A and B Loop
A and B Loop
A and B Loop
A and B Loop
Overview
Status Operational
Stations 52
Service
Type Streetcar
Services 2
History
Technical
Contents
1History
o 1.1Planning
o 1.2Funding and construction
o 1.3Opening and closing the loop
o 1.4Impact and later developments
2Service
o 2.1Ridership
o 2.2Route
o 2.3Stations
3References
4External links
History
Planning
The second phase of the Portland Streetcar Loop Project, referred to as "Close the
Loop",[58] which was later changed to "Complete the Loop",[59] extended the streetcar
tracks from OMSI across the Willamette River to the South Waterfront.[58][60] This phase
had awaited the Portland–Milwaukie project's new river crossing, [50] which finally began
construction in 2011.[61] The project had a total cost of $6.7 million and
included automatic train stop upgrades.[62] Construction of the streetcar components
started in August 2013 with the installation of a turning loop on the intersection of
Southeast Stephens Street, Grand Avenue, and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
[63]
From September to October that year, crews expanded the SE Water/OMSI streetcar
platform and installed the streetcar-track connection with the new bridge. Shuttle
buses carried riders in sections where the streetcar tracks were temporarily closed.
[64]
From June 26 to August 17, 2015, CL Line service ceased operating as part of
Multnomah County's closure of the Broadway Bridge to make way for repainting. [65]
On August 30, 2015, a new temporary schedule eliminated the name CL Line in favor of
two separately named routes: "A Loop" and "B Loop". A Loop and B Loop took over the
CL Line route and were further extended on the west side via existing tracks from
Southwest 10th and Market streets in downtown Portland to Southwest Moody and
Meade streets in the South Waterfront. Streetcars began crossing the new bridge,
which by then was named "Tilikum Crossing", but without carrying passengers across it,
during a two-week transitional "pre-revenue service" phase. [66] The CL Line was formally
re-branded as the "A and B Loop" on September 12, 2015, [67] when Tilikum Crossing
opened to the public and began permitting streetcars to carry passengers on the route
section across the bridge.[68][69]
Impact and later developments
Portland city and streetcar officials have credited the eastside extension with
encouraging development along and near its route; they have claimed that major
redevelopment projects in the Lloyd District,[70] including years-long efforts by Metro to
build a convention center hotel,[71][72] began or were announced after the extension had
started construction.[70] In 2013, Hassalo on Eighth broke ground at the Lloyd 700
"superblock", where the eastside extension was deliberately routed to support
redevelopment.[73] OMSI began pursuing redevelopment plans for its location in
Southeast Portland in 2008. Days before the eastside extension's opening, OMSI's
senior vice president stated that the streetcar's presence "will be an important element
in the development of the lower eastside".[70][74] In December 2021, OMSI submitted a
formal proposal to the city for the "OMSI District", which plans to develop 10 city blocks
into mixed-use buildings and includes up to 1,200 new housing units. [75] A study
published for the Transportation Research Record in 2018 noted that observed stations
along the CL Line increased employment around their areas by 22 percent, compared
to just eight percent by Multnomah County, between 2006 and 2013.[76]
In February 2020, the Portland City Council adopted the Rose Lane Project in an effort
to improve bus and streetcar travel times within the city. [77][78] The ongoing project aims to
create red-painted dedicated lanes, remove or restrict on-street parking, and
implement traffic-signal priority for buses and streetcars.[79] That October, the Portland
Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) launched the MLK/Grand Transit Improvements
project, a complement to the Rose Lane Project that added red lanes to the streetcar
alignment on Grand Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. [80] Work started on
October 7 and was completed after four weeks.[81]
In April 2022, the City of Portland filed a lawsuit in Multnomah County Circuit
Court against TriMet and Stacy and Witbeck for negligence and breach of contract. The
city alleged that TriMet failed to oversee the contractor, whose workers, in turn, failed to
"perform the work in a professional and workmanlike manner", in the construction of an
elevated section of the streetcar near OMSI after cracked walls and foundational flaws
were discovered. The city is seeking $10 million from the defendants for the cost of
repairs.[82][83]
Service
Oregon Convention Center station