News Advisory: Annual Portland Aerial Tram evacuation exercise set for Sunday, Oct. 10 from 9 a.m. to noon

Press Release
The annual evacuation exercise for the Portland Aerial Tram is set for Sunday morning, Oct. 10. The exercise will begin at 9 a.m. and should be concluded by noon. No traffic impacts are expected. The tram is owned by the City of Portland’s Bureau of Transportation and operated by OHSU.
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A firefighter uses ropes and a harness to carefully come down from the Portland Aerial Tram in this image from the annual drill in 2013.

The Portland Aerial Tram is owned by the Portland Bureau of Transportation and operated by OHSU. This photo shows the evacuation drill conducted in 2013. The exercise has been conducted annually since the Portland Aerial Tram opened in 2007. Photo by Felicity J. Mackay, Portland Bureau of Transportation.

(Oct. 8, 2021) – The annual evacuation exercise for the Portland Aerial Tram is set for Sunday morning, Oct. 10. The exercise will begin at 9 a.m. and should be concluded by noon.

Members of the Portland Fire & Rescue Technical Rescue Team will lead the exercise. They will be assisted by representatives from both the City of Portland, whose Bureau of Transportation owns the tram, and Oregon Health & Science University, which operates the tram in conjunction with Doppelmayr USA.

Using ropes and harnesses, the team will lower four Doppelmayr employees playing the role of passengers 100 feet to the top floor of the OHSU Casey Eye Institute’s parking garage.

The training allows crews to practice an aerial rescue in the event the tram is stopped for an extended period of time with passengers on board. If members of the public contact you with questions about the training, please inform them that this is a scheduled training exercise and not a real emergency.

Tram ridership has been limited since March 2020, under safety precautions for the COVID-19 pandemic. For more detail about the current operations, which were adjusted in September, see the PBOT travel advisory.

The exercise has been conducted annually since the Portland Aerial Tram opened on Jan. 27, 2007 and is designed to provide personnel with experience in executing a last resort safety measure.  There has never been a real emergency.

Before the pandemic-related limits, more than 9,000 daily commuters and tourists rode the Portland Aerial Tram, one of only two aerial gondolas used for urban public transit in the United States.

Image removed.

Event Details: Annual Portland Aerial Tram evacuation exercise

WHEN: 

9 a.m., Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021. The exercise should be completed by noon.

LOCATION AND NEWS MEDIA INSTRUCTIONS:

The training will take place above the OHSU Casey Eye Institute parking garage. At that location, a small number of exercise participants will be evacuated from the tram and lowered via ropes and harnesses down to the top of the parking structure. Because OHSU remains in modified operations due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only critical function employees are allowed on campus at this time. However, local news crews are welcome to film the evacuation, with appropriate physical distancing and face coverings, from sidewalks immediately adjacent to the main thoroughfares, e.g., SW Campus Drive and SW Sam Jackson Park Road.

SPECTATORS: 

The Portland Aerial Tram is closed on Sundays during the fall and winter. As a result, the training exercise will not interfere with regular operations. For those interested in observing, please do so from nearby locations and refrain from entering the Casey Eye Institute parking lot.

ABOUT THE PORTLAND AERIAL TRAM

The Portland Aerial Tram is owned by the City of Portland’s Bureau of Transportation and operated by OHSU.  It opened to the public on Jan. 27, 2007. The cabins, named Walt and Jean, travel 3,300 linear feet between the South Waterfront terminal adjacent to the OHSU Center for Health & Healing and the upper terminal at the Kohler Pavilion on OHSU's main campus. Traveling at 22 miles per hour, the tram cabins rise 500 feet for the three-minute trip over I-5, the Lair Hill neighborhood and the Southwest Terwilliger Parkway. Visit GoByTram.com or find the tram on Twitter and Facebook and Instagram.

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The Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) is the steward of the city’s transportation system and a community partner in shaping a livable city. We plan, build, manage, and maintain an effective and safe transportation system that provides access and mobility. Learn more at portland.gov/transportation

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