Downtown’s Multi-Modal Transportation Center

Multi-Modal Transportation Center Full Build Out Concept and Development Sites along Connecting Routes
Norfolk is moving forward with planning and financing a new multi-modal transportation center Downtown. Excellent idea. The plan is to have it ready to open once Amtrak rolls in in three years. It is very exciting. Combining the news of Virginia Beach’s move toward urbanism and I get the idea that our area is actually maturing as a metropolitan area. The one thing that scared me for a minute, though, was where it said,
“In addition, a new bus transfer facility would be developed, moving about two-thirds of buses from the current location at Cedar Grove north of downtown on Monticello Avenue.”
I was worried that might mean that Norfolk was going to keep 1/3 of the buses at Cedar Grove. Fear not. According to the full report by the City,
At present, 17 routes on the HRT network serve the Cedar Grove site, and be-tween 6,000 – 7,000 passengers board or alight daily at the facility. The general conditions of the Cedar Grove site combined with its lack of amenities, poor pedestrian link-ages and connections, and also its remoteness from downtown activity centers combine to make the restructuring of the primary bus transfer operation in Norfolk a high priority. Its lack of a direct connection to the light rail corridor is also another detriment of the current site. … It is planned that the new bus transfer operation at the Multi-Modal Transportation Center will serve 9 current HRT bus routes operating to the Downtown Norfolk area generally from areas to the south and east. Concurrent to this restructuring of the transit network, 6 other bus routes to the downtown area from the west and north would also be realigned to serve other light rail stations which will help to further deemphasize and limit congestion at the Cedar Grove site and thereby improving passenger service and convenience across the entire bus transit network.
That mean 15 out of 17 buses will no longer serve Cedar Grove. I hope the other two will only serve it by driving by. Thinking about it, this actually shows some intelligence on the part of Norfolk city officials. They publicly recognize that Cedar Grove is a terrible place for a bus transfer point. Ignoring the fact that the city is solely responsible for Cedar Grove, I have to give someone credit on this one. One problem. In the build-out image above, the nice, new bus transfer location has been built over with a parking garage. Check it out yourself:
No trackbacks yet.
Comments are closed.



about 1 year ago
I know it’s too much to hope for (and would make too much sense), but I wouldn’t mind a bus transfer point that was somehow integrated into the ground floor of a parking garage.
Could be designed in such a way as to be far more comfortable than Cedar Grove (especially when there’s no shade convenient to wait for a transfer). Of course, would make far too much sense to ever happen, but I can dream, can’t I?
about 1 year ago
that would certainly be nice, but you are right… too much logic… although as far as being more comfortable than Cedar Grove: I am sure that anything would be nicer than Cedar Grove at this point.
about 1 year ago
it must be nice to live in a city/area that’s moving forward and not still stuck in suburban sprawl mode
about 1 year ago
I’m hoping that there will be just 3 buses *passing by* (as opposed to passing through) Shitty Grove: 1, 3, and 23 (as it was when buses were on Charlotte St – anyone remember those days?)
about 1 year ago
I emailed the city about it and they said that it will, indeed, be on the first floor of the garage. that said, i dont know who maplestar is but he/she wins a point.