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Local routes. SMART's 33 local routes serve as the main public transit connection between Detroit's suburbs. [2] Each is classified as either a high-ridership "main corridor" route, a long-distance "crosstown" route, or a "community" route focused on serving denser areas. Almost all connect to FAST, enabling connections to downtown Detroit.
While most of SMART's bus routes run hourly, and travel entirely within the suburbs, the network is connected to downtown Detroit by FAST, a group of limited-stop routes with more frequent service along major corridors in the area. FAST also provides the most direct transit connection from downtown to Metro Airport.
It serves as the secondary hub for the Detroit Department of Transportation bus network, as well as a major transfer point for the suburban SMART network, served by 13 bus routes in total. [ 2 ] The JHTC is an adaptive reuse project designed by NORR, housed in the former Dairy Cattle Building , the last remaining structure from the Michigan ...
Mayor Mike Duggan smiles as he takes a photo with a passenger inside a bus heading to the Detroit Department of Transportation's new transit center, the Jason Hargrove Transit Center, at the State ...
Restored ex-DSR bus 7618 built by Checker Cab at the AACA Museum in Hershey, Pennsylvania. The DDOT began its life as the Department of Street Railways (DSR) in 1922 after the municipalization of the privately-owned Detroit United Railway (DUR), which had controlled much of Detroit's mass transit operations since its incorporation in 1901. [3]
One of Detroit’s busier east-side bus routes is getting a boost. The Detroit Department of Transportation launched a pilot project for the 9-Jefferson bus on Monday that’s designed to boost ...
A new program will take flyers directly to the airport from the city of Detroit. It will launch at the end of March and cost $15 a trip.
The Regional Transit Authority of Southeast Michigan (RTA) is a public transit agency serving Metro Detroit and the Ann Arbor area in the U.S. state of Michigan. It operates the QLINE, [1] and coordinates and oversees public transit operations by other agencies, including DDOT, SMART, and the Detroit People Mover.