Eleven Pace routes serve Harvey Transportation Center, including ones connecting to major employers like Amazon, UPS, and west suburban business districts. Pace Route 352, the agency’s most heavily used route, runs 24 hours a day and links riders with colleges, medical facilities, Metra Stations, and CTA’s 95th/Dan Ryan Red Line Station.
Pace Harvey Transportation Center Reconstruction Project Awarded $20 Million USDOT RAISE Grant
Collaborative effort between Pace, Metra, and City of Harvey invests in one of northeastern Illinois’s most historically disadvantaged communities
HARVEY, IL – The United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) yesterday announced the award of a $20 million Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity (RAISE) discretionary grant to fund the Harvey Transportation Center reconstruction project in Harvey, IL. Once complete, it will offer a significant upgrade for public transit riders in the south suburbs. The project is a partnership between Pace, Metra, and the City of Harvey.
“This is a great day for Pace, Metra, and the City of Harvey. More importantly, it’s a great day for those we serve. The $20 million USDOT RAISE grant announced today, along with the $8 million in funding provided by the Rebuild Illinois bill, will allow us to reconstruct Pace’s Harvey Transportation Center into an exceptional new intermodal facility that will simplify transfers, create a better passenger experience, and boost economic growth in the City of Harvey. None of this would be possible without our strong partnerships, especially with Metra and the City of Harvey. We are grateful to USDOT and all who helped with letters of support,” said Pace Executive Director Melinda Metzger.
The existing Pace Harvey Transportation Center handles more Pace bus boardings than any other single location in the six-county northeastern Illinois region, so it is critical that these thousands of daily riders are provided a modern and comfortable facility. The funding will be used to improve the bus passenger waiting area which will be re-built adjacent to the Harvey Metra Electric station.
The project will ensure safer and easier transfers between Pace buses and Metra trains, offer passenger restrooms, an interior waiting area, a new retail space, 14 bus bays (up from the current 10), better weather protection for pedestrians, an expanded kiss-n-ride area, and a consolidated commuter parking lot. The entire facility will be accessible to people with disabilities and have a dedicated area for ADA paratransit vehicles.
The Metra portion of the project will include the rehabilitation of its Harvey Station to better integrate the station to Pace’s facility. The improvements will include a new station entrance, new platform headhouses and waiting areas, new elevators, an expanded platform with canopy, new parking with a kiss-and-ride lane, and new lighting, signs, and other amenities.
“Metra is excited that this RAISE grant will help create a modern and comfortable transfer facility for the benefit of both Pace and Metra riders,” said Metra CEO/Executive Director Jim Derwinski. “We are grateful to our federal representatives and the Department of Transportation for backing this importance project.”
The improved Pace transit center benefits some of Illinois’s most historically disadvantaged communities and thus meets the standard in the Biden Administration’s Justice40 Initiative. The project reflects an intentionally inclusive economic investment through both the creation of new construction jobs and a vastly improved facility. The project also helps reduce vehicle miles traveled and greenhouse gas emissions by providing a more attractive public transportation option as an alternative to driving.
“My administration is focused on building and maintaining relationships that fosters growth in the City of Harvey. The historic collaboration of Metra and Pace will make a significant impact on the lives, infrastructure, and future City developments. This $20 million dollar investment improves the quality of life for residents that deserve to live in a city for which they can be proud. It demonstrates that change is truly possible when everyone is working together. We look forward to more of it.” said Mayor Christopher J. Clark.
This 20-year-old facility is already served by low-emission compressed natural gas buses and includes new technology such as real-time Bus Tracker infrastructure. These capital improvements, which are a top priority for Pace, will further enhance the current service provided and will accommodate the planned I-294 express and Pulse rapid transit routes.
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About Pace
Pace Suburban Bus safely and efficiently moves people to work, school, and other regional destinations with its family of public transportation services. Pace offers affordable and environmentally responsible transit options for the residents of 272 municipalities in Cook, Will, DuPage, Kane, Lake, and McHenry counties. The backbone of Chicago's suburbs, Pace serves tens of thousands of daily riders. One of the largest bus services in North America, Pace covers 3,677 square miles, an area nearly the size of the state of Connecticut and about 15 times the size of the City of Chicago. Pace's innovative approach to public transportation gives the agency a national reputation as an industry leader.
About Metra
Metra is an essential resource that safely and reliably connects individuals to the things that matter most in their lives — their work, their homes and their families.
About The City of Harvey
The City of Harvey, Illinois is located at the junctions of major interstates, as well as four national and multinational railroad lines. Now under new leadership with the election of Mayor Christopher Clark and a dynamic team of Aldermen and an experienced administrative team operating with integrity, pride and unity, the City of Harvey has planned for a better future and a higher quality of life for residents.