Washington Park is a
light rail station in
Portland, Oregon, United States, served by
TriMet as part of the
MAX Light Rail system. Situated between
Sunset Transit Center and
Goose Hollow/Southwest Jefferson Street station, it is the 17th and 3rd station eastbound on the
Blue Line and the
Red Line, respectively. The station's two tracks and
island platform are part of the
Robertson Tunnel
The Robertson Tunnel is a twin-bore light rail tunnel through the Tualatin Mountains west of Portland, Oregon, United States, used by the MAX Blue and Red Lines. The tunnel is long'' Light Rail and Modern Tramway'', November 1993, p. 302. U ...
beneath Portland's
West Hills. Its
head house and surface-level plaza occupy the middle of a parking lot surrounded by the
Hoyt Arboretum,
Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial
The Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial is an outdoor war memorial dedicated to Oregonians who served in the Vietnam War. It is located in Portland, Oregon's Washington Park at . The memorial was dedicated in 1987, inspired in 1982 by visits to t ...
,
Oregon Zoo,
Portland Children's Museum, and
World Forestry Center
The World Forestry Center is a nonprofit educational institution in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon. Located near the Oregon Zoo in Washington Park, the organization was established in 1964 as the Western Forestry Center, with the actual bui ...
. Washington Park is the only completely underground station in the MAX system. At below ground, it is the deepest transit station in
North America
North America is a continent in the Northern Hemisphere and almost entirely within the Western Hemisphere. It is bordered to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the southeast by South America and the Car ...
and in the
western hemisphere, and the sixth-deepest in the world.
[Washington Park's depth is surpassed by:
* ]Arsenalna
Arsenalna ( uk, Арсена́льна, translit=Arsenál’na, , ) is a station on Kyiv Metro’s Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line. The station was opened along with the first stage and is currently the deepest station in the world at . This is ...
station of the Kyiv Metro, below ground
* Hongtudi station of Chongqing Rail Transit
The Chongqing Rail Transit (branded as CRT; also known as Chongqing Metro) is the rapid transit system in the city of Chongqing, China. In operation since 2005, it serves the transportation needs of the city's main business and entertainment ...
, below ground
* Admiralteyskaya station of the Saint Petersburg Metro, below ground
* Park Pobedy station of the Moscow Metro, below ground
* Jerusalem–Yitzhak Navon railway station of Israel Railways, below ground
The station opened in September 1998 as part of the Westside MAX extension to downtown Hillsboro. Connections include TriMet bus route 63–Washington Park/Arlington Heights and a free seasonal shuttle. Various
hiking trails, some a part of Portland's
40-Mile Loop
The 40-Mile Loop is a partially completed greenway trail around and through Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon. It was proposed in 1903 by the Olmsted Brothers architecture firm as part of the development of Forest Park.
One greenway expert c ...
, connect the station to other parts of
Washington Park, including the
International Rose Test Garden and the
Portland Japanese Garden.
History
Plans to build a
light rail line to serve Portland's western suburbs in
Washington County emerged in 1979 with a proposal from regional government
Metro to extend what would become the Metropolitan Area Express (MAX) from its inaugural terminus in
downtown Portland father west to the cities of
Beaverton and
Hillsboro. During early planning, several alternative alignments through the
West Hills were determined, including routes along the
Sunset Highway,
Beaverton–Hillsdale Highway
Oregon Route 10 is an Oregon state highway which serves Portland and some of its western suburbs.
Route description
OR 10 begins as Naito Parkway in Downtown Portland starting where Naito Parkway interchanges with U.S. Route 26. It heads sout ...
, and Multnomah Boulevard.
A majority of jurisdictions had selected a Sunset Highway light rail alternative by June 1982, with the
Portland City Council the last to adopt a resolution supporting this route in July 1983. Metro subsequently moved forward with this alternative, and the
Urban Mass Transportation Administration (UMTA) authorized $1.3 million in funds to begin a preliminary engineering study.
Soon afterwards, TriMet suspended the project to focus on the completion of the
Banfield Light Rail Project.
Planning for the westside extension resumed in January 1988.
Prior to the start of preliminary engineering efforts, the Portland City Council asked TriMet to consider building a rail tunnel through the West Hills instead of following the Sunset Highway alternative's proposal to run tracks on the surface alongside
Canyon Road
Canyon Road (formerly known as Great Plank Road) is a major road and partial state highway, which serves as a connector between Beaverton and Portland, Oregon, United States. It was the first major road constructed between the Tualatin Valle ...
. TriMet's engineers noted that this surface option would carry a steep six- to seven-percent
grade as opposed to only two percent in a tunnel. That May, TriMet awarded a $230,000 contract to
surveying
Surveying or land surveying is the technique, profession, art, and science of determining the terrestrial two-dimensional or three-dimensional positions of points and the distances and angles between them. A land surveying professional is ca ...
firm Spencer B. Gross of Portland to map out the proposed area and another $200,000 contract to a partnership between Cornforth Consultants of
Tigard and tunneling firm Law/Geoconsult International International of
Atlanta to determine alternative tunnel routes. After several months of soil testing, TriMet announced that a tunnel would be feasible. In October, the agency released a report that identified three tunnel options: a "long tunnel" with a station serving the
Oregon Zoo, the same long tunnel without a station, and a "short tunnel". Both long tunnels featured a western portal west of
Sylvan while the short tunnel featured one on Canyon Road, and all three had an eastern portal near Jefferson Street in Portland's
Goose Hollow neighborhood. These proposals were immediately met with opposition from West Hills residents who feared that tunneling activity would trigger
landslide
Landslides, also known as landslips, are several forms of mass wasting that may include a wide range of ground movements, such as rockfalls, deep-seated grade (slope), slope failures, mudflows, and debris flows. Landslides occur in a variety of ...
s.
The station was designed by the
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership (ZGF) architecture firm and built by
Hoffman Construction Company, with engineering by
Parsons Brinckerhoff.
It opened in 1998 along with the rest of the westside MAX Line. ''Building Design & Construction'' named the station as its top public works project in 1999 in its Building Team Project of the Year competition.
[
In 2018, TriMet completed a $2.1 million renovation of the station's platform level. The agency partnered with ZGF for the renovation, which included mounting energy-efficient LED lighting and installing patterned tiles along the platform-side and elevator lobby walls. Artists from Mayer/Reed painted large-scale murals over the walls across the tracks from the platform.
]
Station details
Surface
The surface portion includes a public plaza named in honor of Les AuCoin, a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives who supported the project. The entrance to the zoo is located just across a parking-lot road from the station plaza, having been moved north from its previous location the weekend after the station opened. Two high-speed elevators are located at either end of the underground station; visitors to the Oregon Zoo are directed to the east elevators while people going to the World Forestry Center are pointed to the west.
Underground
The Robertson Tunnel
The Robertson Tunnel is a twin-bore light rail tunnel through the Tualatin Mountains west of Portland, Oregon, United States, used by the MAX Blue and Red Lines. The tunnel is long'' Light Rail and Modern Tramway'', November 1993, p. 302. U ...
consists of two single-track tubes, one for each direction of travel. The station platform is between the rails, accessed from the left side of trains. A geological timeline—created from a drilling core sample—runs along the platform walls. The eastbound platform is marked by yellow roof girders, symbolizing the sunrise; the westbound platform has orange roof girders, symbolizing the sunset. The platforms were nicknamed Sunrise and Sunset, respectively, by TriMet.
Trains entering the tunnel more than a mile away can be heard from the platforms. They move at up to [ and push a stream of constant-temperature air into the station. This, coupled with the surrounding rock, keeps the platform at a natural average temperature of year round.
A memorial to the only worker killed during the construction of the Robertson Tunnel is located on the wall next to the tunnel portal at the east end of the "Sunset" (westbound) platform.
]
Elevators
The elevators stop at only two levels, surface (S) and tunnel (T) level. As a part of the station's geological theme, the floor indicators outside the elevators refer to these two levels not by conventional floor numbers but by "the present" and "16 million years ago"—for the surface level and tunnel level, respectively. During ascent and descent, a moving indicator display inside each elevator shows the current position expressed as elevation above sea level in feet. The 26- story (28 for the west elevators) equivalent ride takes about 25 seconds. Due to the hillside surface slope, the west elevators are taller than the east elevators.
Bus line connections
This underground MAX station is served by one bus line, the Washington Park Free Shuttle, which now runs year-round (since May 2019), after having been seasonal in the past. Previously, TriMet line 63–Washington Park/Arlington Heights also served the station, but ceased to do so in May 2022.
Notes
References
External links
MAX Light Rail Stations
– TriMet page
{{Washington Park, Portland, Oregon
1998 establishments in Oregon
MAX Blue Line
MAX Red Line
MAX Light Rail stations
Washington Park (Portland, Oregon)
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1998
Railway stations located underground in the United States
Railway stations in Portland, Oregon