Counesyjiboto Guests can listen to opera music and drink in a smoke-free environment in the Honors Bar at the Kennedy School in Portland. Stay in school during spring break Portland's Ken nedy School gives patrons a romantic bed & breakfast experience By Ryan Frank Oregon Daily Emerald who will let you sleep in class, drink in detention or watdi a beer brew ery at work in the girls’ bathroom. But at McMenamins’ Kennedy School bed and breakfast in Port land, a college student’s wildest dreams can come true. Rescued from possible demoli tion in the 1990s, the Kennedy School, a restored elementary school, is now a community crown jewel and a memorable destination for a weekend get away ora spring break trip. But if you do decide to make the two-hour drive into Northeast Portland for the night, be sure to take your beer mug, your wallet and some patience. With five bars, a restaurant, a movie theater and a soaking pool, there’s enough under one roof to keep you busy for a weekend, but it will most likely involve drink ing and eating. McMenamins’ microbrews, the best in the Northwest, are the drink of choice in the five bars, but wine and well drinks are also available. The Detention and Honors bars draw plenty of attention and laughs from guests. The Detention Bar of fers blues and jazz music, beer, wine, scotch, bourbon and cigars for the bad boys and girls, while the Honors Bar caters to the good boys and girls with opera music, wine and a non-smoking atmosphere. “At Kennedy, it’s the easiest way to go from detention to hon ors,” said Tim Hills, a McMe namins historian. At a weekend rate of $99, which includes a movie and breakfast, it’s not exactly cheap, but if you can afford it, the Kennedy School is well worth it. Pints and food run the typical McMenamins rate of $2.85 a pint and about $5 to $6 for a burger or sandwich. As is consistent with the two McMenamins pubs in Eugene, 19th Street and High Street brew eries, the service is not the strongest asset, and plenty of pa tience is necessary. But beyond marginal service, the Kennedy School is a true treasure. All 35 guest rooms are remod eled classrooms split into two rooms that include original art ot since recess has school been this fun. Even in college, it’s dif ficult to find a professor Courtesypboto The walls of the richly unique McMenamins Kennedy School are lined with original art. work and the original chalkboards from when the school closed in 1975. With hardwood floors, high ceilings and large windows, each room has a warm, romantic feel that carries throughout the build ing. Unlike Edgefield, the largest McMenamins’ bed and breakfast, located in Troutdale, each Kennedy School room includes a full private bath. If you are looking for a relaxing weekend of watching movies or TV in your room, the Kennedy School isn’t the place foryou. The rooms don’t have VCRs or TVs. But the Kennedy School does have a movie theater that plays re cent releases in a theater full of couches and lounge chairs, where you can drink and eat pizza dur ing the flick. If the food, drink, movie theater and soaking pool aren’t enough to draw you to the Kennedy School, the place is packed with original artwork, most of which covers the history of the school and its sur rounding neighborhood. Which is one reason why so many people enjoy staying at the Kennedy School, Hills said. “They look at all the paintings and photos on the wall, and they can relate; because of that com monality of elementary school, everyone can relate. ” Without the neighborhood, and specifically the Concordia Neigh borhood Association, the Kennedy School may have been turned into a pile of rubble. Constructed in 1916 and named after the Irish immigrant who owned the land, the Kennedy School closed its doors in 1975 when Portland’s elementary school population dwindled as the baby boomers moved on to middle school. Being one of the McMenamins Kennedy School ■WHAT: A 35-room bed and breakfast ■ ADDRESS: 5736 NE 33rd, Portland ■ E-MAIL: kennedy@mcme namins.com ■WEBSITE: www.mcmenamins.com ■ PHONE: 888-249-3983 ■ ROOM RATES: $89 per night Sunday to Thursday and $99 per night Friday and Saturday older buildings in the district and needing some repairs, the school was shutdown. After serving as a temporary school for other schools in the dis trict under construction, the Kennedy School was relegated to a storage facility. Risking possible demolition in the mid-1990s, the school was saved by the neighborhood asso ciation, which lobbied the city to have the school converted into a business. Several companies placed bids with the city to renovate the school. McMenamins won the bid, and after five months of reno vations, the Kennedy School bed and breakfast had its grand open ing in October 1997. The school is still closely tied to the community. The school, which is on the national register for historic places, has a meeting room devoted exclusively to the community and offers regular, no cost use of some facilities. It’s that community atmosphere and the number of things to do un der one roof that make the Kennedy School a charming expe rience that is difficult to find any where else. w*. rz kzr* fc A iL rz foryOL\ at tA* iy o f Orzcji Sp\r'm^ break ir> Maz^tldft ">bQTl00 fev pevso* based on «y*ad rate- .’j Includes ^iv/Ho-tcl/"tvans-fev-s j out o$ Portland- ^ Trawl_ ._vl Council CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange J OOfw'8/ University or Oregon L In the EMU Building Eugene 877 1/2 East 13in Street Eugene (541)344-2263 Jn. 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