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M Ocean View

The M Ocean View is a light rail line that is part of the Muni Metro system in San Francisco, California. Named after the Oceanview neighborhood, it runs between San Jose and Geneva and Embarcadero station, connecting Oceanview, San Francisco State University, and Stonestown Galleria with the city center. The line opened on October 6, 1925.

M Ocean View
Overview
OwnerSan Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency
LocaleSan Francisco, California
Termini
Stations29
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemMuni Metro
Operator(s)San Francisco Municipal Railway
Rolling stockBreda LRV2 and LRV3
Siemens LRV4
Daily ridership18,100 (January 2024)[1]
History
OpenedOctober 6, 1925 (1925-10-06)[2]
Technical
Line length9.0 mi (14.5 km)[3]
CharacterAt grade and underground
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line600 V DC
Route map
M Ocean View highlighted in green

Route description edit

 
An M Ocean View train in the private right-of-way at Ocean Avenue

The line runs from Embarcadero station in the Financial District to Geneva Avenue and San Jose Avenue near City College of San Francisco in the Balboa Park neighborhood. The downtown portion of the line runs through the Market Street subway, which it shares with three other Muni Metro lines. It continues through the much older Twin Peaks Tunnel, emerging at West Portal Station. From there, it follows West Portal Avenue to the Saint Francis Circle, where it then takes its own right-of-way to 19th Avenue. The portion of the line on 19th Avenue between where it joins 19th near Eucalyptus Drive and Junipero Serra Boulevard is a right-of-way separated from the street. This section has two stations with high-platforms, one at the Stonestown Galleria on Winston Drive and the other at San Francisco State University on Holloway Avenue. It continues on 19th Avenue past Junipero Serra to Randolph Street. At the end of Randolph, the M uses Orizaba Avenue to get to Broad Street and takes that to San Jose Avenue. The rest of the line follows San Jose Avenue to Geneva Avenue, where the line loops around the Metro yard there on the corner opposite from Balboa Park Station.

Operation edit

The M Ocean View begins service at 5 a.m. on weekdays, 6 a.m. Saturdays and 8 a.m. Sundays, with the end of service occurring around 12:30 a.m. each night. Daytime headways are 10 to 12 minutes.

Service on most of the route is provided by overnight Owl buses during the hours that rail service is not running. The L Owl serves the portion between Embarcadero and West Portal, and the 91 Owl serves the portion between West Portal and SF State. On weekends, the M Ocean View Bus service runs from 5 a.m. until the start of rail service. The bus line largely follows the rail line, but it uses surface streets to parallel sections where the rail line has dedicated rights-of-way.[4]

History edit

The M Ocean View line began operation on October 6, 1925, as a shuttle service from St. Francis Circle to the wye at Broad and Plymouth in the city's Ocean View District.[2] It was extended through the Twin Peaks Tunnel to the downtown Ferry Building on October 31, 1927, but reverted to a shuttle service on February 27, 1928.[2] The shuttle service was replaced by buses on August 6, 1939, but streetcar service returned on the full length of the line on December 17, 1944.[2] On June 6, 1948, the Transbay Terminal became the inner terminus of the line.[2]

 
An outbound M Ocean View PCC streetcar on a diversion route during construction of the Market Street subway. Photo taken between 1972 and 1982

While many streetcar lines were permanently converted to buses after World War II, the M Ocean View remained a streetcar line due to its use of the Twin Peaks Tunnel. Service was diverted to Duboce Avenue, Church Street, and 17th Street on December 2, 1972, due to construction of the Market Street subway.[5] On August 30, 1980, the line was extended to Balboa Park BART station.[6] The full line was partially converted to modern light-rail operation with the opening of the Muni Metro system on December 17, 1980.[5] Eureka Valley in the Twin Peaks Tunnel was originally a stop in regular service, but the station was closed in 1972 and replaced, ten years later, by Castro Street Station when the Market Street subway system opened.

Muni Metro edit

In the early 1970s, Muni began planning an extension of the J Church line over new track to Balboa Park station, then over the M Ocean View line to the high-ridership San Francisco State University station and Stonestown Galleria station. A Final Environmental Impact Statement for the new track was released in 1983; it was opened for non-revenue moves in August 1991 and began revenue service in June 1993.[7][8] Original plans called for the two existing stations to be rebuilt with high-level platforms, and a pocket track to allow J Church trains to turn back. After objections from neighbors, the pocket track was removed from the plan.[8]

The first phase of the 19th Ave. Platform & Trackway Improvement Project required the line to be replaced by buses south of St. Francis Circle from June 19 to October 23, 1993; the new platforms at the two stations were opened when service was restored, though several minor stops along 19th Avenue were left permanently closed.[8] The second phase required full bustitution beginning on July 30, 1994; rail service was restored to Stonestown on November 19 for holiday shopping, and on the rest of the line on January 28, 1995.[8] Some weekday J and M service was through-routed beginning on March 27, 1995; this lasted until a rail replacement project on the M in February 1998. Full combined J/M service was planned upon completion of the automated train control system and the Muni Metro Turnback; however, this was never implemented even after the construction projects were finished.[8]

In 2010, Muni replaced the rail junction just south of St. Francis Circle station. Rail service south of West Portal station was replaced with buses from May 17 to September 4.[9][10] The line was temporarily replaced by buses from June 25 to August 24, 2018 due to the Twin Peaks Tunnel shutdown.[11] During that time, a new traffic signal with transit signal priority was installed where the line crosses the northbound lanes of 19th Avenue at Rossmoor Drive, and red transit-only lanes were painted to indicate that drivers must not block the crossing.[12]

On March 30, 2020, M Ocean View light-rail service was replaced with buses due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[13] Light-rail service on the M resumed on August 22, 2020, with the routes reconfigured to improve reliability in the subway. M Ocean View and T Third Street service were interlined, running between Sunnydale station and San Jose and Geneva (Balboa Park station).[14] M Light-rail service was re-replaced by the M Bus on August 25 due to issues with malfunctioning overhead wire splices and the need to quarantine control center staff after a COVID-19 case.[15] M rail service resumed on August 14, 2021, with the line terminating at Embarcadero again, as the K and T are again interlined.[16]

Subway proposal edit

The M Ocean View moves at only 8.5 to 9.5 miles per hour (13.7 to 15.3 km/h) during afternoon commute hours over a 2-mile (3.2 km) distance along 19th Avenue/Highway 1. The slow speed is attributed to trains stopping at multiple busy street crossings.[17] In addition, the majority of riders access 19th Avenue stops from the west side of 19th, since Stonestown Galleria, San Francisco State University and Parkmerced are all located west of 19th. In order to access the stops, which are located in the median of 19th Avenue, pedestrians cross three lanes of traffic and a turn lane. In San Francisco, 55% of severe and fatal pedestrian accidents occur on 7% of its street miles, which includes the 19th Avenue/Highway 1 corridor.[18] In response, the San Francisco County Transportation Authority published studies in 2010[19] and 2014 which explored options to facilitate pedestrian access and improve travel times.[17]

The full-subway option was chosen for further development and named the Muni Subway Expansion Project (MSXP).[20] Under the preliminary concept for MSXP, the rail line would remain underground past West Portal station. K Ingleside would branch off from the underground line and surface on Junipero Serra Boulevard just south of Saint Francis Circle. M Ocean View will remain underground along the current right of way under West Portal Avenue and 19th Avenue, branching off at Holloway to Parkmerced. The underground line would continue with J Church service along 19th until surfacing just east of the intersection of 19th and Junipero Serra, then continuing on to Balboa Park via Randolph, Broad, and San Jose.[21]

The current West Portal station would most likely have to be redesigned as a two-level station with the K/M lines on the lower level and the L line on the upper level. New underground stations would be constructed at Saint Francis Circle (K/M lines), Winston Drive (M, serving Stonestown), Holloway (J/M, serving SF State), and Parkmerced (M). A potential infill station could be constructed at Ocean Avenue in Lakeside Village. Several existing surface stations would be removed; in most cases, they would be replaced by underground stations.[21] The proposed full subway line would continue past Parkmerced with a long tail track; that tail track could be extended in the future to connect to the Daly City BART station via the M line. The total cost of the full subway line project was estimated at approximately $3 billion.[21][22]

Muni Forward project edit

In 2022, the SFMTA begin planning the M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project, a MuniForward project intended to improve reliability of the segment between Junipero Serra Boulevard and Balboa Park station. Initial proposals released that September included transit lanes and platform lengthening on San Jose Avenue, consolidation of several closely spaced stops, and four new traffic signals.[23] A revised proposal in May 2023 eliminated one stop consolidation and two traffic signals, but added modifications to the terminal at San Jose and Geneva.[24] As of October 2023, "quick-build" implementation of some changes is expected to begin in late 2023, with main construction beginning in 2026.[25]

Station listing edit

The M Ocean View line stops at large stations for the downtown section of the route and on 19th Avenue and at smaller stops on the rest of the line. Most of the smaller stops are nothing more than a sign on the side of the street designating a stop and a few others are concrete 'islands' in the middle of the street next to the tracks that provide access for wheelchairs. Muni bus routes provide service to all stations and other systems with access to the stations are noted.

Station/Stop Neighborhood Muni Metro lines Notes and connections
  Embarcadero Financial District          
  Montgomery          
  Powell Civic Center,
Mid-Market,
Tenderloin
         
  (at Union Square/Market St)
  Civic Center/UN Plaza          
  Van Ness          
  Church Duboce Triangle,
Mission Dolores
  (Surface stop)

     

  Castro Castro District      
  Forest Hill Laguna Honda         Muni: 36, 43, 44, 52
  West Portal West Portal         Muni: 48, 57
West Portal and 14th Avenue     Muni: 57
  St. Francis Circle St. Francis Wood     Muni: 23, 57
Right Of Way/Ocean Merced Manor Located in Muni's private right-of-way
Right Of Way/Eucalyptus
  • Located in Muni's private right-of-way
  •   Muni: 57
  Stonestown Galleria
  San Francisco State University
19th Avenue and Junipero Serra (inbound)
19th Avenue and Randolph (outbound)
Merced Heights   Muni: 28
19th Avenue and Randolph
  Randolph and Arch
Randolph and Bright Ingleside
Broad and Orizaba (inbound)
Orizaba and Broad (outbound)
Broad and Capitol
  Broad and Plymouth   Muni: 54
San Jose and Farallones
San Jose and Lakeview
San Jose and Mount Vernon
  San Jose and Geneva (inbound)
  San Jose and Niagara (outbound)
Balboa Park    

References edit

  1. ^ "Average daily Muni boardings by route and month (pre-pandemic to present)". San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e Stindt, Fred A. (October 1990). San Francisco's Century of Street Cars. F.A. Stindt. p. 195. ISBN 0-9615465-1-4.
  3. ^ . San Francisco Metropolitan Transportation Agency. Archived from the original on December 3, 2016. Retrieved December 25, 2007.
  4. ^ "Permanent Muni Service Changes Starting Saturday, February 22, 2020" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. February 22, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Callwell, Robert (September 1999). "Transit in San Francisco: A Selected Chronology, 1850–1995" (PDF). San Francisco Municipal Railway.
  6. ^ McKane, John; Perles, Anthony (1982). Inside Muni: The Properties and Operations of the Municipal Railway of San Francisco. Glendale, CA (US): Interurban Press. p. 198. ISBN 0-916374-49-1.
  7. ^ Muni J Line Connection Project Final Environmental Impact Statement. Urban Mass Transit Administration and San Francisco Department of City Planning. May 1983 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ a b c d e Callwell, Robert (September 1999). "Transit in San Francisco: A Selected Chronology, 1850–1995" (PDF). San Francisco Municipal Railway. pp. 76–79.
  9. ^ "SFMTA Announces Details of St. Francis Circle Project to Begin in May" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. April 29, 2010.
  10. ^ "SFMTA Prepares to Restore 61 Percent of Muni May 8 Service Cuts and Completes St. Francis Circle Project" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. September 2, 2010.
  11. ^ . San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. June 25, 2018. Archived from the original on June 26, 2018.
  12. ^ "M Ocean View Improvements (Rossmoor Drive and Junipero Serra)". San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. July 24, 2017.
  13. ^ Fowler, Amy (March 26, 2020). "Starting March 30: New Muni Service Changes" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.
  14. ^ Maguire, Mariana (August 18, 2020). "Major Muni Service Expansion August 22" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.
  15. ^ "Bus Substitution for All Rail Lines" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. August 25, 2020.
  16. ^ "Welcoming Back the M Ocean View and 31 Balboa" (Press release). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. July 15, 2021.
  17. ^ a b 19th Avenue Transit Study (PDF) (Report). San Francisco County Transportation Authority. March 2014. (PDF) from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2016.
  18. ^ WalkFirst: Improving Safety & Walking Conditions in San Francisco (PDF) (Report). San Francisco Department of Public Health. October 2011. Retrieved March 22, 2016. 4.3 High-injury-density corridors – The identified corridors shown in blue in Map 3 represent 6.7% of San Francisco's street miles, and include 55% of all severe and fatal injuries and 51% of total pedestrian injuries in the five-year period.
  19. ^ 19th Avenue Corridor Study (PDF) (Report). City and County of San Francisco. February 12, 2010. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  20. ^ "Muni Subway Expansion Project". San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. June 5, 2014. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c 19th Avenue/M Ocean View Project: Subway Station Entrances | New, Upgraded & Removed Stations (PDF) (Report). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. February 2016. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  22. ^ Mojadad, Ida. "City proposes Muni M-line to run under Parkmerced, extend to Daly City BART". Golden Gate Xpress. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  23. ^ "M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project Engagement Boards" (PDF). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. September 2022.
  24. ^ "M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project Proposed Improvements" (PDF). San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. May 2023.
  25. ^ . San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. Archived from the original on October 31, 2023.

External links edit

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  Media related to M Ocean View at Wikimedia Commons

  • SFMTA – M Ocean View
  • M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project

ocean, view, light, rail, line, that, part, muni, metro, system, francisco, california, named, after, oceanview, neighborhood, runs, between, jose, geneva, embarcadero, station, connecting, oceanview, francisco, state, university, stonestown, galleria, with, c. The M Ocean View is a light rail line that is part of the Muni Metro system in San Francisco California Named after the Oceanview neighborhood it runs between San Jose and Geneva and Embarcadero station connecting Oceanview San Francisco State University and Stonestown Galleria with the city center The line opened on October 6 1925 M Ocean ViewA train near San Francisco State University station in 2017OverviewOwnerSan Francisco Municipal Transportation AgencyLocaleSan Francisco CaliforniaTerminiEmbarcaderoSan Jose and Geneva Balboa Park Stations29ServiceTypeLight railSystemMuni MetroOperator s San Francisco Municipal RailwayRolling stockBreda LRV2 and LRV3Siemens LRV4Daily ridership18 100 January 2024 1 HistoryOpenedOctober 6 1925 1925 10 06 2 TechnicalLine length9 0 mi 14 5 km 3 CharacterAt grade and undergroundTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrificationOverhead line 600 V DCRoute mapM Ocean View highlighted in green Show interactive mapLegend to 4th amp King to East Bay turnback Embarcadero Montgomery Union Sq Market St Powell Civic Center to Balboa Park Van Ness to Ocean Beach Church to Balboa Park Castro Forest Hill West Portal to SF Zoo West Portal and 14th Avenue St Francis Circle to Balboa Park Right Of Way Ocean Right Of Way Eucalyptus Stonestown San Francisco State University 19th Avenue and Junipero Serra Randolph 19th Avenue and Randolph Randolph and Arch Randolph and Bright Broad and Orizaba Orizaba and Broad Broad and Capitol Broad and Plymouth San Jose and Farallones San Jose and Lakeview San Jose and Mount Vernon I 280 to Civic Center San Jose and Geneva Niagara Balboa Park to Millbrae amp SFO This diagram viewtalkedit Show diagram map Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Operation 2 History 2 1 Muni Metro 2 1 1 Subway proposal 2 2 Muni Forward project 3 Station listing 4 References 5 External linksRoute description edit nbsp An M Ocean View train in the private right of way at Ocean Avenue The line runs from Embarcadero station in the Financial District to Geneva Avenue and San Jose Avenue near City College of San Francisco in the Balboa Park neighborhood The downtown portion of the line runs through the Market Street subway which it shares with three other Muni Metro lines It continues through the much older Twin Peaks Tunnel emerging at West Portal Station From there it follows West Portal Avenue to the Saint Francis Circle where it then takes its own right of way to 19th Avenue The portion of the line on 19th Avenue between where it joins 19th near Eucalyptus Drive and Junipero Serra Boulevard is a right of way separated from the street This section has two stations with high platforms one at the Stonestown Galleria on Winston Drive and the other at San Francisco State University on Holloway Avenue It continues on 19th Avenue past Junipero Serra to Randolph Street At the end of Randolph the M uses Orizaba Avenue to get to Broad Street and takes that to San Jose Avenue The rest of the line follows San Jose Avenue to Geneva Avenue where the line loops around the Metro yard there on the corner opposite from Balboa Park Station Operation edit The M Ocean View begins service at 5 a m on weekdays 6 a m Saturdays and 8 a m Sundays with the end of service occurring around 12 30 a m each night Daytime headways are 10 to 12 minutes Service on most of the route is provided by overnight Owl buses during the hours that rail service is not running The L Owl serves the portion between Embarcadero and West Portal and the 91 Owl serves the portion between West Portal and SF State On weekends the M Ocean View Bus service runs from 5 a m until the start of rail service The bus line largely follows the rail line but it uses surface streets to parallel sections where the rail line has dedicated rights of way 4 History editThe M Ocean View line began operation on October 6 1925 as a shuttle service from St Francis Circle to the wye at Broad and Plymouth in the city s Ocean View District 2 It was extended through the Twin Peaks Tunnel to the downtown Ferry Building on October 31 1927 but reverted to a shuttle service on February 27 1928 2 The shuttle service was replaced by buses on August 6 1939 but streetcar service returned on the full length of the line on December 17 1944 2 On June 6 1948 the Transbay Terminal became the inner terminus of the line 2 nbsp An outbound M Ocean View PCC streetcar on a diversion route during construction of the Market Street subway Photo taken between 1972 and 1982 While many streetcar lines were permanently converted to buses after World War II the M Ocean View remained a streetcar line due to its use of the Twin Peaks Tunnel Service was diverted to Duboce Avenue Church Street and 17th Street on December 2 1972 due to construction of the Market Street subway 5 On August 30 1980 the line was extended to Balboa Park BART station 6 The full line was partially converted to modern light rail operation with the opening of the Muni Metro system on December 17 1980 5 Eureka Valley in the Twin Peaks Tunnel was originally a stop in regular service but the station was closed in 1972 and replaced ten years later by Castro Street Station when the Market Street subway system opened Muni Metro edit In the early 1970s Muni began planning an extension of the J Church line over new track to Balboa Park station then over the M Ocean View line to the high ridership San Francisco State University station and Stonestown Galleria station A Final Environmental Impact Statement for the new track was released in 1983 it was opened for non revenue moves in August 1991 and began revenue service in June 1993 7 8 Original plans called for the two existing stations to be rebuilt with high level platforms and a pocket track to allow J Church trains to turn back After objections from neighbors the pocket track was removed from the plan 8 The first phase of the 19th Ave Platform amp Trackway Improvement Project required the line to be replaced by buses south of St Francis Circle from June 19 to October 23 1993 the new platforms at the two stations were opened when service was restored though several minor stops along 19th Avenue were left permanently closed 8 The second phase required full bustitution beginning on July 30 1994 rail service was restored to Stonestown on November 19 for holiday shopping and on the rest of the line on January 28 1995 8 Some weekday J and M service was through routed beginning on March 27 1995 this lasted until a rail replacement project on the M in February 1998 Full combined J M service was planned upon completion of the automated train control system and the Muni Metro Turnback however this was never implemented even after the construction projects were finished 8 In 2010 Muni replaced the rail junction just south of St Francis Circle station Rail service south of West Portal station was replaced with buses from May 17 to September 4 9 10 The line was temporarily replaced by buses from June 25 to August 24 2018 due to the Twin Peaks Tunnel shutdown 11 During that time a new traffic signal with transit signal priority was installed where the line crosses the northbound lanes of 19th Avenue at Rossmoor Drive and red transit only lanes were painted to indicate that drivers must not block the crossing 12 On March 30 2020 M Ocean View light rail service was replaced with buses due to the COVID 19 pandemic 13 Light rail service on the M resumed on August 22 2020 with the routes reconfigured to improve reliability in the subway M Ocean View and T Third Street service were interlined running between Sunnydale station and San Jose and Geneva Balboa Park station 14 M Light rail service was re replaced by the M Bus on August 25 due to issues with malfunctioning overhead wire splices and the need to quarantine control center staff after a COVID 19 case 15 M rail service resumed on August 14 2021 with the line terminating at Embarcadero again as the K and T are again interlined 16 Subway proposal edit The M Ocean View moves at only 8 5 to 9 5 miles per hour 13 7 to 15 3 km h during afternoon commute hours over a 2 mile 3 2 km distance along 19th Avenue Highway 1 The slow speed is attributed to trains stopping at multiple busy street crossings 17 In addition the majority of riders access 19th Avenue stops from the west side of 19th since Stonestown Galleria San Francisco State University and Parkmerced are all located west of 19th In order to access the stops which are located in the median of 19th Avenue pedestrians cross three lanes of traffic and a turn lane In San Francisco 55 of severe and fatal pedestrian accidents occur on 7 of its street miles which includes the 19th Avenue Highway 1 corridor 18 In response the San Francisco County Transportation Authority published studies in 2010 19 and 2014 which explored options to facilitate pedestrian access and improve travel times 17 The full subway option was chosen for further development and named the Muni Subway Expansion Project MSXP 20 Under the preliminary concept for MSXP the rail line would remain underground past West Portal station K Ingleside would branch off from the underground line and surface on Junipero Serra Boulevard just south of Saint Francis Circle M Ocean View will remain underground along the current right of way under West Portal Avenue and 19th Avenue branching off at Holloway to Parkmerced The underground line would continue with J Church service along 19th until surfacing just east of the intersection of 19th and Junipero Serra then continuing on to Balboa Park via Randolph Broad and San Jose 21 The current West Portal station would most likely have to be redesigned as a two level station with the K M lines on the lower level and the L line on the upper level New underground stations would be constructed at Saint Francis Circle K M lines Winston Drive M serving Stonestown Holloway J M serving SF State and Parkmerced M A potential infill station could be constructed at Ocean Avenue in Lakeside Village Several existing surface stations would be removed in most cases they would be replaced by underground stations 21 The proposed full subway line would continue past Parkmerced with a long tail track that tail track could be extended in the future to connect to the Daly City BART station via the M line The total cost of the full subway line project was estimated at approximately 3 billion 21 22 Muni Forward project edit In 2022 the SFMTA begin planning the M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project a MuniForward project intended to improve reliability of the segment between Junipero Serra Boulevard and Balboa Park station Initial proposals released that September included transit lanes and platform lengthening on San Jose Avenue consolidation of several closely spaced stops and four new traffic signals 23 A revised proposal in May 2023 eliminated one stop consolidation and two traffic signals but added modifications to the terminal at San Jose and Geneva 24 As of October 2023 update quick build implementation of some changes is expected to begin in late 2023 with main construction beginning in 2026 25 Station listing editThe M Ocean View line stops at large stations for the downtown section of the route and on 19th Avenue and at smaller stops on the rest of the line Most of the smaller stops are nothing more than a sign on the side of the street designating a stop and a few others are concrete islands in the middle of the street next to the tracks that provide access for wheelchairs Muni bus routes provide service to all stations and other systems with access to the stations are noted Station Stop Neighborhood Muni Metro lines Notes and connections nbsp Embarcadero Financial District nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bay Area Rapid Transit nbsp nbsp Embarcadero nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp California nbsp SF Ferry Terminal nbsp Muni 1 2 6 7X 9 9R 12 14 14R 14X 21 30X 31 41 81X 82X nbsp Regional bus services Golden Gate Transit Presidio Go Shuttle SamTrans nbsp Montgomery nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bay Area Rapid Transit nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Muni 2 3 5 5R 6 7 7X 8 8AX 8BX 9 9R 10 15 21 30 31 45 76X 81X Geary BRT 38 38R nbsp Regional bus services AC Transit Golden Gate Transit SamTrans nbsp Powell Civic Center Mid Market Tenderloin nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp at Union Square Market St nbsp Bay Area Rapid Transit nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Powell Hyde Powell Mason nbsp Muni 5 5R 6 7 7X 8 8AX 8BX 9 9R 15 21 27 30 31 45 81X nbsp Regional bus services AC Transit SamTrans nbsp Civic Center UN Plaza nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bay Area Rapid Transit nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Muni 5 5R 6 7 9 9R 19 21 83X nbsp Regional bus services AC Transit Golden Gate Transit SamTrans nbsp Van Ness nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Muni 6 7 9 9R Van Ness BRT 47 49 79X nbsp Regional bus services AC Transit SamTrans nbsp Church Duboce Triangle Mission Dolores nbsp Surface stop nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Muni 22 37 nbsp Castro Castro District nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Market amp Wharves nbsp Muni 24 35 37 nbsp Forest Hill Laguna Honda nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Muni 36 43 44 52 nbsp West Portal West Portal nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Muni 48 57 West Portal and 14th Avenue nbsp nbsp Muni 57 nbsp St Francis Circle St Francis Wood nbsp nbsp Muni 23 57 Right Of Way Ocean Merced Manor Located in Muni s private right of way Right Of Way Eucalyptus Located in Muni s private right of way nbsp Muni 57 nbsp Stonestown Galleria Serves Stonestown Galleria nbsp Muni 18 28 28R 29 57 58 nbsp San Francisco State University Serves San Francisco State University nbsp Muni 28 28R 29 19th Avenue and Junipero Serra inbound 19th Avenue and Randolph outbound Merced Heights nbsp Muni 28 19th Avenue and Randolph nbsp Randolph and Arch Randolph and Bright Ingleside Broad and Orizaba inbound Orizaba and Broad outbound Broad and Capitol nbsp Broad and Plymouth nbsp Muni 54 San Jose and Farallones San Jose and Lakeview San Jose and Mount Vernon nbsp San Jose and Geneva inbound nbsp San Jose and Niagara outbound Balboa Park nbsp nbsp Part of the Balboa Park station complex nbsp Bay Area Rapid Transit nbsp Muni 8 8BX 29 43 49 54 714 88 nbsp Regional bus services Commute org Daly City Bayshore shuttle Sierra Point shuttleReferences edit Average daily Muni boardings by route and month pre pandemic to present San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency January 2024 a b c d e Stindt Fred A October 1990 San Francisco s Century of Street Cars F A Stindt p 195 ISBN 0 9615465 1 4 General Information San Francisco Metropolitan Transportation Agency Archived from the original on December 3 2016 Retrieved December 25 2007 Permanent Muni Service Changes Starting Saturday February 22 2020 Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency February 22 2020 a b Callwell Robert September 1999 Transit in San Francisco A Selected Chronology 1850 1995 PDF San Francisco Municipal Railway McKane John Perles Anthony 1982 Inside Muni The Properties and Operations of the Municipal Railway of San Francisco Glendale CA US Interurban Press p 198 ISBN 0 916374 49 1 Muni J Line Connection Project Final Environmental Impact Statement Urban Mass Transit Administration and San Francisco Department of City Planning May 1983 via Internet Archive a b c d e Callwell Robert September 1999 Transit in San Francisco A Selected Chronology 1850 1995 PDF San Francisco Municipal Railway pp 76 79 SFMTA Announces Details of St Francis Circle Project to Begin in May Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency April 29 2010 SFMTA Prepares to Restore 61 Percent of Muni May 8 Service Cuts and Completes St Francis Circle Project Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency September 2 2010 Twin Peaks Tunnel Improvements San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency June 25 2018 Archived from the original on June 26 2018 M Ocean View Improvements Rossmoor Drive and Junipero Serra San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency July 24 2017 Fowler Amy March 26 2020 Starting March 30 New Muni Service Changes Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Maguire Mariana August 18 2020 Major Muni Service Expansion August 22 Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Bus Substitution for All Rail Lines Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency August 25 2020 Welcoming Back the M Ocean View and 31 Balboa Press release San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency July 15 2021 a b 19th Avenue Transit Study PDF Report San Francisco County Transportation Authority March 2014 Archived PDF from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 22 2016 WalkFirst Improving Safety amp Walking Conditions in San Francisco PDF Report San Francisco Department of Public Health October 2011 Retrieved March 22 2016 4 3 High injury density corridors The identified corridors shown in blue in Map 3 represent 6 7 of San Francisco s street miles and include 55 of all severe and fatal injuries and 51 of total pedestrian injuries in the five year period 19th Avenue Corridor Study PDF Report City and County of San Francisco February 12 2010 Retrieved September 25 2019 Muni Subway Expansion Project San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency June 5 2014 Retrieved September 25 2019 a b c 19th Avenue M Ocean View Project Subway Station Entrances New Upgraded amp Removed Stations PDF Report San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency February 2016 Retrieved September 25 2019 Mojadad Ida City proposes Muni M line to run under Parkmerced extend to Daly City BART Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved February 28 2023 M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project Engagement Boards PDF San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency September 2022 M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project Proposed Improvements PDF San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency May 2023 M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Archived from the original on October 31 2023 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML M Ocean ViewKML is not from Wikidata nbsp Media related to M Ocean View at Wikimedia Commons SFMTA M Ocean View M Ocean View Transit and Safety Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M Ocean View amp oldid 1219005547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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