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Local Landmarks
Port Olivia Ferris Wheel, The OMOMA, The Placino
Industries
Shipping & Logistics, Visual Art, Music, Performing Arts
Dates Built
2073-2093
Transit Lines
Red Rail, Green Rail, B-Line Trolleybus
In the early days of Blendini City, Port Olivia was the city’s first main port for shipping and receiving goods. This got the economy going for the city when it was still young. Along with its still-thriving port for trade, Port Olivia has double-downed on its other heritage: fun!
Port Olivia has a lively music and restaurant scene. There is also a diverse mix of businesses run by humans and buildings. The Oliv Museum of Modern Art (the OMOMA) brings in interest from all over the world.
Many skilled artisans provide creative necessities. For example, Wick-ed Candles provides candles for many of the buildings that are looking to save on their electric resources. But they also craft many artistic candles that grace many storefronts in Blendini City’s neighborhoods. Wick-ed Candles also builds some of the street lamps in the city that run on biofuels.
The Handmade Arcade is a marketplace on the Port Olivia Pier that allows creative entrepreneurs to display their handmade products. Visitors love to stroll through this marketplace to find handmade items, from the practical to the unusual.
It allows them to feel like kids again, but the playground also has some twists. The Monster Slide is one of the favorite attractions at the Placino.
Mo Mo’s Lighthaus Grub and Bier brings German fare to Blendini City. People whose grandparents were German ex-pats run the restaurant! The Livia Food Hall is where culinary entrepreneurs of Blendini City can go to test things out before they open restaurants. Some choose to remain small-scale within this Food Hall because it brings them so much business.
At 250 feet tall, I must say that the views are some of the best I’ve seen in Blendini City. You can get a 360-degree view of the lake, Blendini Central, Pastel City, Moon Row, Jam Rock, The Hat District, and the Central Woodlands.
I love my neighbors. We all help each other out and make music and art together through what happens in our buildings. Being a building and a rock is interesting. The rock itself is definitely a part of me, and the music constantly pulsates through my body, but it’s comfortable. I’d say my only limit is death metal, I really hate it when the death metal shows come to town, but on the other hand it does bring those people joy.
Olivia Duffy, Parks Director & namesake of Port Olivia