Pricing transparency matters more than the cheapest quote — a clear written estimate beats a vague round-number bid. Opal 28 appears among wedding bliss listings for Portland, OR. The summary below is editorial — public-source cues plus call-prep questions, not service endorsements.
No structured service signals are present in the public-source pass for this listing. That makes the dispatch conversation the primary signal — ask which services they actually perform versus those that get subcontracted.
No structured homeowner use-case mapping is on file. Ask the dispatch what their typical recent jobs are — small repairs, full replacements, or commercial maintenance contracts.
Ask whether the provider leaves a written report after each visit listing what was done, what was found, and what to watch next. Without that, the next provider has to re-diagnose from scratch.
This is an editorial snapshot, not a referral. Pricing, availability, and certifications may have changed since the public-source pass.
Venue Highlights
Venue StyleBallroom & Banquet
Event venue · · 510 NE 28th Ave
Guest Rating4.5 / 5
128 Google reviews
Guest FavoritesSee reviews
Based on Google reviews
Price GuideRequest quote
Capacity: We went to a wedding at Opal 28. It was lovely. The staff were great. They managed all the decorating and seating. The venue is set up with 3 different rooms and a patio. The ceremony was in one room and there was seating in the other room, … More
LocationPortland, OR510 NE 28th Ave, Portland, OR 97232, United States
Starting PriceRequest quoteBased on sampled Google Maps data
Pricing transparency matters more than the cheapest quote — a clear written estimate beats a vague round-number bid. Opal 28 appears among wedding bliss listings for Portland, OR. The summary below is editorial — public-source cues plus call-prep questions, not service endorsements. No structured service signals are present in the public-source pass for this listing. That makes the dispatch conversation the primary signal — ask which services they actually perform versus those that get subcontracted. No structured homeowner use-case mapping is on file. Ask the dispatch what their typical recent jobs are — small repairs, full replacements, or commercial maintenance contracts. Ask whether the provider leaves a written report after each visit listing what was done, what was found, and what to watch next. Without that, the next provider has to re-diagnose from scratch. This is an editorial snapshot, not a referral. Pricing, availability, and certifications may have changed since the public-source pass.