Gresham Central Transit Center Explained

Address:350 NE 8th Street
Borough:Gresham, Oregon
Country:U.S.
Coordinates:45.5028°N -122.4272°W
Owned:TriMet
Line:Eastside MAX
Platform:2 side platforms
6 bus bays
Tracks:2
Bus Routes: TriMet: FX2, 9, 20, 21, 80, 81, 82, 84
Sandy Area Metro
Bus Stands:6
Parking:540 spaces
Bicycle:Racks and lockers
Accessible:Yes
Opened:1981/82 (bus)
September 5, 1986 (MAX)
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail-light
Zoom:15

The Gresham Central Transit Center, also known as Gresham Transit Center, is a TriMet transit center and MAX light rail station in Gresham, Oregon, United States. The center is a connection point for several bus routes and the MAX Blue Line. The light rail station is the 25th stop eastbound on the eastside MAX line, which was the Portland metropolitan area's first light rail line.

The transit center is located at the intersection of NE Kelly Avenue and NE 8th Street in the central part of Gresham. It is a hub for bus service to points in eastern Multnomah County and Portland.

History and description

It originally opened as a bus-only transit center in 1981, named Gresham Transit Center, in the form of multiple bus stops clustered along 8th Street and Kelly Avenue, a temporary arrangement until construction of a planned off-street facility. The off-street bus layover area – a short section of bus-only road with purpose-built bus stops – was opened in February 1982.[1]

The adjacent MAX station opened in 1986, and the entire facility was renamed Gresham Central Transit Center at that time. However, TriMet continues to refer to it as Gresham Transit Center (or Gresham TC) on bus destination signs and bus schedules. The station originally had no park-and-ride lot, but TriMet built and opened a three-level garage with a ground-floor retail space in 1996.[2] [3] A 30-space bike-and-ride facility (a secured parking area for bicycles) was built later, inside the garage, and opened in July 2011.[4]

Public art at the transit station includes Living Room, a sculpture comprising vintage furniture cast in concrete and a faux television set cast in bronze, which was installed in 2001 through a public art program.[5] The work was subsequently removed in October 2013.[6]

The transit center was located in TriMet fare zone 4 from 1982[7] until September 1988,[8] and in zone 3 from then until September 2012, at which time TriMet discontinued all use of zones in its fare structure.[9]

Bus service

, this station is served by the following bus lines:[10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Tri-Met hails bus line successes". The Oregonian, January 27, 1982, p. B4
  2. Briggs, Kara (July 15, 1996). "A new city hall in town". The Oregonian (East Metro edition), p. B2.
  3. Gresham Park & Ride garage open for business . TriMet . December 26, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/19970119082623/http://www.trimet.org/pressrel/pr-park.html . January 19, 1997 . dead . July 15, 1996.
  4. News: Rose. Joseph. TriMet opens Gresham, Beaverton bike-and-rides, hopes facilities used more than first. July 18, 2011. The Oregonian. December 17, 2011.
  5. News: Genovese. Fran. Trouble in Gresham's 'Living Room'. November 6, 2008. The Oregonian. December 17, 2011.
  6. News: Tomlinson. Stuart. 'The Living Room' art installation at TriMet's Gresham Transit Center will be removed. October 16, 2013. The Oregonian. October 15, 2013.
  7. Federman, Stan (August 29, 1982). "Fare boosts, new routes expected to reverse Tri-Met trends". The Oregonian, p. C2.
  8. Houston, Bryan K. (September 2, 1988). "Tri-Met changes go into effect Sunday". The Oregonian, p. E10.
  9. News: Bailey Jr.. Everton. TriMet boosts most fares starting Saturday; some routes changing . The Oregonian. August 30, 2012 . December 9, 2012.
  10. September 18, 2022 . Rail System . September 18, 2022 . TriMet.