(photo by Whole Wheat Toast)
San Francisco's Transbay Terminal was built in the 1930s, in the midst of the depression, to serve as a terminal for Key System, Southern Pacific and Sacramento Northern trains that crossed the Bay Bridge on its bottom deck to and from the East Bay.
Today it serves as the San Francisco terminal of several trans-bay bus lines run by AC Transit as well as San Francisco's Greyhound terminal, amongst others. It's a dark, depressing, grotty building surrounded by homeless people. The Muni stops out front, which still have rail lines alongside them dating back to when streetcars served it until the 50s, are always surrounded by people with tales of how bad luck landed them at the Transbay Terminal and how just a few dollars will help them get home.
Just a block away over at Folsom and Beale they've just finished constructing the Temporary Transbay Terminal. Over the next few months services to the present Transbay Terminal will begin to reroute here so that today's Transbay Terminal can be demolished, leaving room for its replacement: the Transbay Transit Center.
The plans for the Transbay Transit Center are grand and ambitious. It is planned that it will serve not only the six agencies it already serves but also rail services from BART and Caltrain and eventually the high speed rail link between San Francisco and LA which will enter the city on the Caltrain line and use a new tunnel from the current Caltrain station at 4th and Townsend up along 2nd St to the Transit Center.
A far cry from the dank and dirty Transbay Terminal, the Transbay Transit Center will be open plan and light and will have a public park on its roof. If all goes as planned it will serve as a convenient hub for all of the transit systems serving San Francisco.
It's exciting to see such a large investment in San Francisco's public transit systems and in cleaning up the blighted area just south of Market at 1st St and turning into a commuter neighborhood. This project is scheduled to complete in 2015, so who knows if I'll still be around to see it, but it's nice to know that although right now things seem bleak for public transit in San Francisco with Muni raising prices and cutting service there is a bright future ahead.
The Temporary Transbay Terminal is expected to open within the next month and the existing Transbay Terminal is scheduled to close before the fall before being demolished.