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Duluth Transportation Center

Coordinates: 46°47′2″N 92°6′2″W / 46.78389°N 92.10056°W / 46.78389; -92.10056
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Duluth Transportation Center
General information
Location228 W Michigan Street, Duluth, MN 55802
Coordinates46°47′2″N 92°6′2″W / 46.78389°N 92.10056°W / 46.78389; -92.10056
Owned byDuluth Transit Authority
Line(s)
Construction
ParkingPublic Parking
History
Opened4 February 2016[1]

Duluth Transportation Center (DTC) is a bus station in Duluth, Minnesota, served by urban transit, rural transit, and intercity buses. Duluth Transportation Center is the downtown hub for the Duluth transit system.

Urban transit routes at the center are operated by Duluth Transit Authority, the third-largest transit operator in Minnesota.[2][3] Regional rural transit is provided from the station by Arrowhead Transit. Intercity services are operated by Jefferson Lines.[1]

Construction

Duluth Transportation Center was built in February 2016,[1] replacing an existing parking ramp. The building was designed by LHB Architects and Engineers and LSA Design. Mortenson Construction was the contractor.[4][5] Construction cost $30 million.[1]

The center experienced a setback in 2015 when construction workers discovered a city storm sewer with a large hole that had been leaking for some time. The city authorized the site’s main contractor, Mortenson Construction, to repair the line, putting the storm sewer on pilings.[6]

Design and Layout

The DTC has 8 docks for bus boarding, with space for layovers.[5] Passenger waiting areas are heated during the winter.[4]

Skyways to nearby buildings were replaced during construction, providing improved pedestrian access. Skyways connect to Northwest Passage, Harbor Center, Wells Fargo and the Transit Center East facility.[4]

There are 410 public access parking spaces[6] and 120 bike-storage spaces.[4]

Operation

Duluth Transit operates its downtown routes through the DTC.

Jefferson Lines operates services to the Twin Cities and central Minnesota. Jefferson Lines paper tickets are sold at the station.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Duluth Transportation Center (DTC) Grand Opening Scheduled for Thursday, February 4th". Duluth Transit. Duluth Transit Authority. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  2. ^ "2009 Transit System Performance Evaluation". Metropolitan Council. 2009. Archived from the original on May 19, 2010. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  3. ^ Jeremy Mattson (June 2008). "Effects of Rising Gas Prices on Bus Ridership for Small Urban and Rural Transit Systems" (PDF). Small Urban and Rural Transit Center, Upper Great Plains Transportation Institute, North Dakota State University. p. 7. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d "Duluth Transit Authority Multimodal Transportation Center". Mortenson Construction. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  5. ^ a b Heilig, Jim. "DTA awards Build/Design Contract for Multimodal Center" (PDF). Duluth Transit. Duluth Transit Authority. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  6. ^ a b Slater, Brady (19 December 2015). "Downtown Duluth transit center nears opening". Duluth News Tribune. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  7. ^ "Bus Stops / Minnesota". Jefferson Lines. Retrieved 6 November 2016.