Further bad news for food cart fans—it appears the popular downtown pod at SW 6th and Columbia is slated for closure. Vendors, including Aybla Grill, Love Belizean and E-San Thai were given just 30 days notice last Friday. Andrew Love, co-proprietor of Love Belizean, is both angry and bemused by the eviction as he says it came out of nowhere, though he adds that he ran into a couple of businessmen last week who were discussing redevelopment of the adjacent parking lot—one of whom was allegedly speaking negatively about food carts. “The whole thing is shady,” he says. “No one around here wants the pod to go. Now we have to find a new place and build up our clientele again.”

The Mercury reached out to the firm that owns the lot, Harsch Investment Properties, about the particulars of this change. Unlike some other evictions issued in the name of converting food cart pods and their parking lots into housing, Harsch insists this one’s about turning a pod’s parking lot back into a regular parking lot.

New tenants in a nearby building wanted the stalls, prompting Harsch to reverse course a little more than a year after first establishing the pod.

“Of course, we are saddened to see the food carts leave, but this is about living up to our commitment to our tenant,” Steve Roselli, a senior vice president and Harsch’s Portland regional manager, tells the Mercury. “Portland Fidelity National Title and their affiliates lease 20,000 square feet in the adjacent building and have the right to the parking stalls in that lot for their employees and customers. After three months of occupancy, they have determined that they need the additional stalls. We, as their landlord, are obligated to provide them with the stalls if needed.”

This news comes after the recent announcement that Cartopia on SE 12th and Hawthorne is closing, and adds to the list of cart pod spaces that Portland is losing (Food Carts Portland has its take on the closure here, with a list of all the affected vendors). Yes, cities undoubtedly alter, redevelopment is a necessity, and carts can move—but does that mitigate giving a business only one month to relocate? And while the shifts may be gradual—losing a pod here and there—food and food carts reflect the character of our city, and no one wants Portland to become less vibrant and more sterile.

— News Editor Denis C. Theriault contributed to this report.

5 replies on “Another Food Cart Pod Bites the Dust”

  1. That totally Harschs my buzz.

    Not really, 30 days notice is pretty much standard in any commercial tenancy. As long as Harsch is complying with the terms of their leases with the carts, the whole thing is totally not shady.

  2. Go out to Cartlandia. It might not be in walking distance for most people’s lunch but it is on the Springwater. They have a great selection of quality carts and the owner just installed a full bar (by far the nicest one in the area) on the property in addition to the beer tent that was already there. It doesn’t look like it’s going anywhere soon.

  3. Cartlandia doesn’t help people downtown. That pod fills a good void. The next closest carts, besides an odd one here and there, are up by the Galleria, and down by PSU.

  4. There’s an empty lot near NE 82nd & NE Fremont that is looking for food cart tenants…:) Pretty much the same clientele, right?

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