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Fruitful Fete

p:ear partners with Courtyard Marriott

By Robert Runyon

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Photo: Meghan Colson

Hotel general manager Mike Castro is proud of how connected the new Courtyard Marriott is to the city. “We commissioned all Portland artists for the artwork in the hotel,” he said.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Hotel general manager Mike Castro is proud of how connected the new Courtyard Marriott is to the city. “We commissioned all Portland artists for the artwork in the hotel,” he said.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

On the back wall of the lobby guests are greeted by Daniel Long’s “6 Travelers.” Long appreciates the exposure from having his art at the hotel. “It’s permanent—it feels more special because more people are going to see it,” he said.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

p:ear director Pippa Arend helped create the nonprofit group after a similar program with the Salvation Army shut down six years ago. “We work with kids of all levels,” she says. “Some are going after college, others are learning second-grade English.”

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Jason Okamoto and Michael Papillo play some shiny-suited tunes for the party guests.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

The sustainable fashion show included garments from local designers Idom and Amei Unmei.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Portland Fashion Week’s Tito Chowdry (left), who produced the sustainable show, spoke about the local fashion scene’s amazing growth. “We have designers moving here from New York,” he said. “And the Portland Fashion Week has become one of the biggest in the United States.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Members of SERA, the design team behind the Courtyard Marriott, bunch up in the Bamboo Grove.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Work from p:ear students Scribe, Jane Hoffman, and Joseph Eason was displayed prominently.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Lobby artist Daniel Long’s parents, Owen and Hilary Long, salute the soiree.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Local photographers also get some wall space at the Courtyard Marriott.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

The Garden of Delights included tempting desserts such as marbled chocolate brownies and hazelnut torte, while an enticing vanilla scent permeated the room.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Not only was the lobby of the Courtyard Marriott filled with local art, so were the guests’ rooms themselves.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Guests exiting the elevator are greeted with this nearly life-size photograph of the Made in Oregon sign.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Words of wisdom scattered on the tables distracted guests from their pear-tinis. Or was it the other way around?

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

Tiffany Sullivan and Nicolette Gonzalez ready Erin Dierking for the fashion show.

View Slideshow » Photo: Meghan Colson

The design team wanted to avoid having too many straight and parallel lines in the rooms. “We stylized the Oregon landscape, and turned it into the hotel environment,” said Lisa Zangerle, SERA’s director of interior design.

Better late than never. Clichés only make sense when there’s a hint of truth in them, which was certainly the case with the opening of the new Courtyard Marriott downtown at SW Sixth and Oak. Despite officially opening for business on May 27, the powers that be waited until July 16 for the actual opening shindig. For this auspicious event, the Marriott paired with p:ear, a local nonprofit program that mentors homeless youth and provides them with creative opportunities and a chance to acquire skills that could keep them off the streets.

Within seconds of passing through the doors of the Courtyard, guests were handed a Green Dragon, a disarming cucumber-infused glass of cocktail magic. The lobby was festooned with works by Portland artists, to underscore the idea that this hotel is truly a part of the city.

Upstairs, each room had a different theme that represented a part of Oregon and its culture. There was the Bamboo Grove room that served various types of seafood, while a sustainable fashion show took place accompanied by local band Sneakin’ Out playing bossa nova versions of Deep Purple. The Breath of Fresh Air room gave people literal breaths of fresh air, as an oxygen bar dispensed wild combinations of flavored air (a personal favorite: mocha lavender, no joke). The p:ear Art Gallery included a mushroom bar with chanterelles, morels, shimeji, and shitakes. The dessert suite was called the Garden of Delights. And the Leaf Bar had leaves inscribed with words of wisdom spread out all over the tables for the guests to peruse while sipping their event-appropriate pear-tinis.

By the end of the night, the greatest winner was p:ear. The local nonprofit took in $8,000 to help at-risk kids complete their GEDs and find creative outlets for themselves.

Thanks for reading!
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