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Metrobus (Washington, D.C.)

Metrobus is a bus service operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA). Its fleet consists of 1,595 buses covering an area of 1,500 square miles (3,900 km2) in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia.[2] There are 269 bus routes serving 11,129 stops, including 2,554 bus shelters.[2] In 2022, the system had a ridership of 90,123,200, or about 355,800 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2023.

WMATA Metrobus
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority BRT buses that are painted in the newer Local and Express paint schemes.
ParentWMATA
FoundedFebruary 4, 1973; 51 years ago (1973-02-04)[1]
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
LocaleWashington Metropolitan Area
Service areaWashington Metropolitan Area
Service typeLocal, express, limited-stop, bus rapid transit
Routes269[2]
Stops11,129[2]
Fleet1,595[2]
Daily ridership355,800 (weekdays, Q3 2023)[3]
Annual ridership90,123,200 (2022)[4]
Fuel typeDiesel, Diesel-electric Hybrid, CNG, Electric
OperatorWMATA
General managerRandy Clarke
Websitewmata.com/bus

History edit

Metrobus was founded on February 4, 1973, after acquiring DC Transit, Washington, Virginia and Maryland Coach Company (WV&M), Alexandria, Barcroft and Washington Transit Company (AB&W) and the Washington Marlboro and Annapolis Motor Lines (WM&A) to combine into Metrobus.[1][5] During its founding, WMATA dropped transfer charges, extended senior citizen discounts region-wide and began fare reductions on routes formerly served by the different carriers at different rates. WMATA also unified a new bus livery with red, white and blue paint scheme and purchased 620 buses from AM General with the last buses being delivered in 1974.[6] Today, Metrobus serves the nation's capital 24/7, with over 1,500 buses.

Fares edit

 
Metrobus farebox and SmarTrip reader.

As of June 25, 2017, the Metrobus fare structure is as follows for cash and SmarTrip:[7]

  • Local bus routes within the District of Columbia, Central Maryland and Northern Virginia: $2.00
  • Express bus routes (17B, 17G, 17K, 17L, 17M, 18G, and 18P): $4.25
  • (These routes are as of January 15, 2024 not running anymore but were the fares) Express Airport bus routes (5A and B30): $7.50

Discounts are available for senior citizens, people with disabilities and D.C. students.

Up to two children, per paying adult, under 5 years of age ride for free. Children at least 5 years of age pay adult fare.

All Metrobuses have SmarTrip card readers which automatically deduct the correct fare from a rider's SmarTrip card (including transfer credit).

Metrobus issued paper transfers until January 4, 2009. Transfers are now currently attainable only through SmarTrip cards.

On June 27, 2010, the transfer window was reduced from 3 hours to 2 hours.[8]

All fares were free from mid-March 2020 to January 3, 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[9] On December 6, 2022, the Council of the District of Columbia voted to abolish fares within city limits from July 1, 2023.[10]

Fleet edit

 
The interior of a New Flyer D40LFR Suburban

On July 4, 2018, WMATA awarded a 5-year contract to New Flyer for up to 694 buses, order consist of forty-foot CNG, forty-foot clean diesel, sixty-foot CNG, and sixty-foot diesel heavy-duty transit buses.[11] These new buses will replace Metro's older New Flyer Low Floor buses, which were delivered between 2005 and 2007. Red/Silver painted buses will be used on local routes and Blue/Silver buses will be used on limited stop routes. These buses will have either Local or MetroExtra on the top of each side of the bus for easy identification.[12]

In 2020, WMATA received $4.1 million in funding from the Federal Transit Administration for the purchase of electric buses and charging infrastructure. A Sierra Club report indicated that a pilot study with 14 electric buses was planned, and estimated that 50% electrification would reduce the WMATA fleet's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by more than 58,000 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year.[13]

Divisions edit

 
Metrobus's original bus stop sign used from 1973 to June 2012
 
Metrobus's new bus stop sign, used as of June 2012

There are 9 divisions (a.k.a. depots) in the Metrobus system.[14]

Division Location Areas served Capacity Notes
Andrews Federal Center[15] 38°49′46″N 76°52′56″W / 38.829570°N 76.882310°W / 38.829570; -76.882310 Southwest DC, Prince George's County 175 Opened June 23, 2019[16]
Bladensburg 38°55′23″N 76°58′12″W / 38.922930°N 76.970020°W / 38.922930; -76.970020 Northeast and Southeast DC 257 Plans to be rebuilt.[17]
Cinder Bed Road[18] 38°44′35″N 77°10′59″W / 38.743190°N 77.183030°W / 38.743190; -77.183030 Fairfax County 160
  • Opened December 30, 2018
  • Was contracted by TransDev from opening[19] until December 26, 2021.[20]
Four Mile Run 38°50′35″N 77°03′13″W / 38.843040°N 77.053700°W / 38.843040; -77.053700 Arlington County, Fairfax County, City of Alexandria 218
Landover 38°56′10″N 76°52′31″W / 38.936230°N 76.875320°W / 38.936230; -76.875320 Prince George's County 210
Montgomery 39°02′51″N 77°06′33″W / 39.047630°N 77.109230°W / 39.047630; -77.109230 Montgomery County 240
Southern Avenue Annex 38°52′22″N 76°55′55″W / 38.872710°N 76.931990°W / 38.872710; -76.931990 Southeast DC, Prince George's County 103 Operates Weekdays only, formerly known as "Prince George's" Division up until 1989
Shepherd Parkway 38°48′54″N 77°01′02″W / 38.815040°N 77.017170°W / 38.815040; -77.017170 Southeast and Southwest DC, Prince George's County 250 Opened in 2012, to be converted into a CNG garage.[21] Currently undergoing modifications to hold electric buses.
Western 38°57′31″N 77°05′08″W / 38.958530°N 77.085510°W / 38.958530; -77.085510 Northwest DC 138

Closed depots edit

Division Location Areas served Capacity Notes
Arlington 38°52′41″N 77°06′32″W / 38.878120°N 77.108963°W / 38.878120; -77.108963 Arlington County, Fairfax County Closed in 2009, replaced by West Ox Division
Northern 38°56′49″N 77°01′57″W / 38.946860°N 77.032380°W / 38.946860; -77.032380 Northwest DC 175 Former trolley barn for the Capital Traction Company; closed June 23, 2019 due to structural issues, planned to be rebuilt[22]
Southeastern 38°52′34″N 77°00′28″W / 38.876080°N 77.007870°W / 38.876080; -77.007870 Southeast and Southwest DC Closed in 2008; operations moved to Southern Avenue until the Shepherd Parkway Division opened in 2012
Royal Street 38°48′39″N 77°02′34″W / 38.810950°N 77.042800°W / 38.810950; -77.042800 Fairfax County, City of Alexandria 83 Closed in 2014, Replaced by the Cinder Bed Division; Demolished in January 2020.[23]
West Ox 38°51′10″N 77°22′22″W / 38.852840°N 77.372760°W / 38.852840; -77.372760 Arlington County, Fairfax County 100 Operated Weekdays only, shared with Fairfax Connector. Temporarily closed on March 14, 2021; All operations were moved to Four Mile Run Division.[24]

Routes edit

Numbering edit

Most Metrobus routes follow the rules below:[25]

  • Metrobus routes in Washington, D.C. have either a two digit number (31, 42, 64, etc.) or a letter followed by a number (A2, S2, X8, etc.)
  • Metrobus routes in Montgomery County, MD have a letter followed by a number (C4, Q4, Z6, etc.)
  • Metrobus routes in Prince George's County, MD have a letter followed by two numbers (F12, J12, P12, etc.)
  • Metrobus routes in Northern Virginia have one or two numbers followed by a letter (1A, 16C, 29N, etc.)

Odd-numbered routes are typically part-time variants of even-numbered routes.

Richmond Highway Express edit

 
A 2011 New Flyer XDE40 Metrobus at King Street–Old Town station displaying the 'RICHMOND HIGHWAY EXPRESS' destination sign.

Richmond Highway Express, a.k.a. "REX", is a Limited-Stop bus line that operates between King Street–Old Town station and Fort Belvoir along the Richmond Highway corridor in Fairfax County, Virginia. All REX runs take place on board on any local bus from Cinder Bed Division. REX began service on September 26, 2004, replacing parts of the now-former route 9A (which operated between Huntington and Pentagon stations until it was eliminated on June 26, 2016).[26] The original REX bus fleet consisted of 12 now-retired 2000 Orion 06.501 (VI) buses wrapped (but not painted) in the blue-and-gold color scheme (2073–2084) before the aforementioned Orion 07.501 CNG buses arrived in 2006. The second REX fleet consisted of 12 now-retired 2006 Orion 07.501 (VII) CNG buses (2674–2685) painted in the blue-and-gold color scheme until they were all repainted between June and August 2014. The third REX fleet were consisted of 12 2010 New Flyer DE40LFA diesel-electric hybrid buses (6550–6561) painted in the blue-and-gold color scheme before being repainted from June 2018 back into the Red Local Scheme due to the units being rehabilitated. The fourth and most recent REX fleet consisted of 12 2008 New Flyer DE40LFA buses painted in the blue-and-gold color scheme. The entire REX fleet has been retired as of December 26, 2021; from that date onward, the REX route has been operated entirely with regular Metrobuses.

MetroExtra edit

MetroExtra
 
The MetroExtra logo
 
A 2007 New Flyer C40LFR bus painted in WMATA's MetroExtra current color scheme running on Route 39

MetroExtra is a limited-stop Metrobus service, which operates on Metrobus lines that need extra service with faster trips. MetroExtra started service on March 19, 2007, with the 79 that operates between the Silver Spring and Archives stations on the 7th Street/Georgia Avenue corridor.[27]

Metroway edit

 
The Metroway logo
 
Bus 2986, one of the 13 2016 New Flyer XN40s which replaced the 2014 NABI 42 BRTs (8002–8014) that originally ran the route

Metroway is a bus rapid transit (BRT) service that began on August 24, 2014. The first phase is the Crystal City/Potomac Yard Transitway, which operates on Route 1 in Arlington and Alexandria, Virginia.[28] It is a 5-mile (8.0 km) corridor with 33 platforms and 20 stations located between Pentagon City and Braddock Road.[29] The first 0.8 mile segment in Alexandria runs on a transit lane only. The Arlington County segment began construction in the summer of 2014 and opened April 17, 2016. Metroway originally operated between the Braddock Road and Crystal City stations and was expanded to Pentagon City in April 2016.[30] Thirteen 2016 New Flyer Xcelsior XN40 CNG buses (2981–2993) operate with the blue-and-white Metroway livery. The original Metroway fleet consisted of thirteen 2014 NABI 42 BRT diesel-electric hybrid buses (8002–8014) until they were all repainted in December 2016. The Metroway service, which is operated by Metrobus' Four Mile Run bus division, features dedicated bus lanes, transit signal priority, real-time information, custom designed shelters and stations, as well as near-level boarding at station platforms. A Metroway fare costs the same as Metrobus, which is $2.00 (using cash & SmarTrip).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact" (PDF). www.wmata.com. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e (PDF). www.wmata.com. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. 2017. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 2, 2018. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  3. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Third Quarter 2023" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. November 30, 2023. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  4. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2022" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 1, 2023. Retrieved March 29, 2023.
  5. ^ "History". Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  6. ^ (PDF). WMATA. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 27, 2008. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  7. ^ "June 25, 2017 Fare and Service Changes Brochure" (PDF). www.wmata.com. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  8. ^ "Fare adjustments take effect Sunday" (Press release). WMATA. June 25, 2010. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  9. ^ "Metrobus riders return to boarding through front door, paying fares on Sunday, January 3 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved December 17, 2020.
  10. ^ "Free ride: DC unveils bold plan to boost public transit". December 12, 2022.
  11. ^ "WMATA upgrades fleet with up to 694 new buses from New Flyer/". www.newflyer.com. New Flyer. July 4, 2018. Retrieved July 6, 2018.
  12. ^ "Metro begins express bus service and other improvements to 16th Street Line" (Press release). WMATA. March 30, 2009. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  13. ^ "A Vision for Climate Leadership in Washington, D.C. - Seizing the Economic, Climate, and Public Health Benefits of Electrifying WMATA's Public Bus Fleet" (PDF). Sierra Club. 2020. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
  14. ^ "2017 Metrobus Fleet Management Plan" (PDF). Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  15. ^ "Hensel Phelps Awarded WMATA Andrews Federal Bus Garage". Hensel Phelps. June 19, 2014.
  16. ^ "Metro opens new Andrews Bus Garage, ends cash-free pilot effective with bus service changes June 23". Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  17. ^ "Proposed Reconstruction of the Bladensburg Bus Garage". Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  18. ^ . Wendel Companies. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016.
  19. ^ "Metro awards contract for new bus facility in Virginia". www.wmata.com. WMATA. August 2, 2018.
  20. ^ "Metrobus to implement service changes, improve reliability effective Sunday, December 26 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  21. ^ "FY2021 Budget Strengthening Metro to Better Serve the Region" (PDF). Retrieved September 30, 2020.
  22. ^ Dodds, Alex. "WMATA plans to rebuild its 14th Street bus garage with retail, and keep its diesel fleet for now". Greater Greater Washington. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  23. ^ Guerguerian, Rosemary (December 11, 2019). "Bye, Bye Bus Barn". The Zebra. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  24. ^ "Metrobus to expand service on weekdays, restore additional routes on weekends effective March 14 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  25. ^ Rowlands, DW; Alpert, David (September 20, 2018). "8W? 30N? U7? How Metrobus numbers came to be". Greater Greater Washington. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  26. ^ Fehr, Stephen (August 19, 2004). "Bus Service to Expand, Shift". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  27. ^ "New MetroExtra provides faster Metrobus service along Georgia Avenue" (Press release). Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. March 19, 2007. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  28. ^ Lazo, Luz (August 23, 2014). "Metroway, the region's first bus rapid transit, to debut in Northern Virginia". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 18, 2014.
  29. ^ "Route". Metroway. Retrieved December 18, 2014.
  30. ^ Smith, Max (April 17, 2016). "New bus-only lanes open along Jefferson Davis Highway". WTOP. WTOP. Retrieved April 18, 2016.

metrobus, washington, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, metrobus, washington, news, newspapers, books,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Metrobus Washington D C news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Metrobus is a bus service operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority WMATA Its fleet consists of 1 595 buses covering an area of 1 500 square miles 3 900 km2 in Washington D C Maryland and Virginia 2 There are 269 bus routes serving 11 129 stops including 2 554 bus shelters 2 In 2022 the system had a ridership of 90 123 200 or about 355 800 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2023 WMATA MetrobusWashington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority BRT buses that are painted in the newer Local and Express paint schemes ParentWMATAFoundedFebruary 4 1973 51 years ago 1973 02 04 1 HeadquartersWashington D C LocaleWashington Metropolitan AreaService areaWashington Metropolitan AreaService typeLocal express limited stop bus rapid transitRoutes269 2 Stops11 129 2 Fleet1 595 2 Daily ridership355 800 weekdays Q3 2023 3 Annual ridership90 123 200 2022 4 Fuel typeDiesel Diesel electric Hybrid CNG ElectricOperatorWMATAGeneral managerRandy ClarkeWebsitewmata com bus Contents 1 History 2 Fares 3 Fleet 4 Divisions 4 1 Closed depots 5 Routes 5 1 Numbering 6 Richmond Highway Express 7 MetroExtra 8 Metroway 9 See also 10 ReferencesHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2019 Metrobus was founded on February 4 1973 after acquiring DC Transit Washington Virginia and Maryland Coach Company WV amp M Alexandria Barcroft and Washington Transit Company AB amp W and the Washington Marlboro and Annapolis Motor Lines WM amp A to combine into Metrobus 1 5 During its founding WMATA dropped transfer charges extended senior citizen discounts region wide and began fare reductions on routes formerly served by the different carriers at different rates WMATA also unified a new bus livery with red white and blue paint scheme and purchased 620 buses from AM General with the last buses being delivered in 1974 6 Today Metrobus serves the nation s capital 24 7 with over 1 500 buses Fares editSee also SmarTrip nbsp Metrobus farebox and SmarTrip reader As of June 25 2017 update the Metrobus fare structure is as follows for cash and SmarTrip 7 Local bus routes within the District of Columbia Central Maryland and Northern Virginia 2 00 Express bus routes 17B 17G 17K 17L 17M 18G and 18P 4 25 These routes are as of January 15 2024 not running anymore but were the fares Express Airport bus routes 5A and B30 7 50Discounts are available for senior citizens people with disabilities and D C students Up to two children per paying adult under 5 years of age ride for free Children at least 5 years of age pay adult fare All Metrobuses have SmarTrip card readers which automatically deduct the correct fare from a rider s SmarTrip card including transfer credit Metrobus issued paper transfers until January 4 2009 Transfers are now currently attainable only through SmarTrip cards On June 27 2010 the transfer window was reduced from 3 hours to 2 hours 8 All fares were free from mid March 2020 to January 3 2021 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 9 On December 6 2022 the Council of the District of Columbia voted to abolish fares within city limits from July 1 2023 10 Fleet editMain article Metrobus fleet Washington D C nbsp The interior of a New Flyer D40LFR SuburbanOn July 4 2018 WMATA awarded a 5 year contract to New Flyer for up to 694 buses order consist of forty foot CNG forty foot clean diesel sixty foot CNG and sixty foot diesel heavy duty transit buses 11 These new buses will replace Metro s older New Flyer Low Floor buses which were delivered between 2005 and 2007 Red Silver painted buses will be used on local routes and Blue Silver buses will be used on limited stop routes These buses will have either Local or MetroExtra on the top of each side of the bus for easy identification 12 In 2020 WMATA received 4 1 million in funding from the Federal Transit Administration for the purchase of electric buses and charging infrastructure A Sierra Club report indicated that a pilot study with 14 electric buses was planned and estimated that 50 electrification would reduce the WMATA fleet s greenhouse gas GHG emissions by more than 58 000 tons of carbon dioxide CO2 per year 13 Divisions edit nbsp Metrobus s original bus stop sign used from 1973 to June 2012 nbsp Metrobus s new bus stop sign used as of June 2012There are 9 divisions a k a depots in the Metrobus system 14 Division Location Areas served Capacity NotesAndrews Federal Center 15 38 49 46 N 76 52 56 W 38 829570 N 76 882310 W 38 829570 76 882310 Southwest DC Prince George s County 175 Opened June 23 2019 16 Bladensburg 38 55 23 N 76 58 12 W 38 922930 N 76 970020 W 38 922930 76 970020 Northeast and Southeast DC 257 Plans to be rebuilt 17 Cinder Bed Road 18 38 44 35 N 77 10 59 W 38 743190 N 77 183030 W 38 743190 77 183030 Fairfax County 160 Opened December 30 2018 Was contracted by TransDev from opening 19 until December 26 2021 20 Four Mile Run 38 50 35 N 77 03 13 W 38 843040 N 77 053700 W 38 843040 77 053700 Arlington County Fairfax County City of Alexandria 218Landover 38 56 10 N 76 52 31 W 38 936230 N 76 875320 W 38 936230 76 875320 Prince George s County 210Montgomery 39 02 51 N 77 06 33 W 39 047630 N 77 109230 W 39 047630 77 109230 Montgomery County 240Southern Avenue Annex 38 52 22 N 76 55 55 W 38 872710 N 76 931990 W 38 872710 76 931990 Southeast DC Prince George s County 103 Operates Weekdays only formerly known as Prince George s Division up until 1989Shepherd Parkway 38 48 54 N 77 01 02 W 38 815040 N 77 017170 W 38 815040 77 017170 Southeast and Southwest DC Prince George s County 250 Opened in 2012 to be converted into a CNG garage 21 Currently undergoing modifications to hold electric buses Western 38 57 31 N 77 05 08 W 38 958530 N 77 085510 W 38 958530 77 085510 Northwest DC 138Closed depots edit Division Location Areas served Capacity NotesArlington 38 52 41 N 77 06 32 W 38 878120 N 77 108963 W 38 878120 77 108963 Arlington County Fairfax County Closed in 2009 replaced by West Ox DivisionNorthern 38 56 49 N 77 01 57 W 38 946860 N 77 032380 W 38 946860 77 032380 Northwest DC 175 Former trolley barn for the Capital Traction Company closed June 23 2019 due to structural issues planned to be rebuilt 22 Southeastern 38 52 34 N 77 00 28 W 38 876080 N 77 007870 W 38 876080 77 007870 Southeast and Southwest DC Closed in 2008 operations moved to Southern Avenue until the Shepherd Parkway Division opened in 2012Royal Street 38 48 39 N 77 02 34 W 38 810950 N 77 042800 W 38 810950 77 042800 Fairfax County City of Alexandria 83 Closed in 2014 Replaced by the Cinder Bed Division Demolished in January 2020 23 West Ox 38 51 10 N 77 22 22 W 38 852840 N 77 372760 W 38 852840 77 372760 Arlington County Fairfax County 100 Operated Weekdays only shared with Fairfax Connector Temporarily closed on March 14 2021 All operations were moved to Four Mile Run Division 24 Routes editMain article List of Metrobus routes Washington D C Numbering edit Most Metrobus routes follow the rules below 25 Metrobus routes in Washington D C have either a two digit number 31 42 64 etc or a letter followed by a number A2 S2 X8 etc Metrobus routes in Montgomery County MD have a letter followed by a number C4 Q4 Z6 etc Metrobus routes in Prince George s County MD have a letter followed by two numbers F12 J12 P12 etc Metrobus routes in Northern Virginia have one or two numbers followed by a letter 1A 16C 29N etc Odd numbered routes are typically part time variants of even numbered routes Richmond Highway Express editMain article Richmond Highway Express nbsp A 2011 New Flyer XDE40 Metrobus at King Street Old Town station displaying the RICHMOND HIGHWAY EXPRESS destination sign Richmond Highway Express a k a REX is a Limited Stop bus line that operates between King Street Old Town station and Fort Belvoir along the Richmond Highway corridor in Fairfax County Virginia All REX runs take place on board on any local bus from Cinder Bed Division REX began service on September 26 2004 replacing parts of the now former route 9A which operated between Huntington and Pentagon stations until it was eliminated on June 26 2016 26 The original REX bus fleet consisted of 12 now retired 2000 Orion 06 501 VI buses wrapped but not painted in the blue and gold color scheme 2073 2084 before the aforementioned Orion 07 501 CNG buses arrived in 2006 The second REX fleet consisted of 12 now retired 2006 Orion 07 501 VII CNG buses 2674 2685 painted in the blue and gold color scheme until they were all repainted between June and August 2014 The third REX fleet were consisted of 12 2010 New Flyer DE40LFA diesel electric hybrid buses 6550 6561 painted in the blue and gold color scheme before being repainted from June 2018 back into the Red Local Scheme due to the units being rehabilitated The fourth and most recent REX fleet consisted of 12 2008 New Flyer DE40LFA buses painted in the blue and gold color scheme The entire REX fleet has been retired as of December 26 2021 from that date onward the REX route has been operated entirely with regular Metrobuses MetroExtra editMain article MetroExtra MetroExtra nbsp The MetroExtra logo nbsp A 2007 New Flyer C40LFR bus painted in WMATA s MetroExtra current color scheme running on Route 39 MetroExtra is a limited stop Metrobus service which operates on Metrobus lines that need extra service with faster trips MetroExtra started service on March 19 2007 with the 79 that operates between the Silver Spring and Archives stations on the 7th Street Georgia Avenue corridor 27 Metroway editMain article Metroway Metroway nbsp The Metroway logo nbsp Bus 2986 one of the 13 2016 New Flyer XN40s which replaced the 2014 NABI 42 BRTs 8002 8014 that originally ran the route Metroway is a bus rapid transit BRT service that began on August 24 2014 The first phase is the Crystal City Potomac Yard Transitway which operates on Route 1 in Arlington and Alexandria Virginia 28 It is a 5 mile 8 0 km corridor with 33 platforms and 20 stations located between Pentagon City and Braddock Road 29 The first 0 8 mile segment in Alexandria runs on a transit lane only The Arlington County segment began construction in the summer of 2014 and opened April 17 2016 Metroway originally operated between the Braddock Road and Crystal City stations and was expanded to Pentagon City in April 2016 30 Thirteen 2016 New Flyer Xcelsior XN40 CNG buses 2981 2993 operate with the blue and white Metroway livery The original Metroway fleet consisted of thirteen 2014 NABI 42 BRT diesel electric hybrid buses 8002 8014 until they were all repainted in December 2016 The Metroway service which is operated by Metrobus Four Mile Run bus division features dedicated bus lanes transit signal priority real time information custom designed shelters and stations as well as near level boarding at station platforms A Metroway fare costs the same as Metrobus which is 2 00 using cash amp SmarTrip See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metrobus Washington D C List of Metrobus routes Washington D C Metrobus fleet Washington D C Metro Transit Police DepartmentReferences edit a b Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact PDF www wmata com Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Retrieved March 28 2018 a b c d e Metro Facts 2017 PDF www wmata com Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority 2017 p 5 Archived from the original PDF on July 2 2018 Retrieved March 28 2018 Transit Ridership Report Third Quarter 2023 PDF American Public Transportation Association November 30 2023 Retrieved December 6 2023 Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2022 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 1 2023 Retrieved March 29 2023 History Retrieved December 8 2019 Metro History PDF WMATA Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2008 Retrieved December 8 2019 June 25 2017 Fare and Service Changes Brochure PDF www wmata com Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Retrieved March 28 2018 Fare adjustments take effect Sunday Press release WMATA June 25 2010 Retrieved March 28 2018 Metrobus riders return to boarding through front door paying fares on Sunday January 3 WMATA www wmata com Retrieved December 17 2020 Free ride DC unveils bold plan to boost public transit December 12 2022 WMATA upgrades fleet with up to 694 new buses from New Flyer www newflyer com New Flyer July 4 2018 Retrieved July 6 2018 Metro begins express bus service and other improvements to 16th Street Line Press release WMATA March 30 2009 Retrieved March 28 2018 A Vision for Climate Leadership in Washington D C Seizing the Economic Climate and Public Health Benefits of Electrifying WMATA s Public Bus Fleet PDF Sierra Club 2020 Retrieved August 11 2020 2017 Metrobus Fleet Management Plan PDF Retrieved October 26 2019 Hensel Phelps Awarded WMATA Andrews Federal Bus Garage Hensel Phelps June 19 2014 Metro opens new Andrews Bus Garage ends cash free pilot effective with bus service changes June 23 Retrieved October 25 2019 Proposed Reconstruction of the Bladensburg Bus Garage Retrieved October 25 2019 WMATA Cinder Bed Road Division Wendel Companies Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Metro awards contract for new bus facility in Virginia www wmata com WMATA August 2 2018 Metrobus to implement service changes improve reliability effective Sunday December 26 WMATA www wmata com Retrieved December 23 2021 FY2021 Budget Strengthening Metro to Better Serve the Region PDF Retrieved September 30 2020 Dodds Alex WMATA plans to rebuild its 14th Street bus garage with retail and keep its diesel fleet for now Greater Greater Washington Retrieved June 25 2019 Guerguerian Rosemary December 11 2019 Bye Bye Bus Barn The Zebra Retrieved May 28 2020 Metrobus to expand service on weekdays restore additional routes on weekends effective March 14 WMATA www wmata com Retrieved March 14 2021 Rowlands DW Alpert David September 20 2018 8W 30N U7 How Metrobus numbers came to be Greater Greater Washington Retrieved January 27 2019 Fehr Stephen August 19 2004 Bus Service to Expand Shift The Washington Post Retrieved May 2 2019 New MetroExtra provides faster Metrobus service along Georgia Avenue Press release Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority March 19 2007 Retrieved May 2 2019 Lazo Luz August 23 2014 Metroway the region s first bus rapid transit to debut in Northern Virginia The Washington Post Retrieved December 18 2014 Route Metroway Retrieved December 18 2014 Smith Max April 17 2016 New bus only lanes open along Jefferson Davis Highway WTOP WTOP Retrieved April 18 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metrobus Washington D C amp oldid 1200030433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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