Gateway Transit Center (TriMet)

Last updated
Gateway/NE 99th Ave TC MAX Blue Line icon.svg    MAX Green Line icon.svg    MAX Red Line icon.svg Gateway North MAX Red Line icon.svg
TriMet transit center
West side of TriMet's Gateway TC looking south in 2015.jpg
The transit center's west side. The center has bus stops on both the east and west sides of the MAX station.
General information
Location9900 NE Multnomah St
Portland, Oregon, United States
Coordinates 45°31′50″N122°33′49″W / 45.530667°N 122.563628°W / 45.530667; -122.563628
Owned by TriMet
PlatformsGateway/NE 99th Ave TC: 1 island & 2 side platforms
Gateway North: 1 side platform
Tracks3
Bus routesAiga bus trans.svg TriMet: 15, 19, 22, 23, 24, 25, 87
Aiga bus trans.svg Columbia Gorge Express
Bus stands13
Construction
Parking690 spaces
Bicycle facilitiesBike lockers and banks
AccessibleYes
History
OpenedSeptember 5, 1986
Services
Preceding station TriMet icon.svg TriMet Following station
Gateway/NE 99th Avenue Transit Center
Northeast 82nd Avenue Blue Line East 102nd Avenue
Northeast 82nd Avenue Green Line Southeast Main Street
Northeast 82nd Avenue
One-way operation
Red Line Parkrose/​Sumner Transit Center
Gateway North
Northeast 82nd Avenue Red Line Parkrose/​Sumner Transit Center
One-way operation
Former services
Preceding station TriMet icon.svg TriMet Following station
Gateway/NE 99th Avenue Transit Center
Northeast 82nd Avenue Red Line
2001–2024
Parkrose/​Sumner Transit Center
Location
Gateway Transit Center (TriMet)

Gateway Transit Center is a multimodal transport hub in Portland, Oregon, United States. Owned and operated by TriMet, it comprises Gateway/Northeast 99th Avenue Transit Center, a bus transit center and light rail station serving the MAX Green and Blue Lines and eastbound Red Line trains, and Gateway North, a separate station served by westbound Red Line trains. The complex is where the three lines split, with the Blue Line proceeding east to Gresham, the Green Line proceeding south to Clackamas, and the Red Line proceeding north to Portland International Airport. It is TriMet's second-busiest transit center after Beaverton Transit Center, with 4,847 average weekday boardings for all modes in spring 2023.

Contents

When opened in 1986, it was the busiest station on the Portland–Gresham MAX line, the only line in the system at that time, and was the terminus of 11 bus lines. [1] Currently seven bus lines serve the Gateway Transit Center.

The transit center is next to the interchange of Interstate 84 and Interstate 205, and behind a Fred Meyer store in the Gateway Shopping Center. Neighborhoods served by this station include Hazelwood, Woodland Park, Parkrose Heights, Madison South and Montavilla.

Platform layout

Red Line train on the curved bridge south of the station MAX train on curved Red Line bridge, February 2018.jpg
Red Line train on the curved bridge south of the station
View of the transit center from its parking garage. The brick buildings in the foreground house a MAX traction substation and a break room for TriMet bus drivers. Gateway Transit Center - Portland, Oregon.JPG
View of the transit center from its parking garage. The brick buildings in the foreground house a MAX traction substation and a break room for TriMet bus drivers.

The original Gateway station includes three light rail tracks and platforms, with bus stops located on the east side of the station. The easternmost track is used by inbound (westbound) Blue and Green Line trains. Trains on this track open up doors to both the side and center platforms. The middle track is to the west of the center platform and was used by inbound Red Line trains prior to March 4th, 2024. The westernmost track has a side platform and is used by all outbound (eastbound) trains.

Prior to March 2024, inbound Red Line trains stopped at the center track because of the way the Red Line junction was configured. Because the tracks going into Gateway eastbound approach from the north, running the Red Line north to the airport from Gateway would have required the operator to change cabs. To rectify the problem, TriMet created a special configuration to the Red Line junction. Inbound, the double track line narrowed to single track about 0.5 miles (0.80 km) north of Gateway. The track runs adjacent to I-205, crosses under the main line, then swings around north on a sharp horseshoe turn, and merges with the outbound track just south of Gateway. Inbound trains then used the center track switches to cross over to the inbound track. From 2022 to 2024, as part of the Better Red project to eliminate both sections of single track on the Red Line, TriMet reconfigured the junction. [2] Beginning on March 4th, 2024, inbound Red Line trains ascend onto a flyover bridge that crosses over the outbound track. After crossing I-84, trains stop at a side platform 500 feet (152 m) north of the original station. After making their stop, trains make a right curve, cross the inbound Blue and Green Line track, and merge with the center track before merging with the inbound track. The original loop remains in use by outbound Red Line trains. [3]

In comparison, the Green Line's junction with the Blue Line, 0.5 miles (0.80 km) south of Gateway, is configured as a standard diverging junction.

Parking at this station and transit center was originally entirely in the form of surface lots, but in June 2006 TriMet opened a new 690-space parking garage. [4] This compensated for the closure of the surface lot closest to the station, which was replaced by a medical building. [4] A surface lot to the south of the station, in place since the station's opening in 1986, was not affected.

Bus service

Looking southeast from the outbound MAX platform in 2018, showing all three tracks Platforms at Gateway Transit Center, February 2018.jpg
Looking southeast from the outbound MAX platform in 2018, showing all three tracks

This station in the Gateway District is served by the following bus lines:

Unique station features

The station has the following features: [5]

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. Wade, Michael (November 17, 1986). "MAX spearheads boost in ridership". The Oregonian, p. B4.
  2. Howard, John (October 26, 2017). "TriMet considering expansion of MAX Red Line to county fairgrounds". Portland Tribune. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  3. McLawhorn, Jennifer (February 16, 2024). "TriMet Gateway North MAX Station Opens in March". Railway Track & Structures. Retrieved 25 February 2024.
  4. 1 2 "New Gateway Park & Ride garage opens". TriMet. May 31, 2006. Archived from the original on October 7, 2008. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  5. "Public Art on MAX Red Line". TriMet. Retrieved January 24, 2013.