Talk:Gresham Central Transit Center

Gresham Transit Center Older Than 1986
Originally, when I visited this page it suggested this particular transit center had only existed during the time of MAX starting September 5, 1986. Recently, I found a slight correction that it opened in 1981, which makes sense because of it being mentioned in TriMet's 1982 Self Service Fare Manual describing the list of route changes which had taken effect that September 5th. If anyone can point out exactly when in 1981 the opening of Gresham TC occurred, please comment below.


 * The routes it served initially included:
 * 9-Powell
 * 19-Division (now 4-Division; rush-hour portion of route east of Gresham TC is now served by 84-Kelso-Boring to Kelso; southern part of route from Kelso to Sandy is currently handled through Sandy Area Metro Transit)
 * 19-East Glisan (now 19-Glisan; current route now ends east at Gateway TC)
 * 44-Gresham (defunct)
 * 80-Gresham-Troutdale (now 80-Kane-Troutdale Road)
 * 81-Fairview-Gresham (portions now served by 12-Sandy Blvd.)

However, one thing doesn't seem right about the #19 (before 9/5/82): did the #19-East Glisan portion end at Gresham TC when it was new? Or would it have been #19-Division?

WikiPro1981X (talk) 20:13, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
 * After September 5, 1986 and the slight renaming to Gresham Central Transit Center, this was the list of routes it had served:
 * 4-Division
 * 9-Powell
 * 25-Gresham-Glisan (current route, as of about 1993, is 25-Glisan-Rockwood and now ends east at Rockwood TC, currently under renovation)
 * 26-Stark (now part of current route 20-Burnside-Stark)
 * 80-Gresham-Troutdale (today 80-Kane-Troutdale Road)
 * 81-Rockwood-Gresham (mostly defunct)
 * 84-Sandy-Boring (now 84-Kelso-Boring; old route was formerly part of the Division route)