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Current TopicsSaying Farewell to the Transbay TerminalSeptember 2010 Although the Transbay Terminal has been a bus station for the past 51 years, it was designed and built as a railway station. Designed by prominent architect Timothy Pflueger, it was an instrumental part of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, serving passenger trains that traversed the Bay Bridge to East Bay cities, Sacramento, and beyond. Beginning in 1939, three rail systems carried passengers from the Terminal across the Bay Bridge: the Interurban Electric Railway, the Sacramento Northern and the Key System. The Key System long outlived the other two, shuttling thousands of daily commuters across the Bridge for the next 19 years. The electric trains, powered by a third rail, ran on the lower deck of the Bridge, alongside trucks, while automobiles crossed in both directions on the upper deck. During rush hour, ten car trains arrived at the Terminal every 2 minutes for a 30-minute — or less — trip to East Bay destinations in Oakland, Alameda, Piedmont and other East Bay cities. The Terminal, which was financed by 50-cent Bay Bridge tolls, was designed to handle up to 35 million people a year. At its peak, however, it was used by only 26 million passengers a year. Ridership began to decline after the end of World War II when gas rationing was discontinued, and more people began to buy automobiles. By the early 1950s, train ridership was down to 5 million a year. In 1958, the train tracks on the bridge were dismantled, and the bridge was given over entirely to vehicle and bus traffic. In 1959, AC Transit took over the Key System routes, and, although the Terminal continued to be part of the Bay Bridge owned and managed by the state of California, it was converted into a bus station, primarily for AC Transit’s transbay buses. Remnants of the Terminal’s railroad heydays lasted for years, until the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake damaged the building, and Caltrans boarded up and walled off many of the old sections. One railroad component continued in use until the Terminal closed this past August, however: The elevated loop that AC Transit buses used to drop off and pick up passengers was the same one used by trains. Shortly before
the Terminal was closed for good, Caltrans gave the once-vibrant building
a last hurrah by opening some of the old boarded-up spaces. On
July 30, the public and the media had a chance to glimpse the terminal’s
past and see some of the building’s
original features, including the large waiting room with curved wooden
benches, a 1930s-era diner with green plastic seats and curved counters,
a onetime popular bar, a state police office with an adjoining jail
cell, a shoeshine stand, a news stand and a long spiral staircase to
an underground parking garage. |
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