Living Room (sculpture)

"[1] The installation featured a pink couch, a concrete high-backed yellow chair, a bronze coffee table,[1] and a "hypnotically glowing" television set.

[1] According to Willamette Week, the installation became "notorious as a local party spot for teenagers and twentysomethings", attracting "young (and often intoxicated) people to use it as an actual living room".

[3] In 2012, Willamette Week's Aaron Mesh described the people he encountered at the site during his three-day, nearly 250-mile experience on public transit.

[3] TriMet removed the sculpture in late October 2013, twelve years after its installation, due to loitering teenagers.

[2] Following the sculpture's installation, Anne Endicott of Gresham's newspaper The Outlook wrote, "It's always comforting when someone leaves the light on at home.