Spokane Community College Transit Center

Spokane Community College Transit Center or SCC Transit Center is a transit center and BRT terminus in the Spokane Transit Authority route system. It is one of Spokane Transit's four primary transit centers, along with the STA Plaza, West Plains, and Pence-Cole Valley transit centers.

Spokane Community College Transit Center
STA transit center
Spokane Community College Transit Center, pictured in September 2022, featuring shelters, restrooms, and battery electric bus charging infrastructure
General information
Location1810 N Greene St., Spokane, WA 99217
Coordinates47.673°N 117.358°W / 47.673; -117.358
Owned bySpokane Transit Authority
Bus stands3
Construction
Structure typeSurface
AccessibleYes
History
Openedc. 1984[1]
Rebuilt2013, 2019 (relocated to southeast side of campus)
Passengers
1,725 (avg. weekday, 2015)[2]

It is located on the southeastern corner of the Spokane Community College campus along Mission Avenue and serves as a transfer point for bus routes serving Spokane Valley, Millwood, North Spokane, and South Spokane. It also serves as the eastern terminus for the City Line.

History

Spokane Community College Transit Center with its original shelter structures on the west side of the SCC Campus, pictured in 2011.

Initial transit center

Planning for the Spokane Community College transit center began around 1982[3] and the center opened c. 1984.[4] It was later reconstructed during summer 2013[5] in a project that replaced all existing shelter structures and added additional bus loading zones. The 2013 improvements are intended to be an interim solution as the transit center will eventually be replaced by a newer and larger one.

2019 relocation

The decision was made to reconstruct the Spokane Community College transit center at a site on the opposite side of campus. Growing transit operations combined with site constraints, particularly the construction of an elevated North Spokane Corridor adjacent to the current site, limit the future potential of the transit center in its current form. Construction on the new transit center began in 2019 and was completed in December 2019.[6]

City Line

A Spokane Transit City Line Bus charging at the SCC Transit Center.

The SCC Transit Center serves as the eastern terminus of the City Line bus rapid transit line, which began service in 2023. Because the vehicles utilize electric-battery propulsion through inductive charging, major infrastructure improvements were made to support the BRT line.

Location

As implied by its name, the transit center is located on the Spokane Community College campus and is sited at its southeast corner.

Routes

As of July 2023, the Spokane Community College Transit Center serves five routes and as a terminus and charging center for the City Line.

Route Termini Service level Streets traveled
1
City Line
Browne's Addition Chief Garry Park
Spokane Community College
at unknown Bay*
Bus rapid transit Cannon St, 4th Ave, Spruce St, Pacific, 1st Ave, Wall St, Main Ave, Pine, Spokane Falls Blvd, Cincinnati, Mission Ave, Riverside Ave, Sprague Ave, 2nd Ave
32
Trent/Montgomery
Chief Garry Park
Spokane Community College

at Bay 2

Spokane Valley

Mirabeau Park & Ride

Regular route Greene, Freya, Trent, Argonne, Montgomery, Mansfield, Indiana
33
Wellesley
West Hills
Whistalks Way

at Spokane Falls Community College

Chief Garry Park
Spokane Community College
at Bay 7
Frequent route Whistalks Way, TJ Meenach Drive, Cochran/Alberta, Driscoll Blvd, Wellesley, Haven/Market, Greene
34
Freya
Lincoln Heights
South Hill Park & Ride
Chief Garry Park
Spokane Community College
at Bay 4
Regular route 29th Ave., Freya, 18th Ave., Ray, Thor/Freya, 2nd Ave./3rd Ave., Havana, Broadway/Alki, Freya, Greene
39
Minnehaha Loop
Minnehaha
Minnehaha Park
Chief Garry Park
Spokane Community College
at Bay 3
Regular route Mission, Greene, Carlisle, Marietta, Myrtle, Frederick, Euclid, Market

References

  1. "Transit Centers Planned". Spokane Chronicle. December 10, 1984. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  2. "Annual Performance Report – Passenger Facilities Edition No. 4 (2015 Data)". Spokane Transit Authority. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  3. "Transit Shelters on Agenda". Spokane Chronicle. February 25, 1982. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  4. "Transit Centers Planned". Spokane Chronicle. December 10, 1984. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  5. Prager, Mike (September 9, 2013). "Getting There: Spokane airport to offer quicker screenings". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  6. "URTC Fact Sheet Jul17" (PDF). STA Moving Forward. Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
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