty, resting in the shadow of Mount Hood, Oregon’s tallest mountain, and at the intersection of two rivers.

Much of Portland’s tech industry action is tucked into home offices and coworking spaces, or beneath a canopy of trees in the so-called Silicon Forest sprawling out to the west-side suburbs of Beaverton, Hillsboro, and Aloha. This is where Nvidia cofounder Jensen Huang went to high school, and it’s also where he planted an engineering outpost for Nvidia. It’s likewise where a sizable chunk of America’s semiconductor and microchip industry has put down roots, including wings for Intel and Microsoft.

This low profile can make Portland a chill place to do business. Whatever the occasional national headlines, the city remains a mostly relaxed mecca for food and beer and music, and for always dressing like you’re about to go on a hike. It is also a nerd’s paradise for hacker spaces and tech ephemera. Here’s where to stay, and where to go.

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Where to Stay in Portland

Courtesy of Jupiter NEXT

Don’t just plop yourself down in a sleepy downtown hotel—a rookie Portland move many a visiting executive or engineer has come to regret. Portland is most workable where people actually live, amid dense business districts filled with cafés and restaurants. That’s also where you’ll find many of the coworking spaces and meeting resources that make doing business here easier, and the saunas and cold plunge tubs that make it pleasant.

Portland’s downtown core hugs the west side of the Willamette River that bisects the city. But WIRED recommends finding a hotel on the amenity-packed central east side across the river from downtown, or in the more residential districts just outside of downtown on the west side.

East Side Hotels

What to Do in Portland Oregon If You're Here for Business

Courtesy of Jupiter NEXT

900 E Burnside St., (503) 230-9200

The Jupiter NEXT hotel is the statement piece of Portland’s eastside LoBu neighborhood just across the river from downtown, a modernist six-story sculpture of a building with a balcony, bamboo garden, and bookable meeting rooms for large or small groups. Corporate discounts and packages are available for frequent business travelers, which include complimentary drink tickets at Hey Love, a popular ground-floor cocktail bar that’s a bit like a tropical fern bar from the ’70s.

100 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., (971) 346-2992

Not far from Jupiter NEXT is the only North American location of Icelandic hostel KEX, a 28-room boutique with private rooms and event spaces. For business travelers, KEX gets a good-neighbor discount at startup-centric coworking space CENTRL across the street, where you can book a meeting space or coworking berth. The downstairs lounge, Pacific Standard, offers oysters on the half shell and cocktails from internationally renowned bartender Jeffrey Morganthaler.

Near Jupiter and KEX: The immediate neighborhood includes music venue Nova, patio bar Rontoms, excellent pizza and hoagies at Dimo’s Apizza, and terrific coffee from Roseline Coffee. Visitors can usually walk in for foie gras dumplings and steam burgers (which sound like a Simpsons joke and taste like heaven) at Canard, the wine-filled casual sister restaurant of James Beard Award-winning French prix-fixe spot Le Pigeon next door. High-rise luxury sauna and cold plunge spa Knot Springs, offering river views from hot or cold water, sits near KEX.

West-Side Hotels

What to Do in Portland Oregon If You're Here for Business

Courtesy of Sentinel

614 SW 11th Ave., (503) 224-3400

The best advice around Southwest Portland’s downtown core is to stay above 9th Avenue, in the residential and restaurant-packed West End. Boutique hotel The Sentinel is within easy reach of the interstate, with corporate meeting spaces available and a classic seafood spot and steakhouse, Jake’s Grill, on the bottom floor, along with a tasting room for one of the country’s premier wineries, Domaine Serene.

Nearby: One of the most extravagant views of the city can be found at Bellpine, the top-floor bar and restaurant at the nearby Ritz-Carlton, whose first-floor food hall, Flock, offers excellent birria tacos and a surprisingly well-stocked wine cellar. Nearby Multnomah Whiskey Library offers one of the largest and most renowned whiskey cellars in the country.

1150 NW 9th Ave., (503) 220-1339

For longer stays, local execs tell us a favored location is the Marriott’s Residence Inn at the edge of Portland’s tony Pearl District just north of downtown, within easy reach of light rail to the airport—with small kitchenettes for leftovers or snacks, and an onsite gym and pool. This is a place to stay, and stay fit, while working away from home.

Nearby: A location of drop-in-friendly coworking space CENTRL is a brisk 14-minute walk away. Nearby Jamison square is a dense corner of upscale eateries and bars. The most acclaimed food in the neighborhood comes from nationally recognized Mexican chef Angel Medina, at prix-fixe Republica (reservations recommended) and its nearby a la carte cousin, Lilia Comedor.

Where to Work

What to Do in Portland Oregon If You're Here for Business

Courtesy of CENTRL

329 NE Couch St., plus three more locations

CENTRL is a midsize West Coast chain of coworking spaces with four locations in Portland that offers flexible and low-friction arrangements for drop-in business travelers. This includes $40-per-day open-format day passes and private collaborative day offices ranging from $100 to $300 a day. Relatively low-frills meeting rooms are also rentable by the hour.

830 NE Holladay St.

WeWork is back from the brink these days, and Portland has one of the more modern locations, with flexible day work options and a pleasant enclosed patio—plus the requisite craft beer taps and table tennis. If your company has a WeWork membership, this is where you’ll be—amid high rises overlooking Portland’s convention district.

500 SW 116th Ave.

This luxe coworking space at the edge of Portland’s western suburbs is a perfectly located way station for those doing business in the chip-filled Silicon Forest west of Portland. Day passes and meeting rooms are available, in a sleek and high-ceilinged space attuned to corporate clients, with an attached health club.

Where to Get Coffee

Portland was the earliest hotbed for third-wave craft coffee in America, and some of the best-regarded beans in the world come here to be roasted. Here are the spots that best let you mix excellent brew with Wi-Fi and a power outlet.

What to Do in Portland Oregon If You're Here for Business

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

321 NE Davis St. and other locations

Roseline is a midsize roastery with a few locations around Portland that offers perhaps the best mix of work-friendly spaces and truly excellent coffee—ranging from forward-thinking light roast drip coffee to balanced espresso shots.

823 NW 23rd Ave.

Looking for a café where you’re likely to find Portland tech intelligentsia? This sophisticated multi-roaster hall of espresso is your spot, with shots from far-flung roasters on offer. You’ll need to show up early to get a prime table.

1229 SW 10th Ave.

In Downtown Portland’s museum blocks, Behind the Museum Café is a lovely respite, opened by owner Tomoe Horibuchi with a focus on small Japanese snacks, excellent tea, and coffee from local roaster Extracto. Wi-Fi is free, and the tucked-away café often has seats (and outlets) available.

2181 NW Nicolai St.

Electrica is a brick-walled multi-roaster café that offers excellent tea, coffee roasted in Japan or Thailand, espresso tonic drinks, and Mexican-style coffee—all at the edge of an electric fixture store.

Where to Eat

What to Do in Portland Oregon If You're Here for Business

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

Toya, for Some of the Country’s Best Ramen

803 SE Stark St.

I have eaten at a lot of ramen spots, from New York to Los Angeles to Tokyo. Few in this country are on Toya’s level, from its classic shoyu broth to wild modern inventions like a brothless ramen carbonara with hand-massaged noodles. The menu is equally schooled in sake and shochu highballs.

EEM, for Texas Brisket and Thai Spice

3808 N Williams Ave.

Akkapong “Earl” Ninsom founded multiple Thai restaurants in Portland that rank among the best in the country, including Beard-awarded prix-fixe Royal Thai restaurant Langbaan. None are as distinctive as EEM—a mix of tiki cocktail, slow-smoked Texas barbecue, and Thai curry that must be tasted to believe. You will order the white curry with brisket burnt ends. And you will talk about it to your friends for years.

Kachka, for Horseradish Vodka and Cherry Dumplings

960 SE 11th Ave.

There’s no restaurant quite like Kachka—a vodka and dumpling-filled hall devoted to the food of the former Soviet world. Ask for the Ruskie Zakuski, an endless parade of Slavic treats including Kachka’s iconic bright pink “herring under a fur coat” salad. Then order dumplings, from savory pelmeni to sour cherry vareniki, fine caviar with butter and blini, and flutes of infused vodka distilled by the restaurant. Prefer seafood? Try Kachka’s newly opened Fabrika spinoff at 2117 NE Oregon St.

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