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$108,000 View on Map
TAJ2163
14655 SW 76th Ave
Tigard, OR (in city)
2 Bed, 1 Bath Home
$345,000 View on Map
TCD1631 6 Photos
13132 SW Shakespeare St
Portland, OR (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2557 sq.ft.
$347,500 View on Map
WDC9593
9373 SW Fast Pl
Tigard, OR (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2500 sq.ft.
$489,000 View on Map
DJG0534
13957 SW Mistletoe Dr
Portland, OR (in city)
5 Bed, 3+ Bath Home
3525 sq.ft.
$318,000 View on Map
ADJ4647 26 Photos
11995 SW Burnett Ln
Beaverton, OR (1.9 miles)
5 Bed, 3 Bath Home
3018 sq.ft.
11995 SW Burnett Lane Beaverton OR 97008 $319,000 5 Bedroom/3BA/3018sqft Beaverton, …more»
$369,900 View on Map
TTG4237
6310 SW Pamela St
Portland, OR (1.9 miles)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2100 sq.ft.
This home is turn-key and move in ready.  Fresh paint and a very clean home is …more»

AMERICAN CLASSIC

$339,000 View on Map
WTP2759 10 Photos
12300 SW Davies Rd
Beaverton, OR (2.4 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2287 sq.ft.
$349,000 View on Map
PBG8419
104 Kingsgate Rd
Lake Oswego, OR (2.5 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
1979 sq.ft.
$425,000 View on Map
TTT3043
6206 SW Garden Home Rd
Portland, OR (3.1 miles)
4 Bed, 3 Bath Home
2391 sq.ft.
$365,000 View on Map
MTT5433
2955 Wembley Park Rd
Lake Oswego, OR (3.6 miles)
2 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2400 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Tigard, OR

Tigard () is a city in Washington County, Oregon, United States. The population was 41,223 at the 2000 census. The 2006 estimate is 46,300 residents. According to the 2003 Oregon Blue Book, Tigard is the state's 11th largest city. Located south of Beaverton and north of Tualatin, it is part of the Portland metropolitan area.


Like many towns in the Willamette Valley, Tigard was originally settled by several families, the most noteworthy of which was the Tigard family, headed by Wilson M. Tigard. Arriving in the area known as "East Butte" in 1852, the family settled and became involved in organizing and building the East Butte School, a general store (which starting in 1886 housed the area's post office) and a meeting hall, and renamed East Butte to "Tigardville". The Evangelical organization built the Emanuel Evangelical Church at the foot of Bull Mountain, south of the Tigard store in 1886. A blacksmith shop was opened in the 1890s by John Gaarde across from the Tigard Store, and in 1896 a new E. Butte school was opened to handle the growth the community was experiencing from an incoming wave of German settlers.

The period between 1907 and 1910 marked a rapid acceleration in growth as Main Street blossomed with the construction of several new commercial buildings, Germania Hall (a two-story building featuring a restaurant, grocery store, dance hall, and rooms to rent), a shop/post office, and a livery stable. Limited telephone service began in 1908.

In 1910, the arrival of the Oregon Electric Railway triggered the development of Main Street and pushed Tigardville from being merely a small farming community into a period of growth which would lead to its incorporation as a city in 1961. The town was renamed Tigard by the railroad to greater distinguish it from the nearby Wilsonville, and the focus of the town reoriented northeast towards the new rail stop as growth accelerated.

1911 marked the introduction of electricity, as the Tualatin Valley Electric company joined Tigard to a service grid with Sherwood and Tualatin. William Ariss built a blacksmith shop on Main Street in 1912 that eventually evolved into a modern service station. In the 1930s the streets and walks of Main Street were finally paved, and another school established to accommodate growth.

The city was the respondent in (and eventual loser of) the landmark property rights case, Dolan v. City of Tigard, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1994. The case established the "rough proportionality" test that is now applied throughout the United States when a local government evaluates a land use application and determines the exactions to require of the recipient of a land use approval.

In the 2004 general elections, the city of Tigard won approval from its voters to annex the unincorporated suburbs on Bull Mountain, a hill to the west of Tigard. However, residents in that area have rejected annexation and are currently fighting in court various moves by the city.

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