PORTLAND AERIAL TRAM

'Portland Aerial Tram'
City Portland, Oregon
Country United States
Operated by Oregon Health & Science University
Vertical distance
Horizontal distance
Duration of one-way trip 3 minutes
Number of cars 2
Passenger capacity 78 per car
Daily round trips 1,500
Began service December 2006
Tramway manufacturer Doppelmayr CTEC
Official website Portland Aerial Tram

The 'Portland Aerial Tram' is an aerial tramway in Portland, Oregon carrying commuters between the city's South Waterfront district and Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) and the Marquam Hill neighborhood. It is the second commuter aerial tramway in the United States (after New York City's Roosevelt Island Tramway).[1]
The tram travels a horizontal distance of 3,300 feet (5/8 mi, 1 km) and rises 500 feet in a ride that lasts three minutes.[2] Its upper terminal is 140 feet above grade, and connected to the ninth floor of a new patient care facility on the university's campus. Its lower terminal in the rapidly growing South Waterfront connects to the Portland Streetcar for direct service downtown. A single intermediate tower supports the tram's cables between the two terminals, allowing the tram to rise 500 feet over Interstate 5. Almost all of the journey is near its upper elevation, making the tram easily visible for some distance, and providing good views of the eastern metropolitan area and the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington.
The tram was estimated to cost $15 million in 2003 (although that figure was called "political" by the tram's designer in November of that year)[3], but was completed for $57 million in 2006,[4] one of several sources of controversy over the project. The tram opened to OHSU employees on December 1, 2006,[5] and to the public on January 27, 2007.[6] The tram, in addition to the Portland Streetcar and MAX Light Rail, rounds out a diverse network of public transportation in Portland.
Through the end of April 2007, cumulative ridership on the tram was in excess of 300,000.[7] Limited Sunday service will operate for the summer until September 20, 2007.[8] The fare on the tram is $4.00 round trip, but free for OHSU employees and patients.[9]

Contents
Cars
Early history
Cost estimates rise
Controversy
References
External links

Cars


The tram cabins are shaped and painted to look like "bubbles floating through the sky"; the surface of the cabins reflect and refract light, minimizing their visual impact to the neighborhood underneath. The cabins are designed to limit passengers' view of the Lair Hill section of the South Portland neighborhood below.
The tram cars carry a maximum of 78 passengers per trip, with cars leaving every 5 minutes.[10] Transportation officials estimate the tram will carry over 1,500 people a day initially, with up to 5,500 by 2030.[11] On October 29, 2006, the tram's two cars arrived from Switzerland after a week-long delay.[12] An inaugural run of the tram was conducted on November 9, 2006.[13] Four tram construction workers were the first to "ride" the tram while harnessed to the roof and suspending arm.
On January 19, 2007, City Commissioner Sam Adams announced that the tram's two cars would be named ''Jean'' and ''Walt'', after Jean Richardson (the first female engineering graduate from Oregon State University) and Walt Reynolds (the first African-American to graduate from OHSU, then known as the University of Oregon Medical school).[14]

Early history


This is the single intermediate tower while it was under construction. The tower is adjacent to the northbound lanes of Interstate 5.

In late 2001, OHSU purchased property in the South Waterfront (then known as North Macadam) area, with plans to expand there. After studying several ways, including shuttle buses, gondola lifts, tunnels, and even funiculars, to connect OHSU's primary campus with this area of planned expansion, the university sought city support of an aerial tram.
In early 2002, Portland Aerial Transportation, Inc., (PATI) was formed as a non-profit board. One of its first public actions was to request the Portland Office of Transportation, also known as PDOT,sic to undertake an independent analysis of the connectivity options considered earlier by the university and its development supporters. In May 2002, the city council accepted PDOT's process proposal and also accepted PATI as the project sponsor. PDOT undertook an assessment, which led to the same conclusion OHSU had reached earlier: an aerial tram was the preferred approach. PDOT also recommended a second tram linking the Marquam Hill area with a nearby transit center on SW Barbur Boulevard. The city council accepted PDOT's recommendations and asked PDOT and PATI to proceed to the design phase, including a design competition. Both were also asked to work with residents of the affected neighborhoods to identify any ways to mitigate the tram's impact and identify other desired neighborhood improvements which should accompany the project.
The design competition started out by identifying four firms which would participate in the contest. The competition officially began in January 2003, with firms from New York City, Amsterdam, and Los Angeles/Zurich as finalists. The winner, the firm from Los Angeles/Zurich (Angélil / Graham / Pfenninger / Scholl), was announced on March 26, 2003.[15] The construction estimates at that time were $15.5 million. By November, PATI chose Doppelmayr CTEC to design, fabricate and install the tram. The first public review of the project's status was held in November.

Cost estimates rise


First trip of the Portland aerial tram, still wrapped in plastic.

In April 2004, the second public review was held, to present the projects recommendations prior to a May review by the city council. The costs by then were estimated to be $28.5 million.[16]
In April 2005, the price was readjusted to $40 million,16 with a construction delay of six months. Higher steel costs, a weakening dollar, and engineering modifications are blamed for these changes.
Construction began in August 2005; by October, ''The Oregonian'' was reporting that steel costs had led to bids pushing the project's price (with contingency funds) to $45 million. The increased cost is expected to be met through South Waterfront urban renewal contributions which would have otherwise been spent on streets and parks.
According to City Commissioner Sam Adams, who inherited responsibility for the project after planning had already begun, a cheaper alternative, which would have changed the tower's designs to a lattice style used in electrical transmission towers, was not considered because the result would look like an "ugly ski lift at a bad ski resort"[17] and leave the city with what Adams called an "ugly postcard" that could last 100 years.
A tram car docking with the upper terminal.

The spiraling costs led to a month-long independent audit and risk assessment, which was published February 1, 2006, at a point where construction was over a third complete.[18] While complimenting the tram as "a dramatic, one-of-a-kind facility that will become a Portland landmark," the report noted the design was difficult to construct, requiring the tall, thin, complex tower and the tall, heavily loaded upper terminal to be built within very tight tolerances. Special risks cited include:

★ An extremely restricted site for construction of the upper terminal.

★ A complex, European mechanical/electrical system with a sophisticated U.S. steel structure and infrastructure—the integration of the two has technical challenges and risks from conflicts between the two business cultures and management procedures.

★ The need to install tramway cables over an interstate highway and state highways.
The audit/risk assessment increased the estimate of the final project cost to $55 million, which includes a $5 million contingency fund. This amount is after a $457,000 lower station shelter was eliminated.
The construction price was nearly four times the initial estimate and the operating cost, originally forecast at $915,000 annually, is expected to be $1,700,000 annually. As a result, the fare, originally estimated at $1.70, is set at $4 for round-trip riders that are not hospital visitors, OHSU employees or transit pass holders.[19]

Controversy


Downtown Portland, as viewed from the Portland Aerial Tram

Some critics cite the tram as an example of corporate welfare for OHSU with limited public benefit.[20] Many residents of the Corbett-Terwilliger and Lair Hill neighborhoods, over which the tram passes, claimed the cars would be an invasion of privacy and lead to lower property values.[21] Initially, residents were promised that overhead power lines would be buried as part of the project, but as cost overruns mounted, this plan was scrapped.[22] Some view it as a gaudy attraction to bring tourists to the city. The largest source of criticism has been the cost of constructing the tram. This is largely an issue because OHSU initially claimed it would only need a very small amount of government funding to complete the project.[23] While the taxpayer share has grown, OHSU is paying for 85 percent of the total cost of the tram yet it will be operated as public transit facility.
While the issues of increasing public costs are real, the importance of continued growth of OHSU for the city's economy must be factored in as well. Not only is it the largest employer in the city, but OHSU is an important and effective vehicle to attract both federal funding,[24] totaling more than 168 million dollars for 2005, and a highly skilled workforce to the area. The growth in the current campus on the Marquam Hill is limited by access roads and parking, an expansion of which would likely cause more dramatic harm to the surrounding communities.
Also, KATU questions the relative price of the tram compared to Jackson Hole's tram, which was built by the same company, hauls more passengers a greater distance and height, and cost only $20 million.
The tram remains somewhat unpopular with those living underneath its route. In April 2007, an unidentified homeowner living under the tram route placed a sign on his/her roof, visible to all who ride the tram, stating "FUCK THE TRAM" in large block letters. The sign is not visible from the street, only from the air. Officials were looking into whether or not the sign violated any laws.[25] The publicity surrounding the sign prompted city officials to speak with the home owner,[26] and the sign has since been moved and the expletive covered.[27]

References


The Portland Aerial Tram approaching the upper station


1. Portland's commuter tram offers postcard views of Mount St. Helens, Mount Hood
2. The Portland Aerial Tram
3. Tram Designer To Show Design Concepts, Calls Budget Estimate 'Political'
4. Tram ride will now set you back
5. OHSU tram takes off
6. OHSU tram makes its public debut
7. Tram Executive Management Committee Agrees to Test Sunday Tram Opening
8. Portland Aerial Tram News
9. Portland Aerial Tram Fares and Schedules
10. 'Soap bubble' OHSU tram cabins head for Portland
11. Pricey to build, what cost to ride?
12. Portland's tram cars arrive
13. Crews test one of the new tram cars
14. City chooses names for new aerial tramcars
15. Project History/Background
16. Portland Aerial Tram Project Funding History
17. Sam Adams's blog
18. Tram goes up again Ryan Frank
19. Yardley, William (January 28, 2007). "City That Loves Mass Transit Looks to the Sky for More". ''New York Times''. Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
20. The Lady and the Tram M
21. Tram OK lifts the gate on growth Jim Redden
22. City, neighbors are poles apart Todd Murphy
23. Nice tram, who pays? Todd Murphy
24. NIH Awards to Medical Schools by Rank
25. Homeowner's sign drops f-bomb on people riding the OHSU tram
26. Man explains why he made f-bomb tram sign
27. F-bomb sign moved, profane word hidden


External links



Official website

Portland Office of Transportation: Aerial Tram page

Archive of tram related articles from The Oregonian

South Portland Neighborhood Association

Diagram of Tram Car from ''The Oregonian'' website

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