Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (4,579)
  • Business (301)
  • Career (3,871)
  • Climate (201)
  • Culture (3,841)
  • Education (4,048)
  • Finance (174)
  • Health (824)
  • Lifestyle (3,730)
  • Science (3,733)
  • Sports (284)
  • Tech (161)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

It’s not a hangover, it’s social apnea: Study links weekend lifestyle changes to sleep disorder | Health

September 21, 2025

Trends and What Drove Them

September 21, 2025

LeBron James Explains What Scoring 50,000 Career Points Means To Him

September 21, 2025

CBS NewsMeet the lowrider ladies dedicated to upholding Bay Area's lowrider cultureLowrider clubs were established in the 1940s, but women weren't allowed to join them. The tide started changing around in the 70s with more….12 hours ago

September 21, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Zelenskyy plans to meet Trump on sidelines of UN as Russia steps up attacks | Russia-Ukraine war News

    September 21, 2025

    Don’t ignore this red flag behavior in a relationship

    September 20, 2025

    Selena Gomez reveals how her lupus diagnosis caused arthritis at young age

    September 20, 2025

    Trump seeks enforcement of transgender and non-binary passport policy | Donald Trump News

    September 20, 2025

    Trump H-1B visa tech foreign governments

    September 20, 2025
  • Business

    Recently, SK Hynix, a domestic semiconductor company, has become a big topic. This is because the st..

    September 20, 2025

    51 Incredible Customer Loyalty Statistics (2024)

    September 18, 2025

    Equal pay hot topic for International Women’s Day

    September 16, 2025

    “My Yunnan Flavor” Topic Challenge to Be Launched

    September 12, 2025

    Virginia Company | Definition, History, & Facts

    September 9, 2025
  • Career

    LeBron James Explains What Scoring 50,000 Career Points Means To Him

    September 21, 2025

    Dr. Shannon Castillo named Career and Technical Education Administrator of the Year

    September 21, 2025

    Why 7-foot-3 Jordan Wilmore left his pro basketball career behind to pursue his true passion, policing

    September 20, 2025

    Bengals News (9/20): Mohamed Sanu Officially Calls it an NFL career

    September 20, 2025

    Fall Career Fair set for Sept. 22-25 in Littlejohn Coliseum

    September 20, 2025
  • Sports

    Raiders-Commanders FEED topic: Ashton Jeanty’s touches

    September 19, 2025

    170+ Cause-and-Effect Essay Topics for K-12 Students

    September 19, 2025

    Cowboys Hot Topic: Jadeveon Clowney is already showing leadership

    September 19, 2025

    Boxing | History, Rules, Weight Divisions, Notable Fighters, & Facts

    September 18, 2025

    Sorber Injury Puts Bigger Spotlight on Nikola Topic

    September 18, 2025
  • Climate

    Controlled Environment Agriculture Goes Dynamic

    September 9, 2025

    The Economic Benefits of Nature-Based Tourism

    September 8, 2025

    Data centers are a hot topic for Virginia legislators

    September 7, 2025

    Organic food | Definition, Policies, & Impacts

    September 2, 2025

    Green export strategies | UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

    August 31, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    2024 Enterprise Networking Award Finalists

    September 19, 2025

    Discovering What Non-Tech Users Need In A Solution

    September 19, 2025

    TECH TUESDAY: Trading Speed, AI Among Hot Topics in 2024

    September 19, 2025

    Tech topics will be focus of Lutnick hearing

    September 19, 2025

    Trends and What Drove Them

    September 21, 2025

    Texas teen uses computer science to fight scammers

    September 21, 2025

    Scientists predict wildfire smoke will be the most costly climate-related health hazard

    September 20, 2025

    Analytics and Data Science News for the Week of September 19; Updates from Databricks, Domino Data Lab, Plotly & More

    September 20, 2025
  • Culture

    CBS NewsMeet the lowrider ladies dedicated to upholding Bay Area's lowrider cultureLowrider clubs were established in the 1940s, but women weren't allowed to join them. The tide started changing around in the 70s with more….12 hours ago

    September 21, 2025

    By honoring Indigenous cultures, new education center at Tryon Creek aims to inspire next generation

    September 21, 2025

    New Democratic think tank looks to break ‘culture of rigidity’ within the party

    September 20, 2025

    Cultural events, guest speakers, Taste of Nations Festival will highlight Global Focus Week

    September 20, 2025

    College of Human Development, Culture, and Media Starts the Academic Year With Third-Annual Convocation and Celebration

    September 20, 2025
  • Health

    World Rabies Day 2025

    September 19, 2025

    Public health | Definition, History, & Facts

    September 19, 2025

    International Snakebite Awareness Day 2025 (ISBAD ’25)

    September 19, 2025

    Cleveland 19 NewsMental health of man accused of killing Cleveland police officer a major topic in courtMental health of man accused of killing Cleveland police officer a major topic in court. Published: Sep. 18, 2025 at 10:23 AM PDT|Updated: 23 minutes ago..1 hour ago

    September 18, 2025

    Public health hot topic: COVID-19, influenza and RSV immunizations in 2025

    September 18, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Culture»By honoring Indigenous cultures, new education center at Tryon Creek aims to inspire next generation
Culture

By honoring Indigenous cultures, new education center at Tryon Creek aims to inspire next generation

September 21, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
L32xb4v7prawlpbdo4cvybijmq.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
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 Southwest Portland. This photo taken on Sep. 13, 2025 shows the front of the roughly 2,900-square-foot pavilion which is designed to resemble plankhouses used by Northwest Indigenous tribes for potlatches, ceremonies and other events.

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 Southwest Portland. This photo taken on Sep. 13, 2025 shows the front of the roughly 2,900-square-foot pavilion which is designed to resemble plankhouses used by Northwest Indigenous tribes for potlatches, ceremonies and other events.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

This Saturday, a new education pavilion is opening at Tryon Creek State Natural Area. The roughly 660-acre day-use area located in Southwest Portland near Lake Oswego is the only Oregon state park within a major metropolitan area.

The Friends of Tryon Creek raised the funds for and oversaw the construction of the new facility that will allow the nonprofit to provide year-round community events and educational programming for thousands of students who come each year to experience day camps, field trips and classes at Tryon Creek.

News of the pavilion’s opening was first reported by Oregon ArtsWatch.

“School groups that are coming from East Portland, from Beaverton, Hillsboro, Canby, Wilsonville, they generally, you know, want a place to have lunch, a place where students can sit down and rest a little bit,” said Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships, who is Cayuse and Walla Walla and a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.

Tryon Creek’s new center will also remind students and visitors of the enduring cultural legacies of Northwest Indigenous tribes and their stewardship of the environment extending beyond the Douglas fir, big leaf maple, red alder and western red cedar that dominate this urban forest canopy.

Input from community members helped inform the pavilion’s design which was based on plankhouses used by tribes as community spaces to gather for potlatches, ceremonies and other functions.

“We really heard from tribes, tribal partners, and had this opportunity to represent kind of the Indigenous architecture of the space, so a plankhouse with cedar planks, having mature western red cedar logs as kind of the backbone of the structure.

“But a little different in that we have a lot of windows that are floor to ceiling, … so we’re holding on to the views and … it definitely feels like you’re still in the forest.”

Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships poses for a portrait on Sept. 13,  2025, at the new education pavilion which was designed to evoke traditional plankhouses used by Indigenous Northwest tribes for potlatches, ceremonies and other events.

Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships poses for a portrait on Sept. 13, 2025, at the new education pavilion which was designed to evoke traditional plankhouses used by Indigenous Northwest tribes for potlatches, ceremonies and other events.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The new pavilion has two classrooms with air conditioning, whiteboards, chalkboards, modern A/V equipment, custom-made barn doors and floor-to-ceiling glass walls that open onto a hallway made of bluestone, a blue-gray composite stone chosen to represent Columbia River flood basalts that helped shape the geology of the Northwest.

A covered fire pit lies in the middle for use during special occasions in the nearly 2,900-square-foot pavilion, which replaces a wooden gazebo built in 1975 that was open on all sides.

Douglas fir boards that could be salvaged from the old gazebo were reused for the new construction, tying the new space with reminders of the generations of students who’ve been lucky enough to have this temperate rainforest as a classroom.

“We’re building in a living, intact ecosystem and we’re not conquering it,” Sheoships said. “We made a very strategic effort to build within the forest and the wooden materials will represent the living forest that will obviously grow up around us,” he added.

Roughly half of the pavilion’s $2.6 million cost has come from donations made by individuals and family foundations. The project has also received grant funding from philanthropic organizations and public agencies such as Oregon State Parks and the Metro regional government, which awarded it $350,000 in 2023.

Two years earlier, the Oregon state legislature allocated $250,000 in federal pass-through funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to kickstart the project. Sheoships says roughly $300,000 remains to be raised, which Friends of Tryon Creek aims to do by year’s end.

Artist Shirod Younker uses a chisel to work an 8-foot-tall carving he’s making out of western red cedar on Sep. 16, 2025 inside the basement of the new education pavilion opening at the Tryon Creek State Natural Area in Southwest Portland. Younker is Coos, Miluk and Umpqua, a citizen of the Coquille Indian Tribe and one of four Northwest Indigenous artists commissioned to create artwork inside the new space.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

Younker’s carving is made from a board of western red cedar and is modeled after house posts found in traditional plankhouses used by Indigenous Northwest tribes for ceremonies and other communal gatherings. The carving is of a figure that will contain an obsidian blade to symbolize wealth and status and dentalium, which was traditionally used by Northwest tribes for decoration and as a form of currency for trading.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

Six massive, sustainably harvested western red cedar lodge poles are used in the new pavilion to serve both as support beams for the structure and to honor the wood’s cultural significance for Native American tribes in the Northwest. Treated cedar was also used for the exterior.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The new pavilion triples the number of students Friends of Tryon Creek can serve at any given time with educational programs. This photo shows one of the two new classrooms which feature A/V equipment, custom made barn doors, chalk boards and moveable floor-to-ceiling glass walls. The pavilion is built on the site of a 50-year-old gazebo made of Douglas fir and open all sides where classes and community events were previously held at Tryon Creek. Wood from that old gazebo were reclaimed for reuse inside and outside the new structure and is identifiable with its darker hue which stands in contrast to the new Douglas fir boards in the walls and ceiling. Big leaf maple was used for the classroom floors.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The nearly 2,900-square-foot Tryon Creek education pavilion was carefully constructed over the past two years on the forest floor. Six western red cedar lodge poles were used for the exterior of the structure, which can be seen in this side view of the building. Although the design is based on traditional plankhoused used by Indigenous Northwest tribes, the pavilion features windows which provide floor-to-ceiling views of the surrounding temperate rainforest at Tryon Creek.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

“Think Out Loud” host Dave Miller interviews Gabe Sheoships, executive director of Friends of Tryon Creek on the back deck of the new, $2.6 million Tryon Creek education pavilion for which Sheoships’ nonprofit raised the funds and oversaw its construction.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The new education pavilion at Tryon Creek State Natural Area features artwork made by four Indigenous artists from different tribal nations, including Greg Robinson, a member of the Chinook Indian Nation. Robinson has made an 8-foot-tall carving out of western red cedar which is shown in this photo being prepared for its installation inside one of the two classrooms in the pavilion.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

Indigenous artist Shirod Younker uses a carving tool called an adze to work on the 8-foot-tall he is making out of western red cedar which will be installed in one of the two classrooms in the new Tryon Creek education pavilion. “You start second guessing all your cuts and then sometimes you take off too much and and then you figuratively carve yourself into a corner and got to figure out how to make it I guess palatable for yourself and potentially the audience that will see it,” Younker said.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

Friends of Tryon Creek executive director Gabe Sheoships stands inside a classroom in the education pavilion at Tryon Creek State Natural Area a week before its opening on Sep. 20, 2025. “I think the more people that are able to access this place, I think more people will care about this forest and then go on to wherever they journey in life and have a connection with the natural world,” Sheoships said.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The nonprofit commissioned four Indigenous artists from different Northwest tribal nations to make original works that will be permanently displayed inside the pavilion.

In a makeshift studio set up for him in the pavilion’s basement, Shirod Younker is completing an 8-foot-tall sculpture carved out of western red cedar inspired by house posts found in traditional plankhouses.

“A house post is something that holds up, like the ridge pole that holds up the roof or holds up other beams that you can set the sides on,” said Younker. “There’s usually two main ones that are on the opposite ends of the building and sometimes those would be carved.”

Younker is Coos, Miluk and Umpqua and a citizen of the Coquille Indian Tribe, whose ancestral lands span the southern Oregon Coast.

In a nod to that heritage, Younker’s piece will be installed on the southern side of the pavilion directly facing an 8-foot-tall sculpture carved by Greg Robinson, an artist and citizen of the Chinook Indian Nation.

“So the idea is that there’ll be a conversation between the two pieces and kind of a nice metaphor for what the building hopefully will be, where people from different backgrounds and ethnicities can come in and exchange ideas, but make and learn all together as a collaborative,” Younker said.

Younker’s carving will feature an obsidian blade to signify status and wealth and also dentalium, a white shell that Indigenous tribes throughout the Pacific Northwest used for decoration and as a form of currency for trading.

Even though there may be no exchange of goods within the walls of the new space, the hope is that there will be an exchange of ideas inspired by the setting of Tryon Creek, its connection to the natural world and the lessons it beckons about the responsibility to protect it for future generations.

This photo taken on Sep. 13, 2025, shows the hallway inside the pavilion which separates two classrooms and is made of bluestone chosen to represent Columbia River basalt. A covered fire pit lies in the middle of the hallway.

This photo taken on Sep. 13, 2025, shows the hallway inside the pavilion which separates two classrooms and is made of bluestone chosen to represent Columbia River basalt. A covered fire pit lies in the middle of the hallway.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

“I hope that young people will come here and will be able to express what we want them to know about this environment so that they’ll begin to love it, right? And that being said, when they love it, then they’ll want to protect it or take care of it,” Younker said.

“This building will give a space for gathering, a space for communion, a space for playing, a space for making friends, a space of connection that would then be a gateway to this larger forest and many others throughout the region and really the world,” Sheoships said.

Tryon Creek State Natural Area in Southwest Portland is a temperate rainforest with moss-covered Douglas fir, western red cedar, big leaf maple and red alder trees dominating its urban forest canopy. This photo taken on Sep. 16, 2025 at Tryon Creek State Natural Area shows a view of stands of Douglas fir trees and ferns growing on the forest floor.

Tryon Creek State Natural Area in Southwest Portland is a temperate rainforest with moss-covered Douglas fir, western red cedar, big leaf maple and red alder trees dominating its urban forest canopy. This photo taken on Sep. 16, 2025 at Tryon Creek State Natural Area shows a view of stands of Douglas fir trees and ferns growing on the forest floor.

Sheraz Sadiq / OPB

The public is invited to attend an opening celebration at Tryon Creek State Natural Area from 2-4 p.m. this Saturday featuring a salmon bake, tours of the new pavilion and a welcoming ceremony.

Gabe Sheoships and Shirod Younker spoke to “Think Out Loud” host Dave Miller. Click play to listen to the full conversation:

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

CBS NewsMeet the lowrider ladies dedicated to upholding Bay Area's lowrider cultureLowrider clubs were established in the 1940s, but women weren't allowed to join them. The tide started changing around in the 70s with more….12 hours ago

September 21, 2025

New Democratic think tank looks to break ‘culture of rigidity’ within the party

September 20, 2025

Cultural events, guest speakers, Taste of Nations Festival will highlight Global Focus Week

September 20, 2025

College of Human Development, Culture, and Media Starts the Academic Year With Third-Annual Convocation and Celebration

September 20, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

It’s not a hangover, it’s social apnea: Study links weekend lifestyle changes to sleep disorder | Health

September 21, 2025

Trends and What Drove Them

September 21, 2025

LeBron James Explains What Scoring 50,000 Career Points Means To Him

September 21, 2025

CBS NewsMeet the lowrider ladies dedicated to upholding Bay Area's lowrider cultureLowrider clubs were established in the 1940s, but women weren't allowed to join them. The tide started changing around in the 70s with more….12 hours ago

September 21, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (4,579)
  • Business (301)
  • Career (3,871)
  • Climate (201)
  • Culture (3,841)
  • Education (4,048)
  • Finance (174)
  • Health (824)
  • Lifestyle (3,730)
  • Science (3,733)
  • Sports (284)
  • Tech (161)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (4,579)
  • Business (301)
  • Career (3,871)
  • Climate (201)
  • Culture (3,841)
  • Education (4,048)
  • Finance (174)
  • Health (824)
  • Lifestyle (3,730)
  • Science (3,733)
  • Sports (284)
  • Tech (161)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.