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CT Hartford is the largest division of Connecticut Transit, providing service on 43 local routes, 5 "flyer" limited stop routes and 18 express routes throughout 27 towns in Hartford County, including Bloomfield, East Hartford, Farmington, Glastonbury, Manchester, Middletown, Newington, New Britain, Rocky Hill, South Windsor, West Hartford, Wethersfield and Windsor, in addition to Hartford.
CT Transit (styled as CTtransit) is a public transportation bus system serving many metropolitan areas and their surrounding suburbs in the state of Connecticut. CT Transit is a division of the Connecticut Department of Transportation , although it contracts a number of private companies for most of its operations.
PVTA Northampton-area routes connect with FRTA Route 31 at the Academy of Music Theater in Northampton. PVTA Route 46 connects with FRTA Route 31 at the Whately Park and Ride. CTtransit, for service to Enfield, Windsor Locks, Windsor, and Hartford, CT:
CT New Britain Division and CT Bristol Division is one division of Connecticut Transit that collectively provides local bus service to four towns in the Central Connecticut Region with connections to CT Transit Hartford Division in downtown New Britain, downtown Bristol, along the Berlin Turnpike, at UConn Health, at Tunxis Community College, CT Transit Waterbury Division and Middletown Area ...
As of December 2016, twelve CT Transit routes use the CTfastrak busway with a variety of stopping patterns. [9] Nine routes provide local stopping service on various sections of the busway: [4] 101 Hartford/New Britain; 102 Hartford/New Britain/Bristol; 121 MCC/Hartford/UConn Health; 125 Berlin Tpke
The North East Transportation Company (abbreviated as NET, sometimes written as Northeast Transportation) is a bus operator based in the Naugatuck Valley area of Connecticut. NET currently serves as a contractor under CT Transit providing local bus and paratransit services in Meriden , Wallingford , and Waterbury .
In the Hartford area, Farmington Avenue east of Route 10, from Farmington to downtown Hartford, used to be part of the original U.S. Route 6 alignment. When US 6 was rerouted in 1956, Farmington Avenue was assigned to an extended Route 4. The route designation was later truncated to end in West Hartford where state maintenance of the road ended.
Bus networks are an important part of the transportation system in Connecticut, especially in urban areas like Hartford, Stamford, Norwalk, Bridgeport and New Haven. The state also operates CTfastrak, a bus rapid transit line linking New Britain and Hartford. [2] [3] [4]