Route The tram consists of two stations and a single intermediate tower. Two tram cars operate in a pendular mode on parallel track ropes and are pulled in unison by a haul rope which is driven by an engine at the lower terminal; when one car is at the upper terminal, the other is at the lower terminal, and vice versa. The lower station is located beside an OHSU facility in the
South Waterfront neighborhood, adjacent to a stop on the Portland Streetcar line, which connects the South Waterfront neighborhood with downtown Portland. The upper station is located adjacent to OHSU Hospital, on the university's Marquam Hill campus. The two stations are exactly east and west of each other separated by a horizontal distance of and a vertical distance of . The maximum vertical clearance between the tram and the ground is . The tram route crosses over
Interstate 5 as well as major thoroughfares such as Barbur Boulevard,
Oregon Route 10 (
Naito Parkway), and
Oregon Route 43 (Macadam Avenue). The intermediate tower is located east of
Interstate 5 close to the South Waterfront station. As a result of this configuration, much of the journey is significantly elevated above the ground, making the tram easily visible for some distance, and providing tram riders with good views of the eastern metropolitan area and the
Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington. The alternative to riding the tram is via public roadways which require a route with numerous stoplights and intersections. This route includes a short stretch of busy
U.S. Route 26, as well as twisty Sam Jackson Park Road which ascends the side of the
Tualatin Mountains to the hospital campus.
Structures and cabling The lower (South Waterfront) station houses the tram's engines in a reinforced concrete basement The upper station is a freestanding steel and concrete tower above grade and houses the tram's counterweight. It is structurally separate from nearby
OHSU Hospital and connects to the hospital's ninth floor via a
skybridge over SW Campus Drive, which winds through the middle of the University. Structural separation between the tram and the hospital is necessary to avoid vibrations from tram machinery interfering with delicate
microsurgery performed in the hospital. The intermediate tower allows the tram to gain elevation quickly once leaving the lower station to provide adequate clearance over Interstate 5. The tower is wide and long at its base, at its narrowest point—nearly two-thirds up the tower—and at the top. It rests on a pier cap thick supported by 35 piers. Nearly of
steel and of
concrete are in the two platforms and the intermediate tower; the lateral loads on the upper platform range from or . The haul rope length is over .
Cars The tram cars each weigh approximately , with cabin dimensions of . Each car has a capacity of over and there is sufficient room in the cabin for 78 passengers and one operator. The tram cars were built by
Gangloff AG, of
Bern in Switzerland, and were shaped and painted to look like the architectural firm's vision of "bubbles floating through the sky". The surface of the cabins reflects and refracts light, minimizing their visual impact to the neighborhood underneath. The north and south cars are named
Jean and
Walt, respectively, after Jean Richardson, the first female
engineering graduate from
Oregon State University, and Walt Reynolds, the first
African-American to graduate from OHSU, then known as the University of Oregon Medical School.
Drive and safety systems The tram is propelled by three independent drive systems. The primary drive is a variable-frequency electric motor. Two hydrostatic
diesel engines are also part of the design: one is a standby drive, permitting operation during a
power outage; the other is an emergency evacuation drive. A counterweight offsets the weight of the cars. The tram is capable of operating at speeds up to In addition to the redundant drive system, the tram has numerous other design features intended to ensure the safety of passengers and persons on the ground under its route. Communications systems permit the tram car operators to communicate with the control room. Automatic supervisory and control systems monitor the condition of the ropes and the drive systems. The tram was designed to safely operate in the earthquake-prone
Pacific Northwest, with a structural design exceeding U.S
earthquake standards, and operate in sustained winds of up to . The tram is free for OHSU employees, students, and patients.
TriMet,
C-Tran, and
Portland Streetcar monthly and annual passes are no longer honored. Those initial estimates proved to be conservative: the tram attracted one million riders in its first 10 months of operation, In May 2022, the tram reopened to the general public. ==History==