The grounds of the dairy include: • '''Circuit d'Alpenrose''', a
velodrome, one of only 25 such tracks in the
United States. The track was built to host the 1967 National Championships. At 268.43 meters around with a radius and a 43-degree bank, Alpenrose is one of the steepest velodromes in the country. Alpenrose is home to the only North American Six-day race. It hosts races all summer, and annually draws the largest velodrome crowd in North America for the Alpenrose Challenge, in mid-July. •
Alpenrose Field, the site of
baseball and
softball games, including
Little League Softball World Series games, from 1956 to 2019. •
Dairyville, a replica of a
western frontier town, with false-front shops, a doll museum, an ice cream
parlor, a
harness-maker's store, a music shop, and a 600-seat
opera house with a
pipe organ (with 4000 pipes). • A
quarter-midget racing arena. The velodrome was permanently closed to the public in 2021. With little hope of reopening. Products from Alpenrose include
milk,
ice cream,
eggs, and various cultured
dairy products.
Dairyville Dairyville was added to Alpenrose sometime in the 1960s. As stated above, the replica frontier town consists of a few streets of false front stores, a doll museum, an ice cream parlor, a music shop and a 600-seat opera house. The theater's pipe organ was salvaged from the Portland Civic Auditorium. Dairyville is typically open to the public on holidays and during the summer months. For decades, Dairyville has hosted an annual holiday event called "Christmas in Dairyville". In addition to a gift shop and a house where children can have their photos taken with Santa Claus, there's also "Storybook Lane", an elaborate, walk-through attraction. Visitors wander through a snowy, moonlit mock-village inhabited by farm animals and displays based on
Mother Goose's fables. The attraction also includes a tiny fire station for kids to play in. Elsewhere on the property, choir groups from local schools perform. Dairyville's opera house also hosts nightly screenings of comedy shorts featuring
The Three Stooges and
Laurel and Hardy, along with more contemporary entertainment like the 2004 film adaptation of
The Polar Express. The event ended its annual run in 2005 but returned again for the 2011 Christmas season. Dairyville's assets were auctioned off in 2020 and several of the items remain in the public view. Some of the iconic red/gold carriages pulled by miniature horses in parades were bought and restored by Nob Hill Christmas Historical Society and now walk in the annual Starlight Parade, in addition several rows of seats from the Theater and reels of film from the Theater are publicly made available in Christmas time at the Nob Hill storage facility to enjoy a short from
Shirley Temple or 3 Stooges . The
Calliope that clown Rusty Nails would walk with in the Parade was bought by the son of the wagons original builder. Later in 2021 it was sold to a local collector to be preserved and displayed locally. The houses from Storybook Lane were bought by 2 parties, one private collector in Sandy Oregon as well as the Nob Hill Christmas Historical Society.
Lawsuit On March 4, 2019, a lawsuit was filed in
Multnomah County Circuit Court by three members of the Cadonau family against two other family members, alleging they are planning to sell the dairy and immediately stop all community events at Alpenrose. The family has since settled differences and dropped the lawsuit. In February 2021 the property was closed to events and all other uses.
Future development Lennar Northwest, Inc, represented by Westlake Consultants, Inc. submitted a "preapplication concept" for developing the Alpenrose property. The application "proposes a 193-lot single-family detached residential land division". The proposal includes: • Pre-application project summary. • Land Division Preapplication Meeting -- Applicant Questions (May 18, 2021) • Land Division Preapplication Concept (map) • Early Assistance application • Notice of a Pre-Application Conference (held June 17, 2021) • Pre-Application Conference report (dated August 4, 2021) ==References==