Overlook Park station

[4] In February 2000, the Portland City Council authorized the relocation of Overlook Park station's planned northbound platform closer to the main entrance of Kaiser Permanente's medical offices, despite hospital officials expressing a preference to shift both platforms closer to benefit patients.

Its platforms consist of shelters, benches, garbage cans, ticket vending machines, and passenger information displays.

[12] TriMet commissioned artist Fernanda D'Agostino to design the station's public artwork, which pays homage to nature, healing, and the Overlook neighborhood's Polish roots.

[13] Her work, entitled Icons of Transformation, comprises two light towers and windscreens installed on the station platforms.

[14] The light towers, modeled after Polish wayside shrines, feature portraits of community members overlaid with images of nature.

[15] A community map by artist Margaret Eccles depicts a shaft of wheat with roots interweaving a street grid and adorned with glass-block medical drawings derived from ancient Islamic, Chinese, and Medieval European cultures.