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Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit is a bus rapid transit (BRT) corridor on Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco, California, United States. The 1.96-mile (3.15 km) line, which runs between Mission Street and Lombard Street , has dedicated center bus lanes and nine stations.
Golden Gate Transit Route 101 [1] Route operates as a complement to local Route 80. Operates effective June 15, 2009 as a weekday-only service, and it will use the HOV lanes along U.S. Highway 101 in Marin County between San Francisco and Santa Rosa. San Jose: VTA: Rapid 522: Route 522 parallels existing Route 22 in most sections.
In the future, VTA has plans to upgrade the rest of the Rapid 522 route to BRT service with the El Camino Real Bus Rapid Transit Project . VTA replaced Express line 168 with line 568 in October 2021 due to many passenger complaints that line 68 took too long to get between Gilroy and San Jose.
The route number was retired in 2009 when the service was discontinued and the 71 Haight/Noriega absorbed riders on the route. (That service was renumbered 7 in 2015.) By 1952, the 7 terminated at Golden Gate Park, effectively a short turn of the 71 Haight/Noriega and 72 Haight/Sunset which both continued further south and west. [ 5 ]
At least seven of the nine largest mass transit systems in the country have bounced back to more than 50% of their pre-pandemic ridership, but Northern California’s Bay Area Rapid Transit, or ...
The route was cut short in 1950 to California and 2nd Avenue with the opening of the 1 California bus line, and was removed along with the B Geary on December 29, 1956. [8] [9] The 1 California and 55 Sacramento were combined to form the current 1 California line on January 27, 1982. [10] [11]
San Francisco Municipal Railway: Vehicle: New Flyer XT60 New Flyer XDE60: Predecessors: 12 Ocean: Route; Locale: San Francisco, California: Start: Van Ness and North Point: Via: Van Ness Avenue, Mission Street, Ocean Avenue: End: City College (Unity Plaza) Length: 6.9 miles (11.1 km) [1] Daily ridership: 25,000 (2019) Map: 49 Van Ness/Mission Map
The Geary Bus Rapid Transit project added bus rapid transit features to San Francisco Municipal Railway bus lines along Geary Boulevard. The corridor serves routes 38 , 38R , 38AX , 38BX which combined to serve 52,900 daily riders in 2019, the most of any corridor in the city.