Houston Chronicle

Beam crack closes San Francisco’s new $2B terminal

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SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco officials shut down the city’s celebrated new $2.2 billion transit terminal Tuesday after discoverin­g a crack in a support beam under the center’s public roof garden.

Coined the “Grand Central of the West,” the Salesforce Transit Center opened in August near the heart of downtown after nearly a decade of constructi­on. It was expected to accommodat­e 100,000 passengers each weekday, and up to 45 million people a year.

Authoritie­s in green vests immediatel­y began moving people out of the building Tuesday afternoon and rerouted buses to a temporary area about two blocks away that had been used during the center’s constructi­on.

Enveloped in wavy white sheets of metal veil, the five-level center includes a bus deck, a towering sky-lit central entrance hall and a rooftop park with an outdoor amphitheat­er.

Officials said Tuesday the transit center will remain closed while engineers assess the damage and inspect other beams.

The terminal is managed by the Transbay Joints Power Authority. Executive director Mark Zabaneh said no other damage is suspected.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported that the complex faced delays in putting out contracts to bid, and the winning bids were ultimately higher than expected.

The terminal’s cost rose from $1.6 billion at its 2010 groundbrea­king to more than $2 billion in 2016 because of what one analyst called “optimistic assumption­s,” according to the newspaper.

The project, a commanding presence in the city’s South of Market neighborho­od, is financed by land sales, federal stimulus grants, district fees and taxes, bridge tolls, and federal and state funds.

The online business software company Salesforce, which opened its adjacent 61-story Salesforce Tower three months ago, bought naming rights to the center in 2017 as part of a 25-year, $110 million sponsorshi­p agreement.

 ?? Jessica Christian / San Francisco Chronicle ?? A constructi­on worker Tuesday inspects a portion of the roof inside Transbay Terminal’s third-level bus terminal after reports of a crack in a steel beam.
Jessica Christian / San Francisco Chronicle A constructi­on worker Tuesday inspects a portion of the roof inside Transbay Terminal’s third-level bus terminal after reports of a crack in a steel beam.

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