TriMet’s 82nd Avenue Transit Project fueled by $55.5 million grant from Portland Clean Energy Fund

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TriMet FX®–Frequent Express bus service will reduce traffic congestion, lower greenhouse gas emissions and provide better access to jobs along 82nd Avenue, home to TriMet’s busiest bus line

Riders can experience crowding and delays on TriMet’s Line 72-Killingsworth/82nd which provides more than 65,000 weekly trips, primarily along 82nd Avenue

TriMet is celebrating a $55.5 million grant awarded by the Portland Clean Energy Fund (PCEF) for the 82nd Avenue Transit Project. The Portland City Council’s approval of the funding this week formalizes the partnership between TriMet and PCEF, and it authorizes an investment that helps set the transit improvement project in motion, with a strong foundation in a collaborative planning process led by Metro. With continued support from local and federal partners, our next Frequent Express bus line will be serving riders throughout the 82nd Avenue corridor within five years. 

Currently, TriMet’s Line 72-Killingsworth/82nd serves 82nd Avenue, a corridor with the unique distinction of being one of the state’s most culturally diverse and historically disenfranchised areas. A lot of people who live and work along 82nd use Line 72. It is by far the busiest of our 78 bus lines, with more than 65,000 trips taken each week. Unfortunately, due to 82nd Avenue’s former development as a state highway, combined with increasing traffic congestion, Line 72 is also the most delayed.

The 82nd Avenue Transit Project will complement the Portland Bureau of Transportation’s (PBOT) Building a Better 82nd Project, which brings a number of safety improvements to the corridor. Once completed by the summer of 2029, the transit project will improve the ride for thousands of people who rely on TriMett to connect to opportunities throughout the region, with safe, fast and more reliable bus service that benefits the community and the environment.

“When our buses are stuck in traffic, people can’t get to work, school or appointments on time, and that’s an equity issue,” said TriMet General Manager Sam Desue Jr. “This generous grant from the PCEF begins to break down the barriers that exist along 82nd Avenue. The 82nd Avenue Transit Project is a gateway to opportunity, and this grant unlocks its potential.”

The 82nd Avenue Transit Project received a $630,000 grant from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) following Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg’s visit to Portland in July, pictured with TriMet General Manager Sam Desue Jr.

With the support of our partners at PCEF, the project will also help develop and train the local workforce and invest in strategies to lower greenhouse emissions and cool the climate locally, such as planting trees along 82nd Avenue. These elements reflect priorities from a community-driven process aimed at equitable development. 

“We hear time and again from people along the corridor: They no longer want a high-speed, loud and dangerous highway to cut through their neighborhood,” said 82nd Ave Coalition and Project Manager and Executive Director of Oregon Walks, Zachary Lauritzen. “The 82nd Avenue Transit Project is the opportunity to transition that highway into a multimodal street that prioritizes the bus riders who make Line 72 the highest ridership bus line in Oregon. By giving this line the space and priority it deserves, this project has the potential to make 82nd safer and cleaner, with the fastest, most reliable bus service in the state!”

82nd Avenue Transit Project: the next FX bus line

This route is based on a preliminary vote by the 82nd Avenue Steering Committee. A final vote is expected in early 2025.

TriMet’s 82nd Avenue Transit Project will bring high-capacity bus service to 10 miles of 82nd Avenue between Clackamas Town Center and Northeast Portland. Like our first Frequent Express bus line, FX2-Division, the future FX line along 82nd Avenue will use 60-foot articulated buses, with more room on board for riders. Buses will arrive more often and help riders reach their destinations faster, with transit-signal priority improvements that keep buses moving past traffic congestion.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) awarded TriMet $39 million to advance the 82nd Avenue Transit Project. The grant will help TriMet purchase up to 14 zero-emissions hydrogen fuel-cell electric buses for the project, as well as the supporting infrastructure and workforce development. TriMet received an additional $25 million USDOT grant to develop our Columbia Operations Facility, which will one day house a fleet of fuel-cell electric buses as part of our transition to a 100% zero-emissions bus fleet.

“PCEF’s support of the 82nd Avenue Transit Project is a major investment in creating a more sustainable, accessible and economically prosperous corridor,” said Duncan Hwang, a Metro councilor and Community Development Director at APANO. “Investing in this important project helps ensure that people and businesses along SE 82nd Avenue continue to have opportunities to thrive, grow and stay in the community.” 

The project will include fuel-cell electric buses powered by hydrogen (Pictured: New Flyer Xcelsior CHARGE FC™ 60-foot bus)

Join the Community Advisory Committee

TriMet is putting together a Community Advisory Committee (CAC), which will play an important role in shaping the 82nd Avenue Transit Project. Members of the CAC will represent community interests and provide feedback to project decision-makers. Learn more and apply at trimet.org/82nd. Applications will be accepted through Monday, Jan. 27, 2025.

Timeline and next steps

TriMet will host an open house in late January, to share information about the 82nd Avenue Transit Project with the community. We expect to select a contractor for the project by mid-year. The project’s Steering Committee, which includes representatives from community-based organizations including Oregon Walks, Clackamas Resource Center, Unite Oregon and the 82nd Avenue Business Alliance, will vote on a Locally Preferred Alternative (LPA) in early 2025. The LPA will include the final routing and general station locations. Construction is expected to begin in 2027, with service opening to the public in the summer of 2029.

Project costs are estimated at $320 million, with up to $150 million projected from the Federal Transit Administration’s (FTA) Small Starts Program.

Thanks to the continued support of project partners who coordinated planning efforts and funding opportunities, including Metro, the City of Portland, Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT), Multnomah County, Clackamas County and Port of Portland.