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San Francisco Transbay Terminal - Wikipedia Jump to content

San Francisco Transbay Terminal

Coordinates: 037°47′22″N 122°23′47″W / 37.78944°N 122.39639°W / 37.78944; -122.39639
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Transbay Terminal
A 2008 view of the facade of the now-demolished 1939 "Transbay Transit Terminal" which was designed by Timothy L. Pflueger
General information
Location425 Mission Street, San Francisco, California
Coordinates037°47′22″N 122°23′47″W / 37.78944°N 122.39639°W / 37.78944; -122.39639
Owned byCaltrans
Other information
Websitehttp://transbaycenter.org/project/terminal-history
History
OpenedJanuary 14, 1939 (1939-01-14)
ClosedAugust 7, 2010 (2010-08-07)
Former services
Preceding station Muni Following station
1995–2000
Market and Battery F Market & Wharves Terminus
1939–1982
Market and Battery
towards Balboa Park
J Church Terminus
Market and Battery
towards Phelan Loop
K Ingleside
Market and Battery
towards SF Zoo
L Taraval
Market and Battery M Ocean View
Market and Battery
towards Ocean Beach
N Judah
Preceding station Key System Following station
1939–1958
Terminus A Yerba Buena Island
towards Oak & 12th
B Yerba Buena Island
towards Underhill
C Yerba Buena Island
E Yerba Buena Island
towards Claremont
F Yerba Buena Island
H
(discontinued 1941)
Hollis
Preceding station Sacramento Northern Railway Following station
1939–1941
Terminus Main Line Oakland
toward Chico
Preceding station Southern Pacific Railroad Following station
Interurban Electric Railway
1939–1941
Terminus Berkeley Branch 34th Street
Ninth Street Line
7th Street Line Oakland
Lincoln Avenue Line Oakland
Encinal Avenue Line
Location
Map

The San Francisco Transbay Terminal was a transportation complex in San Francisco, California, United States, roughly in the center of the rectangle bounded north–south by Mission Street and Howard Street, and east–west by Beale Street and 2nd Street in the South of Market area of the city. It opened on January 14, 1939 as a train station and was converted into a bus depot in 1959. The terminal mainly served San Francisco's downtown and Financial District, as transportation from surrounding communities of the Bay Area terminated there such as: Golden Gate Transit buses from Marin County, AC Transit buses from the East Bay, and SamTrans buses from San Mateo County. Long-distance buses from beyond the Bay Area such as Greyhound and Amtrak Thruway also served the terminal. Several bus lines of the San Francisco Municipal Railway connected with the terminal.

It closed on August 7, 2010, to make way for the construction of the replacement facility, the Salesforce Transit Center, and associated towers. All long-distance and transbay bus operations were transferred to a Temporary Transbay Terminal at the nearby block bounded by Main, Folsom, Beale, and Howard Streets.

The new Salesforce Transit Center broke ground on August 11, 2010.[1] US Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, and the Mayor of San Francisco Gavin Newsom attended the ceremony. The new transit center opened to the public on August 12, 2018.

Bridge railway

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The bus deck in 2010, formerly the track level of the train station

The Transbay Terminal served as the San Francisco terminus for the electric commuter trains of the Interurban Electric (Southern Pacific), the Key System and the Sacramento Northern (Western Pacific) railroads, which ran on the south side of the lower deck of the Bay Bridge. Bus services such as Greyhound and local Muni streetcar lines had stops at the main entrance.

History

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The Terminal was designed by Timothy L. Pflueger[2][3] in the Art Moderne style.[4] Bids were taken for construction of the terminal in June 1937,[5] excavation began on July 29, 1937, and the first steel was erected on January 12, 1938.[6] Structural concrete was complete by May 1938.[7] The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge Electric Railway Terminal Building was formally dedicated on January 14, 1939 (1939-01-14Tdmy). State Director of Public Works Frank W. Clark turned the facilities over to the State of California, as represented by Lieutenant Governor Ellis E. Patterson, who turned over management of the facility to the three electric railroad companies.[6] State officials and guests rode electric trains to the opening ceremony.[6][8]

Construction of rail facilities (including laying tracks on the bridge and construction of the new San Francisco terminal) for the Bay Bridge had cost the state an estimated US$15,000,000 (equivalent to $328,600,000 in 2023), and the state had invested an additional US$3,666,129 (equivalent to $80,300,000 in 2023) in rolling stock, which was leased to the railroad companies.[9] The terminal cost was estimated at US$2,300,000 (equivalent to $50,400,000 in 2023),[8] and it was expected to serve upwards of 60,000 passengers per day.[10][11]

Train service

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Governor Frank Merriam piloted the first (ceremonial) electric train across the bridge on September 23, 1938,[12] although regular service did not commence until January 1939, after the terminal was complete. Trains were controlled with a custom electric switchboard, which was considerably simpler than the typical mechanical lever system then in use.[13] A loop was built so trains could turn around and go back across the bridge. Even after rail service ended, the loop continued to be used by AC Transit, Amtrak Thruway and Greyhound buses until the station closed. Surprisingly, a track was never made to connect to the Southern Pacific's Third and Townsend Depot so trains could go further south. There were six tracks. Beginning on January 15, 1939, half of all Market Street Railway trains were rerouted to a loop in front of the building; all services were eventually rerouted here in 1941.[14]

By November 1940, the Interurban Electric Company was seeking permission to abandon East Bay service, prompting Director Clark to consider proposals for the state to assume operation of trains across the bridge.[15] The SP and Sacramento Northern trains ceased service across the Bay in 1941 only two years after the Terminal was completed. Interurban stated they were forced to discontinue service, citing falling passenger counts, revenues, and a failed proposed consolidation with the Key System.[16] After Interurban was granted permission to discontinue service, Sacramento Northern also applied to discontinue service in 1941.[9] Sacramento Northern carried only a minuscule fraction (less than 1%) of the total rail traffic over the Bay Bridge,[17][18] which meant Sacramento Northern likely also operated at a loss. Trains carried 37.334 million passengers across the Bay Bridge at peak ridership in 1945, driven in part by gasoline rationing, but ridership declined precipitously, managing to move only 6.113 million passengers in 1957.[19] The Key System successfully petitioned the Public Utilities Commission to discontinue service across the Bay Bridge in 1955 due to falling revenues, after failing to discontinue service in an unsuccessful 1953 petition. The Oakland City Planning Commission reported that since 1945, all the petitions from the Key System had invariably asked for cuts to service and increased fares, which also contributed to declining ridership.[20] The last train crossed the bridge on April 20, 1958 (1958-04-20), less than twenty years after service was inaugurated in 1939, despite the vital role the trains played. There have been several attempts to restore rail service across the bridge (though not necessarily into the Transbay Terminal), but none have been successful.[citation needed]

During the 1987 San Francisco Historic Trolley Festival, streetcar 578, formerly of Kobe, Japan, turns into the Transbay Terminal loop in scheduled service on the F-Market line.

Rebuilt for bus service

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During the next year, the Transbay Terminal was rebuilt into a bus depot.[19] The tracks were removed and replaced with pavement[21] for use primarily by the buses of the publicly owned successor of the Key System, AC Transit. All lines were operating from the rebuilt terminal by July 12, 1959, and Greyhound service was added on February 1, 1960.[19] In 1971 Amtrak started running buses into the Transbay Terminal from the Southern Pacific's 16th Street Station. Bus service thrived until late 1974, when BART's Transbay Tube opened. Many people preferred BART over AC Transit. The tube didn't run through the terminal, resulting in its decline. Homeless people noticed the dropping commuters and took the chance to inhabit it.

After formation of the Muni Metro, streetcars were replaced with light rail vehicles and rerouted through the upper level of the Market Street subway. Rail service to the station was briefly revived by the F Market line, at first during historic streetcar festivals, but for full service by 1995.[14] The line's extension to Fisherman's Wharf in March 2000 saw the end of rail traffic to the terminal.[22] The last F-line trip departed from the Transbay Terminal at 12:55 a.m. on the night of March 3,[23] and the track was abandoned in August 2000, the final use being a "farewell" trip by 1916-built work car C1 on August 18,[24] with work on removal of the track on Fremont Street beginning soon afterwards.[25]

The Transbay Terminal hosted a cocktail lounge, a diner, a newsstand, and a state police office until the 1990s, when the tenants were either evicted or unable to meet safety regulations.[26] Because the Terminal straddled First and Fremont streets, the large overpass structures and lobby spaces unofficially served to shelter numerous homeless people.[27] Even after demolition commenced, several Transbay Terminal residents refused to move, preferring instead to sleep next to demolition debris.[28]

Environmental issues

[edit]

On January 30, 1986, four underground storage fuel tanks were excavated and removed from the 150 First Street site. Each of these tanks had a capacity of 1,000 gallons (Earth Metrics, 1989). Eight soil samples showed the existence of total petroleum hydrocarbons in levels ranging from 20 to 9,000 parts per million. On February 3, 1986, the excavation was backfilled.

Demolition and replacement

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Transbay Terminal facade in December 2010, with crane-mounted wrecking ball in foreground

The City and County of San Francisco, the Alameda – Contra Costa Transit District (AC Transit), and the Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board (Caltrain) proposed[when?] to replace the underused original Transbay Terminal with an entirely new and more functional building at roughly the same location. The final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) was published in 2004,[29] and construction began in August 2010 on Phase 1, the new Transbay Transit Center (TTC) building. A new outdoor temporary terminal was opened nearby to serve commuters during construction of the new transit center.

The last bus departed the Transbay Terminal early on August 7, 2010 (2010-08-07), just after ownership of the building was transferred from Caltrans to TJPA.[30] Demolition by wrecking ball commenced in December 2010,[31][32] and demolition was declared complete on September 7, 2011 (2011-09-07).[33]

It was announced in March 2011 that a sculpture to be assembled from Transbay Terminal debris by Tim Hawkinson would be erected on the corner of Mission and Fremont Streets after completion of the new Transbay Transit Center.[34][35] However, the sculpture project was cancelled on June 7, 2017 due to cost and engineering concerns.[36]

Temporary Transbay Terminal

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Temporary Transbay Terminal
The Temporary Transbay Terminal

The Temporary Transbay Terminal was the San Francisco terminus for Transbay and regional buses for most of the 2010s. It was in operation from August 2010 through August 2018, when the new Salesforce Transit Center opened, and again from September 2018 to August 2019 during a temporary closure of the new center. It occupied the city block bounded by Howard, Main, Folsom, and Beale Streets.

Closure & reopening

[edit]

The Temporary Transbay Terminal initially ceased operations on August 12, 2018, with the opening of the new Salesforce Transit Center, only to be reopened weeks later, on September 25, 2018, following the discovery of support beam cracks at the Salesforce Transit Center.[37] By December 5, 2018, Clipper card kiosks were reinstalled at the temporary terminal due to the continued closure of the Transit Center.[38] In April 2019, repairs were finished and it was determined that the cause of the cracking was partly caused when crews welding the beams together skipped a crucial step in the process required by the building code that led to tiny, micro-cracks forming. Multiple inspections failed to notice the skipped step, and those micro-cracks grew into larger ones. After a thorough set of repairs and reviews, the transit center reopened to the public on August 11, 2019, nearly one year after its closure.[39]

Future development

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In 2018, real estate developers submitted proposals to demolish the Temporary Terminal and replace it with affordable housing and a park, but with the permanent transit center still closed for repairs at that time, the future of that proposed project was not known. [40]

See also

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Bibliography

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  • Earth Metrics Inc, ‘'Environmental Site Assessment, Assessors Block 3747, San Francisco'‘, File 7825W0.001, 25 April 1989

References

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  1. ^ "San Francisco breaks ground on $4.2B Transbay Transit Center". Metro Magazine. August 12, 2010.
  2. ^ King, John (April 22, 2010). "Plan for new Transbay Terminal in, under budget". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  3. ^ Nolte, Carl (July 25, 2010). "Transbay Terminal finally going terminal". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  4. ^ Nyren, Ron (September 21, 2015). "The Transformation of Transbay". Urbanland: The Magazine of the Urban Land Institute. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  5. ^ "Bay Bridge Terminal Bids to be Opened". Berkeley Daily Gazette. June 14, 1937. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  6. ^ a b c "Bay Bridge Terminal Dedicated" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 17 (2). California Department of Highways and Public Works: 6–9, 28. February 1939. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  7. ^ "Building Bay Bridge Railroad" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 16 (5). California Department of Highways and Public Works: 8–11. May 1938. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  8. ^ a b "Bridge Crossed by First Train". San Jose News. AP. January 14, 1939. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  9. ^ a b "U.C. Man to Make Survey of Span Transport Lines". Berkeley Daily Gazette. May 2, 1941. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  10. ^ "Opening of Rail Traffic on Bay Bridge Feted Saturday". Madera Tribune. January 12, 1939.
  11. ^ King, John (March 10, 2011). "Huge sculpture to rise from debris of transit hub". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  12. ^ "Governor Merriam Pilots First Train Across Bay Bridge" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 16 (10). California Department of Highways and Public Works: 18–19. October 1938. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  13. ^ "Bay Bridge Train Movements Controlled By Push Buttons" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 16 (9). California Department of Highways and Public Works: 24–25. September 1938. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  14. ^ a b Callwell, Robert (September 1999). "Transit in San Francisco: A Selected Chronology, 1850–1995" (PDF). San Francisco Municipal Railway.
  15. ^ "State Operation of Bay Trains Urged". Berkeley Daily Gazette. UP. November 18, 1940. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  16. ^ Johnson, Hal (February 26, 1940). "S.P. Would Abandon Train Lines to S.F." Berkeley Daily Gazette. Retrieved March 24, 2016. President A.T. Mercier said: 'This action was made inevitable by circumstances beyond our control.
      'While patronage on this transbay commuter service has been declining and has been unremunerative [sic] for years, the losses have increased from the date of completion of the Bay Bridge in November, 1936. In 1920 there were 22,657,418 transbay passengers carried in this service, as compared with 9,937,466 in 1939, while the population of the East Bay cities and San Francisco increased more than 50 per cent in the same period. [...]
      'Loss of business to vehicular travel over the bridge has been given impetus by progressive reduction of automobile tolls from 65 cents to 35 cents. Fur[ther] reduction in tolls is being considered, which would bring further increased losses to the Interurban. [...]
      'Every possible solution of the problem looking to economies of operation or possibility of consolidation of the Interurban Electric with the Key System, has been considered. All of these efforts have failed, and we are, therefore, left with no alternative but to abandon our service at the earliest practicable date.'
  17. ^ "Bay Bridge Traffic Declines in August". Berkeley Daily Gazette. UP. September 30, 1940. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  18. ^ "Commuters Do Get Around Quite a Lot". Healdsburg Tribune, Enterprise and Scimitar. UP. March 25, 1940. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  19. ^ a b c Raab, N.C. (July–August 1960). "Bay Bridge: First Phases of Reconstruction For Added Capacity Completed" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 39 (7–8). Division of Highways, California Department of Public Works: 35–42. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  20. ^ Griffith, John; Holmes, Dallas (August 1967). "BART and the Victoria Line: A Comparison of New Commuter Transport in California and London". California Law Review. 55 (3): 780. doi:10.15779/Z38K175. On July 24, 1953, a strike paralyzed Key System for seventy-six days. The California Public Utilities Commission refused to grant permission to Key System to abandon its train service on "A" and "B" transbay lines. [...] [In February 1954,] Key System applied to the Commission to cut services further. This was granted whereupon Key System announced that it contemplated still more curtailments and asked for tax relief of $188,000 per year. [...] In July [1954], Key System served public notice that it intended to abandon all transbay trains and substitute coaches within one or two years. [...] In October [1954], Key System was allowed by the Public Utilities Commission to curtail services on the East Bay motor coach lines and to increase fares [...] In January 1955, Key System applied to abandon all its rail services, and a rapid transit district was created in the East Bay to replace it.
  21. ^ "Remodeling of S.F. Transit Terminal Continues" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 39 (1–2). Division of Highways, California Department of Public Works: 59. January–February 1960. Retrieved March 24, 2016. The elevated track area from the San Francisco Anchorage which faces Beale Street in San Francisco, around the Terminal Loop, and through the building, has now been repaved and the 14 motor coach lines of the Key System Transit Lines are now operating out of the terminal, thus relieving the city streets of this traffic. [...] Included in this remodeling was the construction of a new stairway to the garage area below the street level, the installation of fluorescent lights in the main waiting room and on the mezzanine floor, the opening of various previously closed areas for freer movement of pedestrian traffic throughout the building, and the installing of a new stairway flanked on both sides by escalators, leading from the lobby to the mezzanine level.
  22. ^ Epstein, Edward (March 2, 2000). "New way to the wharf; Merchants hope F–Market line will draw locals to tourist attractions". The San Francisco Chronicle. p. A20. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
  23. ^ "Systems News". Tramways & Urban Transit. UK: Ian Allan Publishing/Light Rail Transit Association. April 2000. pp. 150–151. ISSN 1460-8324.
  24. ^ "Systems News". Tramways & Urban Transit. UK: Ian Allan Publishing/Light Rail Transit Association. November 2000. p. 431. ISSN 1460-8324.
  25. ^ "Roadwork to begin Friday on Fremont Street". The San Francisco Chronicle. August 15, 2000. p. A26.
  26. ^ Cabanatuan, Michael (July 30, 2010). "Travel into the Transbay Terminal's past". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  27. ^ Coté, John (July 31, 2010). "Mayor urges homeless to leave Transbay Terminal". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  28. ^ Fagan, Kevin (February 11, 2011). "Transbay Terminal hurdle: hard-core homeless". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  29. ^ "Final EIS/IER Transbay Terminal/Caltrain Downtown Extension/Redevelopment Project". Transbay Transit Center. June 15, 2004. Archived from the original on August 3, 2016. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  30. ^ Cabanatuan, Michael (August 6, 2010). "Crews to ready Transbay Terminal for demolition". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  31. ^ "Demolition of Transbay Terminal". San Francisco Chronicle. December 3, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  32. ^ "Wrecking ball begins Transbay Terminal demolition". San Francisco Chronicle. December 4, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  33. ^ Tyler, Carolyn (September 7, 2011). "Demolition of old Transbay Terminal complete". ABC7 News. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  34. ^ "New Sculpture by Tim Hawkinson to be Installed at the New Transbay Transit Center" (Press release). San Francisco Arts Commission. March 10, 2011. Archived from the original on April 8, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  35. ^ "Public Art: Tim Hawkinson". Transbay Transit Center. 2011. Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  36. ^ Saldaña, Cesar (June 8, 2017). "S.F. Cancels Multimillion-Dollar Transbay Terminal Art Project". KQED. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  37. ^ "How to get around during Salesforce Transit Center's temporary closure in San Francisco". San Francisco Chronicle. September 25, 2018. Retrieved September 25, 2018.
  38. ^ Matier & Ross (December 5, 2018). "No date to fix SF transit terminal as Clipper kiosks return to temporary site". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  39. ^ "Buses roll again at SF's Transbay transit center, declared safe after nearly a year - SFChronicle.com". www.sfchronicle.com. August 12, 2019. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
  40. ^ "Park, housing key to future of SF's new high-rise neighborhood". August 12, 2018.
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