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Public transport in Istanbul

Public transport in Istanbul comprises a bus network, various rail systems, funiculars, and maritime services to serve the more than 18 million inhabitants of the city spread over an area of 5712 km2.

Istanbul rail & Metrobus (Bus Rapid Transport) transit network
Istanbul Rail Systems Map

History

 
Tünel is the oldest surviving underground urban rail line in continental Europe.
 
A tram's photo from Ottoman period

Public road transport in Istanbul dates back to 30 August 1869, when a contract to build a tram system in the capital of the Ottoman Empire was signed. With this agreement, Konstantin Krepano Efendi's "Société des Tramways de Constantinople" obtained the concession to operate public transportation for forty years. The inauguration of four lines of horse-driven trams was in 1871. In the first year, the horsecars transported 4.5 million people on the lines Azapkapı-Galata, Aksaray-Yedikule, Aksaray-Topkapı and Eminönü-Aksaray. More lines were added in the following years. 430 horses were used to draw the 45 carriages, including 15 summer-type and some double-deckers, on 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge track. In 1912, the horse-drawn tram had to cease to operate for one year because the Ministry of Defence sent all the horses to the front during the Balkan War.

The tram network was electrified by overhead contact wire on 2 February 1914. The tram began to run on the Anatolian part of Istanbul on 8 June 1928 between Üsküdar and Kısıklı. By the 1950s, the length of the tram lines reached 130 km (81 mi). The trams were on service on the European side of the city until 12 August 1961 and on the Asian side until 14 November 1966.

The same time as the horsecar started to run, construction of the Tünel, a short funicular between Pera and Galata, began on 30 July 1871. The funicular opened to service on 5 December 1874, the second oldest subway in the world after the London Underground. In the beginning, only freight and livestock were transported. On 17 January 1875, after completing the test runs, the funicular was opened to the public. It is still in service.

A commuter rail line was built on the European side of the city from Sirkeci to Hadımköy in 1872, which was followed in 1873 on the Anatolian part from Haydarpaşa Terminal to İzmit.

The ferry is one of the oldest means of transit in İstanbul, a city with two parts separated by the Bosphorus strait and surrounded by sea. In 1837, British and Russian owned boats started transport on the Bosphorus. The İstanbul Maritime Company was established in 1851 by a decree of Ottoman Sultan Abdülmecid I. The ferry service began in 1853 with six paddle steamers built in the Robert White shipyard in England. The service was extended in 1859 to places around Golden Horn. After 1903 screw-driven steamboats were put in service. Until 1929 boats were imported; later on the ferries were built in the shipyards in Golden Horn. At its peak the fleet contained 40 boats. In 1867, the same company started vehicle transport across the Boğaziçi (Bosphorus) between Kabataş and Üsküdar with two ferries purchased from England, as the first scheduled ferry lines in the world. All ferry companies were nationalized in 1945.[1]

Bus transportation in İstanbul started in 1926 with four Renault-Scania buses between Beyazıt and Karaköy. The fleet grew up from 9 buses in 1942 to 16 in 1955 and to 525 buses in 1960, and then became the backbone of public transport in an ever-enlarging city.

Several British and French companies operated all public transport in İstanbul until 16 June 1939,[2] the date of nationalization. The newly established company İETT (İstanbul Electric Tram and Tünel Company) took over from then on the task of public transport in İstanbul.

On 27 May 1961, trolleybuses were put in service first between Topkapı and Eminönü following the elimination of trams. However, the last trolleybuses were taken out of service in 1984,[3] because they hindered the growing traffic in the narrow streets of the old city.[citation needed]

In 1988, a company called Ulaşım A.Ş. (Transport Inc.) was established to run the services of LRT (light rail transit) (since 1989), Metro (since 2000) and modern trams (since 1992) by the Municipality of Istanbul.[4] The company is still active and will be the operator of the new rail lines.

 
Sirkeci Terminal on the European side of Istanbul was inaugurated in 1890 as the terminus of the Rumeli Railway and the Orient Express

Transportation today

Metro

 
Mecidiyeköy M7 station of the Istanbul Metro

The first line (M1) began service on 3 September 1989 between Aksaray and Kocatepe. The line was further developed step-by-step and reached Atatürk Airport on 20 December 2002. The line has 18 stations and is 19.6 kilometres (12.2 mi) long. As of 2012, daily ridership was 416 journey and 210,000 passengers.[5] Even if it's numbered as the first line, actually the line is a LRT system with many common characteristics with the T4 line, including the rolling stock. Though they are categorized differently by the operator.

The construction of the underground railway in Istanbul began in 1992. The first line (M2) between Taksim and 4th Levent went into service on September 16, 2000. This line is 8.5 km long and has 6 stations, which all look similar but are in different colours.

A northern extension from 4th Levent to Atatürk Oto Sanayi station in Maslak (ITÜ/Ayazağa) entered service in 2009, as well as a southern extension from[6] Taksim to Şişhane station in Beyoğlu, near the northern entrance of Tünel. The last northern extension for the short term, Hacı Osman was opened in 2011. The southern extension of M2 from Şişhane to Yenikapı over the new Golden Horn Bridge was opened in 2013 permitting the line to reach the Yenikapı Transfer Center. Finally the Airport (M1A) and Bağcılar (M1B) lines' eastern terminus was extended from Aksaray to this transfer center in 2014.

The M3 line runs from Kirazlı station on the M1 line to the northern Başakşehir district. It opened on 14 June 2013. A southern extension to Bakırköy IDO station and a northern extension to Kayaşehir is under construction.[7]

M6 is a line branching off the M2 from the Levent station running east towards Hisarüstü and Boğaziçi University. It opened on 19 April 2015.[8]

On the Asian side, 26.5 km (16.5 mi) long M4 line opened on 17 August 2012 up to Kartal. The line will have a total of 25 stations when the third section as far as Tuzla opens. A connection to Sabiha Gökçen Airport is under construction.

There is also M5, which links Üsküdar, Ümraniye and Çekmeköy. A further extension to the Sancaktepe and the Sultanbeyli districts is under construction.

Currently there are 124 Hyundai-Rotem (M2) and 120 CAF[9] (M4) trains in service, with a trip along the entire line taking 27 (M2) and 52 (M4) minutes.

All lines are operated by Metro Istanbul (the new name of Istanbul Ulaşım A.Ş.) which belongs to the Municipality of Istanbul.[10]

Tram

 
 
Nostalgic tram and modern tram systems of İstanbul

Istanbul inaugurated horse trams in 1872 and these served the people of Istanbul until 1912. Following this date, electric trams were put in place and they were the main means for urban public transport until 1966. Many routes were built step by step, and it reached their most widespread network in 1956 with 108 million passengers in 270 shuttles in 56 lines. Tramcars were not modernized for many decades, and some of the 1911 electric cars were still running in the 1960s. At that time modern buses provided faster and smoother journeys. Because of those negative issues, tram system closed in mid-1960s.

From the early 1970s, traffic congestion worsened. By the mid-1980s, Istanbulites realized that the uncontrolled extension of motorization & closure of the tram network had been a mistake. Other cities around the world, e.g. Tunis and Buenos Aires, also understood that error, and like them, Istanbul also planned the return of tramway.

As an experiment, Istanbul first opened a heritage tram at European side in 1990. Due to increasing popularity, they opened a modern tram system starting in 1992, also at European side. Now, the Asian side has a heritage tram system, whereas the European side has both a heritage tram and a modern tram system.

The modern tram consists of lines T1, T4 and T5, initially operated with 55 low-floor Bombardier Flexity Swift and 32 Alstom Citadis.[11] The line T4 was opened in 2007 between Edirnekapı and Mescid-i Selam. There are 22 stations and length is 15,3 km. Since March 2009, the line works between Topkapı and Mescid-i Selam.[12] Service is operated with LRT vehicles built by SGP in 1989. As of 2019, daily ridership was 446 journeys and 196,000 passengers.[12]

 
The Yenikapı Transfer Center where transfer between Marmaray and the metro is possible

Commuter rail

Starting from June 2013, suburban lines on both sides of the city (Istanbul suburban and Haydarpaşa suburban) were closed for rehabilitation works as well as for their fusion into a single line by the means of an undersea tunnel through the Bosphorus as part of the Marmaray project.

On 12 March 2019, the whole parts of the Marmaray are operational. A further extension to Bahçeşehir via Ispartakule is proposed.

Funicular

 
Operated by İETT, the Tünel (1875) in Istanbul was the first underground railway line in continental Europe, and the second subterranean railway line in the world after London's Underground (1863)

Istanbul is served by three underground funicular railways, of very different ages and styles.

The older of these lines is the Tünel. This line is the oldest underground metro line in continental Europe, and the second in the world after London. The Tünel is 573 m long with an altitude difference of 60 m and no intermediate stations between Karaköy and Tünel Square. It has been continuously in service since 1875. It was originally steam-powered with two wooden trains serving parallel tracks. It was modernized in 1971. Today the line is single-track with a passing loop, electrically powered and runs on rubber tyres with rebuilt ex-RATP MP 55 vehicles. A trip takes approximately 1.5 minutes. About 15,000 people use the line each day. Unlike the modern one below which runs at strictly five-minute intervals, this one has a less regular schedule.

Opened in June 2006, a second modern funicular line, the Kabataş-Taksim Funicular, is operated by Ulaşım A.Ş.[13] and connects the Seabus port and tram stop of Kabataş with the metro station at Taksim Square. It is about 600 meters long and climbs approximately 60 meters in 110 seconds.

In October 2022 the newest funicular line the F4 (Istanbul Metro) Boğaziçi Üni./Hisarüstü-Aşiyan funicular line opened and operated by Ulaşım A.Ş. It connects with M6 (İstanbul Metro) line at Boğaziçi University.

Bus rapid transit (BRT)

 
Metrobüs BRT in Istanbul

The bus rapid transit (BRT) system in Istanbul is called Metrobüs. The construction of the Metrobüs BRT line began in 2005. The first line runs between Avcılar and Söğütlüçeşme. This line is 41.5 km long and has 35 stations, which are located on Istanbul's Main Highway, called the D 100. It is currently operated with Mercedes Capacity, Mercedes-Benz Citaro, and some Phileas buses.[14] Daily ridership is 715.000 passenger.[15]

An extension to Beylikdüzü opened in 2012.[16]

 
Metrobüs lines in Istanbul

Bus system

 
A Mercedes-Benz Citaro of the İETT with the new livery

The bus fleet has a total of 4,012[17][18] vehicles built by MAN, Ikarus, Mercedes-Benz, BMC,[19] Phileas, Otokar,[18] Temsa[18] and Güleryüz.[18] In 2012 the daily ridership was 3,621,908[15] passengers, representing 30% of the city's total daily transportation.[20]

Since 1985, privately owned ÖHO (Özel Halk Otobüsü - Private Public Bus) buses have been allowed to operate under the authority of İETT. There are 2,157 private owned public buses, including 144 double-deckers.[21] There are 783 bus lines excluding diversions as of May 21, 2018.[22] Many routes have diversions running one roundtrip a day on average, which usually feed less developed suburbs around frequent routes. Some routes also provide short turning services at peak hours for crowded stops. Those diversions are listed under the same headsign reference as main route. Buses running diversion routes do not display route numbers, spelling out the route on the headsign in detail instead. In 2010, the municipality decided to found a new company called Otobüs A.Ş. (Bus Inc.) in order to more quickly replace old vehicles.[23] Otobüs A.Ş. had a fleet of 544 vehicles as of December 2012.[18] The vehicles are fully low floor and certified to Euro 5 standards. In 2014, IETT carried 1.31 billion ticketed passengers, a record for a Turkish transport system.[24] İETT is currently trialling outsourcing the drivers and maintenance into private bus company Akkurtlar. Outsourced drivers can be distinguished by their uniforms.

IETT bus fleet
Bus Number Exhaust emission
MAN SL202 4 ECE-R 49
MAN SL202 (articulated) 37 ECE-R 49
Ikarus 260 218 ECE-R 49
Ikarus 280 (articulated) 3 EURO 1
Mercedes-Benz O345 (solo) 477 EURO 2
Mercedes-Benz O345 (articulated) 84 EURO 2
Mercedes-Benz O530 Citaro 393 EURO 3
Mercedes-Benz O530G Citaro G (articulated) 100 EURO 3
Mercedes-Benz O530GL Citaro GL 'CapaCity' (articulated) 250 EURO 4/EURO 5
Mercedes-Benz O345 Conecto (articulated) 265 EURO 4/EURO 5
Phileas 50 EURO 6
OTOKAR KENT 290 LF 900 EURO 6
KARSAN B. Avancity 240 EURO 6
Total 3,059
Otobüs A.Ş. bus fleet
Bus Number Exhaust emission
Temsa Avenue LF 237 EURO 6
Otokar Kent 290LF 161 EURO 6
Güleryüz Cobra 149 EURO 6
BMC Procity Euro5 114 EURO 6
Mercedes Conecto 139 EURO 5
Tezeller Autobus 66 EURO 6
TCV Karat 66 EURO 6
MAN Lion's City 21 EURO 6
Total 953

Ferryboats

 
Kaptan Gündüz Aybay ferry on the Bosphorus

Ferryboats sail on 15 lines serving 27 seaports on the shores of Bosphorus and Sea of Marmara. The 20 older ferryboats carry 61 million passengers yearly.[citation needed] In the 1980s 150 million people were transported.[citation needed]

Today, there are 3 types of ferry in İstanbul; Sea Busses (İDO), Vapur's[25] (traditional name for commuter ferries) and private motorboats.

The first steam ferries appeared on the Bosphorus in 1837 and were operated by private sector companies. On 1 January 1851, the Şirket-i Hayriye [tr] (literally “The Goodwill Company”, as the Istanbul Ferry Company was originally called) was established by the Ottoman state. The Şirket-i Hayriye continued to operate the city's landmark commuter ferries until the early years of the Republican period, when they went under the direction of Türkiye Denizcilik İşletmeleri (“Turkish State Maritime Lines”). Since March 2006, Istanbul's traditional commuter ferries have been operated by municipality. In 2017, the municipality established a system for musicians to play live music for passengers in the lower salons of most ferry lines.

The current design of the Istanbul ferries, as we know them today, was largely created by the Fairfield Shipbuilders of Glasgow, Scotland, which also built the largest amount of Istanbul ferries since 1851. The companies which designed and built the traditional commuter ferries of Istanbul include the White Shipbuilders of East Cowes, England (models of 1854–1860); the M. Wigram Shipbuilders of London, England (models of 1863–1869); Maudslay & Sons of London, England (models of 1870–1872); R. & H. Green Shipbuilders of London, England (models of 1872-1890 and 1894–1896); J. W. Thames of London, England (models of 1890–1893); Napier, Shanks & Bell of Glasgow, Scotland (models of 1893–1894); Fairfield Shipbuilders of Glasgow, Scotland (models of 1903–1906, 1910–1911, 1914–1929, and 1938–1962); Armstrong Shipbuilders in Newcastle and Glasgow, United Kingdom (models of 1905–1907); Atl. & Chantiers de France in Dunkerque, France (models of 1907–1911); Hawthorn Leslie and Company in Newcastle, England (models of 1911); Kinderdijk L. Smith & Zoon Ltd, Holland (models of 1951); Cantieri Navali di Taranto SPA, Taranto, Italy (models of 1952); and Hasköy, Camialtı, and İstinye Shipyards in Istanbul (models of 1929-1938 and 1962–1989).

Seabus

 
A Seabus on the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul

On 16 April 1987 the Municipality of Istanbul established a company to provide fast sea transport with catamaran-type seabuses. With the first ten vessels purchased from Norway, modernization of sea transportation was achieved. Today, the company İDO serves 29 terminals with a fleet of 28 catamarans, including six fast car ferries.

Aerial lift

 
Maçka Gondola tandem cabins at Maçka Terminal.

There is a short gondola lift line above the Democracy Park in the valley between Taksim and Maçka, the Maçka Gondola (Turkish: Maçka-Taşkışla Teleferiği), built in 1993. It connects the hotels Hilton Istanbul Bosphorus on one side with Parksa Hilton and Swissotel The Bosphorus on the other side. The cable line is 333 m (1,093 ft) long and transports in two cabins with six seats each around 1,000 passengers daily. The trip takes three minutes.

A second aerial lift line, the Eyüp Gondola (Turkish: Eyüp-Piyerloti Teleferiği) was opened in 2005 between the historical district of Eyüp and the Pierre Loti Hill. The gondola lift, built by the Italian Leitner Ropeways Co. of Leitner Group was the most expensive cable car line in Turkey costing 5 million Euros.

Statistics

The average time that people spend commuting with public transit in Istanbul, for example to and from work, on a weekday is 91 min. About 30% of public transit users ride for more than 2 h every day. The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 19 min, and 36% of riders wait for over 20 min on average every day. The average distance that people usually ride in a single trip by public transit is 12 km, and 35% travel for over 12 km.[26]

Smart Ticket

Istanbul has an integrated electronic ticket system for bus, funiculars, LRT, metro, commuter trains, ferryboats and trams. The system uses smart RFID cards, called Istanbulkart, as tickets. The old Akbil iButtons were phased out in 2015.

See also

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  2. ^ "İETT - İstanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tünel İşletmeleri Genel Müdürlüğü".
  3. ^ Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia. Yateley, Hampshire, UK: Trolleybooks. p. 73. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  4. ^ "İstanbul Ulaşım A.Ş." (PDF) (in Turkish). 23 January 2023.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-23.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-05-25.
  7. ^ "Kirazlı-Başakşehir/Metrokent Metro Hattı".
  8. ^ "Levent-Boğaziçi Ü./Hisarüstü Metro Hattı".
  9. ^ tr:M4 hattı
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-05-03.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-06-25. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  12. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2010-07-23.
  13. ^ "Taksim-Kabataş Füniküler Hattı". www.metro.istanbul. Retrieved 2023-01-23.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-05-12. Retrieved 2011-03-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ a b "İETT - İstanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tünel İşletmeleri Genel Müdürlüğü".
  16. ^ "Avcılar-Beylikdüzü metrobüs denemeleri başladı - Son Dakika Flaş Haberler".
  17. ^ "İETT - İstanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tünel İşletmeleri Genel Müdürlüğü".
  18. ^ a b c d e . Archived from the original on 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2017-01-09.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  22. ^ "İETT Otobüs Hatları". İETT (in Turkish). İETT.
  23. ^ tr:İstanbul Otobüs AŞ
  24. ^ "İETT rekor kırdı - Son Dakika Ekonomi Haberleri".
  25. ^ tr:Vapur
  26. ^ "Istanbul Public Transportation Statistics". Global Public Transit Index by Moovit. Retrieved June 19, 2017.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

External links

İstanbul public transport websites

These official websites include timetables and maps Buses & Funicular

  • Municipal Bus Transport Authority of Istanbul IETT

Trains & Trams

  • (operator of İstanbul's modern rail systems)
  • Marmaray (contains general information about the line/project including timetables)

Ferry Services

  • İstanbul Sea Ferries (catamaran)
  • (operator of traditional ferries)

Interactive Transit Maps

  • http://www.istanbulmetromap.com Metrobus / Metro / Tramway

Other links

  • Timeline of the Istanbul (Turkey) Rail Transit Network - CityRailTransit.com
  • The Istanbul metro - UrbanRail.net
  • Public Transport by Rail in Turkish Cities - Rail Turkey

public, transport, istanbul, comprises, network, various, rail, systems, funiculars, maritime, services, serve, more, than, million, inhabitants, city, spread, over, area, 5712, istanbul, rail, metrobus, rapid, transport, transit, network, istanbul, rail, syst. Public transport in Istanbul comprises a bus network various rail systems funiculars and maritime services to serve the more than 18 million inhabitants of the city spread over an area of 5712 km2 Istanbul rail amp Metrobus Bus Rapid Transport transit network Istanbul Rail Systems Map Contents 1 History 2 Transportation today 2 1 Metro 2 2 Tram 2 3 Commuter rail 2 4 Funicular 2 5 Bus rapid transit BRT 2 6 Bus system 2 7 Ferryboats 2 8 Seabus 2 9 Aerial lift 3 Statistics 4 Smart Ticket 5 See also 6 References 7 External links 7 1 Istanbul public transport websites 7 2 Interactive Transit Maps 7 3 Other linksHistory Edit Tunel is the oldest surviving underground urban rail line in continental Europe A tram s photo from Ottoman period Public road transport in Istanbul dates back to 30 August 1869 when a contract to build a tram system in the capital of the Ottoman Empire was signed With this agreement Konstantin Krepano Efendi s Societe des Tramways de Constantinople obtained the concession to operate public transportation for forty years The inauguration of four lines of horse driven trams was in 1871 In the first year the horsecars transported 4 5 million people on the lines Azapkapi Galata Aksaray Yedikule Aksaray Topkapi and Eminonu Aksaray More lines were added in the following years 430 horses were used to draw the 45 carriages including 15 summer type and some double deckers on 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge track In 1912 the horse drawn tram had to cease to operate for one year because the Ministry of Defence sent all the horses to the front during the Balkan War A nostalgic tram on Istiklal Avenue The tram network was electrified by overhead contact wire on 2 February 1914 The tram began to run on the Anatolian part of Istanbul on 8 June 1928 between Uskudar and Kisikli By the 1950s the length of the tram lines reached 130 km 81 mi The trams were on service on the European side of the city until 12 August 1961 and on the Asian side until 14 November 1966 The same time as the horsecar started to run construction of the Tunel a short funicular between Pera and Galata began on 30 July 1871 The funicular opened to service on 5 December 1874 the second oldest subway in the world after the London Underground In the beginning only freight and livestock were transported On 17 January 1875 after completing the test runs the funicular was opened to the public It is still in service A commuter rail line was built on the European side of the city from Sirkeci to Hadimkoy in 1872 which was followed in 1873 on the Anatolian part from Haydarpasa Terminal to Izmit The ferry is one of the oldest means of transit in Istanbul a city with two parts separated by the Bosphorus strait and surrounded by sea In 1837 British and Russian owned boats started transport on the Bosphorus The Istanbul Maritime Company was established in 1851 by a decree of Ottoman Sultan Abdulmecid I The ferry service began in 1853 with six paddle steamers built in the Robert White shipyard in England The service was extended in 1859 to places around Golden Horn After 1903 screw driven steamboats were put in service Until 1929 boats were imported later on the ferries were built in the shipyards in Golden Horn At its peak the fleet contained 40 boats In 1867 the same company started vehicle transport across the Bogazici Bosphorus between Kabatas and Uskudar with two ferries purchased from England as the first scheduled ferry lines in the world All ferry companies were nationalized in 1945 1 Bus transportation in Istanbul started in 1926 with four Renault Scania buses between Beyazit and Karakoy The fleet grew up from 9 buses in 1942 to 16 in 1955 and to 525 buses in 1960 and then became the backbone of public transport in an ever enlarging city Haydarpasa railway station in Kadikoy district Several British and French companies operated all public transport in Istanbul until 16 June 1939 2 the date of nationalization The newly established company IETT Istanbul Electric Tram and Tunel Company took over from then on the task of public transport in Istanbul On 27 May 1961 trolleybuses were put in service first between Topkapi and Eminonu following the elimination of trams However the last trolleybuses were taken out of service in 1984 3 because they hindered the growing traffic in the narrow streets of the old city citation needed In 1988 a company called Ulasim A S Transport Inc was established to run the services of LRT light rail transit since 1989 Metro since 2000 and modern trams since 1992 by the Municipality of Istanbul 4 The company is still active and will be the operator of the new rail lines Sirkeci Terminal on the European side of Istanbul was inaugurated in 1890 as the terminus of the Rumeli Railway and the Orient ExpressTransportation today EditMetro Edit Main article Istanbul Metro Mecidiyekoy M7 station of the Istanbul Metro The first line M1 began service on 3 September 1989 between Aksaray and Kocatepe The line was further developed step by step and reached Ataturk Airport on 20 December 2002 The line has 18 stations and is 19 6 kilometres 12 2 mi long As of 2012 daily ridership was 416 journey and 210 000 passengers 5 Even if it s numbered as the first line actually the line is a LRT system with many common characteristics with the T4 line including the rolling stock Though they are categorized differently by the operator The construction of the underground railway in Istanbul began in 1992 The first line M2 between Taksim and 4th Levent went into service on September 16 2000 This line is 8 5 km long and has 6 stations which all look similar but are in different colours A northern extension from 4th Levent to Ataturk Oto Sanayi station in Maslak ITU Ayazaga entered service in 2009 as well as a southern extension from 6 Taksim to Sishane station in Beyoglu near the northern entrance of Tunel The last northern extension for the short term Haci Osman was opened in 2011 The southern extension of M2 from Sishane to Yenikapi over the new Golden Horn Bridge was opened in 2013 permitting the line to reach the Yenikapi Transfer Center Finally the Airport M1A and Bagcilar M1B lines eastern terminus was extended from Aksaray to this transfer center in 2014 The M3 line runs from Kirazli station on the M1 line to the northern Basaksehir district It opened on 14 June 2013 A southern extension to Bakirkoy IDO station and a northern extension to Kayasehir is under construction 7 M6 is a line branching off the M2 from the Levent station running east towards Hisarustu and Bogazici University It opened on 19 April 2015 8 On the Asian side 26 5 km 16 5 mi long M4 line opened on 17 August 2012 up to Kartal The line will have a total of 25 stations when the third section as far as Tuzla opens A connection to Sabiha Gokcen Airport is under construction There is also M5 which links Uskudar Umraniye and Cekmekoy A further extension to the Sancaktepe and the Sultanbeyli districts is under construction Currently there are 124 Hyundai Rotem M2 and 120 CAF 9 M4 trains in service with a trip along the entire line taking 27 M2 and 52 M4 minutes All lines are operated by Metro Istanbul the new name of Istanbul Ulasim A S which belongs to the Municipality of Istanbul 10 Tram Edit Main articles Istanbul Tram and Istanbul nostalgic tramways Nostalgic tram and modern tram systems of Istanbul Istanbul inaugurated horse trams in 1872 and these served the people of Istanbul until 1912 Following this date electric trams were put in place and they were the main means for urban public transport until 1966 Many routes were built step by step and it reached their most widespread network in 1956 with 108 million passengers in 270 shuttles in 56 lines Tramcars were not modernized for many decades and some of the 1911 electric cars were still running in the 1960s At that time modern buses provided faster and smoother journeys Because of those negative issues tram system closed in mid 1960s From the early 1970s traffic congestion worsened By the mid 1980s Istanbulites realized that the uncontrolled extension of motorization amp closure of the tram network had been a mistake Other cities around the world e g Tunis and Buenos Aires also understood that error and like them Istanbul also planned the return of tramway As an experiment Istanbul first opened a heritage tram at European side in 1990 Due to increasing popularity they opened a modern tram system starting in 1992 also at European side Now the Asian side has a heritage tram system whereas the European side has both a heritage tram and a modern tram system The modern tram consists of lines T1 T4 and T5 initially operated with 55 low floor Bombardier Flexity Swift and 32 Alstom Citadis 11 The line T4 was opened in 2007 between Edirnekapi and Mescid i Selam There are 22 stations and length is 15 3 km Since March 2009 the line works between Topkapi and Mescid i Selam 12 Service is operated with LRT vehicles built by SGP in 1989 As of 2019 daily ridership was 446 journeys and 196 000 passengers 12 The Yenikapi Transfer Center where transfer between Marmaray and the metro is possible Commuter rail Edit Main article Marmaray Starting from June 2013 suburban lines on both sides of the city Istanbul suburban and Haydarpasa suburban were closed for rehabilitation works as well as for their fusion into a single line by the means of an undersea tunnel through the Bosphorus as part of the Marmaray project On 12 March 2019 the whole parts of the Marmaray are operational A further extension to Bahcesehir via Ispartakule is proposed Funicular Edit Main articles Kabatas Taksim funicular and Tunel Operated by IETT the Tunel 1875 in Istanbul was the first underground railway line in continental Europe and the second subterranean railway line in the world after London s Underground 1863 Istanbul is served by three underground funicular railways of very different ages and styles The older of these lines is the Tunel This line is the oldest underground metro line in continental Europe and the second in the world after London The Tunel is 573 m long with an altitude difference of 60 m and no intermediate stations between Karakoy and Tunel Square It has been continuously in service since 1875 It was originally steam powered with two wooden trains serving parallel tracks It was modernized in 1971 Today the line is single track with a passing loop electrically powered and runs on rubber tyres with rebuilt ex RATP MP 55 vehicles A trip takes approximately 1 5 minutes About 15 000 people use the line each day Unlike the modern one below which runs at strictly five minute intervals this one has a less regular schedule Opened in June 2006 a second modern funicular line the Kabatas Taksim Funicular is operated by Ulasim A S 13 and connects the Seabus port and tram stop of Kabatas with the metro station at Taksim Square It is about 600 meters long and climbs approximately 60 meters in 110 seconds In October 2022 the newest funicular line the F4 Istanbul Metro Bogazici Uni Hisarustu Asiyan funicular line opened and operated by Ulasim A S It connects with M6 Istanbul Metro line at Bogazici University Bus rapid transit BRT Edit Main article Metrobus Istanbul Metrobus BRT in Istanbul The bus rapid transit BRT system in Istanbul is called Metrobus The construction of the Metrobus BRT line began in 2005 The first line runs between Avcilar and Sogutlucesme This line is 41 5 km long and has 35 stations which are located on Istanbul s Main Highway called the D 100 It is currently operated with Mercedes Capacity Mercedes Benz Citaro and some Phileas buses 14 Daily ridership is 715 000 passenger 15 An extension to Beylikduzu opened in 2012 16 Metrobus lines in Istanbul Bus system Edit It has been suggested that this article should be split into a new article titled IETT discuss May 2018 A Mercedes Benz Citaro of the IETT with the new livery The bus fleet has a total of 4 012 17 18 vehicles built by MAN Ikarus Mercedes Benz BMC 19 Phileas Otokar 18 Temsa 18 and Guleryuz 18 In 2012 the daily ridership was 3 621 908 15 passengers representing 30 of the city s total daily transportation 20 Since 1985 privately owned OHO Ozel Halk Otobusu Private Public Bus buses have been allowed to operate under the authority of IETT There are 2 157 private owned public buses including 144 double deckers 21 There are 783 bus lines excluding diversions as of May 21 2018 22 Many routes have diversions running one roundtrip a day on average which usually feed less developed suburbs around frequent routes Some routes also provide short turning services at peak hours for crowded stops Those diversions are listed under the same headsign reference as main route Buses running diversion routes do not display route numbers spelling out the route on the headsign in detail instead In 2010 the municipality decided to found a new company called Otobus A S Bus Inc in order to more quickly replace old vehicles 23 Otobus A S had a fleet of 544 vehicles as of December 2012 18 The vehicles are fully low floor and certified to Euro 5 standards In 2014 IETT carried 1 31 billion ticketed passengers a record for a Turkish transport system 24 IETT is currently trialling outsourcing the drivers and maintenance into private bus company Akkurtlar Outsourced drivers can be distinguished by their uniforms IETT bus fleet Bus Number Exhaust emissionMAN SL202 4 ECE R 49MAN SL202 articulated 37 ECE R 49Ikarus 260 218 ECE R 49Ikarus 280 articulated 3 EURO 1Mercedes Benz O345 solo 477 EURO 2Mercedes Benz O345 articulated 84 EURO 2Mercedes Benz O530 Citaro 393 EURO 3Mercedes Benz O530G Citaro G articulated 100 EURO 3Mercedes Benz O530GL Citaro GL CapaCity articulated 250 EURO 4 EURO 5Mercedes Benz O345 Conecto articulated 265 EURO 4 EURO 5Phileas 50 EURO 6OTOKAR KENT 290 LF 900 EURO 6KARSAN B Avancity 240 EURO 6Total 3 059Otobus A S bus fleet Bus Number Exhaust emissionTemsa Avenue LF 237 EURO 6Otokar Kent 290LF 161 EURO 6Guleryuz Cobra 149 EURO 6BMC Procity Euro5 114 EURO 6Mercedes Conecto 139 EURO 5Tezeller Autobus 66 EURO 6TCV Karat 66 EURO 6MAN Lion s City 21 EURO 6Total 953 Ferryboats Edit Main article Ferries in Istanbul Kaptan Gunduz Aybay ferry on the Bosphorus Ferryboats sail on 15 lines serving 27 seaports on the shores of Bosphorus and Sea of Marmara The 20 older ferryboats carry 61 million passengers yearly citation needed In the 1980s 150 million people were transported citation needed Today there are 3 types of ferry in Istanbul Sea Busses IDO Vapur s 25 traditional name for commuter ferries and private motorboats The first steam ferries appeared on the Bosphorus in 1837 and were operated by private sector companies On 1 January 1851 the Sirket i Hayriye tr literally The Goodwill Company as the Istanbul Ferry Company was originally called was established by the Ottoman state The Sirket i Hayriye continued to operate the city s landmark commuter ferries until the early years of the Republican period when they went under the direction of Turkiye Denizcilik Isletmeleri Turkish State Maritime Lines Since March 2006 Istanbul s traditional commuter ferries have been operated by municipality In 2017 the municipality established a system for musicians to play live music for passengers in the lower salons of most ferry lines The current design of the Istanbul ferries as we know them today was largely created by the Fairfield Shipbuilders of Glasgow Scotland which also built the largest amount of Istanbul ferries since 1851 The companies which designed and built the traditional commuter ferries of Istanbul include the White Shipbuilders of East Cowes England models of 1854 1860 the M Wigram Shipbuilders of London England models of 1863 1869 Maudslay amp Sons of London England models of 1870 1872 R amp H Green Shipbuilders of London England models of 1872 1890 and 1894 1896 J W Thames of London England models of 1890 1893 Napier Shanks amp Bell of Glasgow Scotland models of 1893 1894 Fairfield Shipbuilders of Glasgow Scotland models of 1903 1906 1910 1911 1914 1929 and 1938 1962 Armstrong Shipbuilders in Newcastle and Glasgow United Kingdom models of 1905 1907 Atl amp Chantiers de France in Dunkerque France models of 1907 1911 Hawthorn Leslie and Company in Newcastle England models of 1911 Kinderdijk L Smith amp Zoon Ltd Holland models of 1951 Cantieri Navali di Taranto SPA Taranto Italy models of 1952 and Haskoy Camialti and Istinye Shipyards in Istanbul models of 1929 1938 and 1962 1989 Seabus Edit A Seabus on the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul Main article IDO On 16 April 1987 the Municipality of Istanbul established a company to provide fast sea transport with catamaran type seabuses With the first ten vessels purchased from Norway modernization of sea transportation was achieved Today the company IDO serves 29 terminals with a fleet of 28 catamarans including six fast car ferries Aerial lift Edit Macka Gondola tandem cabins at Macka Terminal Main articles Macka Gondola and Eyup Gondola There is a short gondola lift line above the Democracy Park in the valley between Taksim and Macka the Macka Gondola Turkish Macka Taskisla Teleferigi built in 1993 It connects the hotels Hilton Istanbul Bosphorus on one side with Parksa Hilton and Swissotel The Bosphorus on the other side The cable line is 333 m 1 093 ft long and transports in two cabins with six seats each around 1 000 passengers daily The trip takes three minutes A second aerial lift line the Eyup Gondola Turkish Eyup Piyerloti Teleferigi was opened in 2005 between the historical district of Eyup and the Pierre Loti Hill The gondola lift built by the Italian Leitner Ropeways Co of Leitner Group was the most expensive cable car line in Turkey costing 5 million Euros Statistics EditThe average time that people spend commuting with public transit in Istanbul for example to and from work on a weekday is 91 min About 30 of public transit users ride for more than 2 h every day The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 19 min and 36 of riders wait for over 20 min on average every day The average distance that people usually ride in a single trip by public transit is 12 km and 35 travel for over 12 km 26 Smart Ticket EditMain article Istanbulkart Istanbul has an integrated electronic ticket system for bus funiculars LRT metro commuter trains ferryboats and trams The system uses smart RFID cards called Istanbulkart as tickets The old Akbil iButtons were phased out in 2015 Istanbul Jeton Istanbulkart Jetonmatik Akbil smart ticket Istanbulkart BiletmatikSee also EditIstanbul nostalgic tramways Sabiha Gokcen Airport Metrobus Istanbul Ferries in Istanbul Istanbul Airport Istanbul Metro Istanbul Tram Marmaray Boji dog References Edit Sehir Hatlari Vapurlari Vapurlarin Tarihi Iskele ve Vapur Kiralama Hizmetleri Sirketi Hayriye Sanat Galerisi Archived from the original on 2012 07 12 Retrieved 2012 07 01 IETT Istanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tunel Isletmeleri Genel Mudurlugu Murray Alan 2000 World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia Yateley Hampshire UK Trolleybooks p 73 ISBN 0 904235 18 1 Istanbul Ulasim A S PDF in Turkish 23 January 2023 Istanbul Ulasim A S Rayli Sistemler Archived from the original on 2010 07 23 Haciosman Metro Istasyonu Acildi Taksim 24 Dakika Archived from the original on 2011 05 25 Kirazli Basaksehir Metrokent Metro Hatti Levent Bogazici U Hisarustu Metro Hatti tr M4 hatti Istanbul Ulasim A S Kurumsal Archived from the original on 2012 05 03 Global transport and transport solutions around the world Archived from the original on 2012 06 25 Retrieved 2012 06 30 a b Istanbul Ulasim A S Rayli Sistemler Archived from the original on 2010 07 23 Taksim Kabatas Funikuler Hatti www metro istanbul Retrieved 2023 01 23 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 05 12 Retrieved 2011 03 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b IETT Istanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tunel Isletmeleri Genel Mudurlugu Avcilar Beylikduzu metrobus denemeleri basladi Son Dakika Flas Haberler IETT Istanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tunel Isletmeleri Genel Mudurlugu a b c d e Otobus AS Archived from the original on 2016 11 27 Retrieved 2017 01 09 IETT Istanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tunel Isletmeleri Genel Mudurlugu Archived from the original on 2012 06 15 Retrieved 2012 06 15 Istanbul Kara Ulasim Yolculuk Paylari Archived from the original on 2012 06 15 Retrieved 2012 06 30 IETT Istanbul Elektrik Tramvay ve Tunel Isletmeleri Genel Mudurlugu Archived from the original on 2012 06 15 Retrieved 2012 06 30 IETT Otobus Hatlari IETT in Turkish IETT tr Istanbul Otobus AS IETT rekor kirdi Son Dakika Ekonomi Haberleri tr Vapur Istanbul Public Transportation Statistics Global Public Transit Index by Moovit Retrieved June 19 2017 Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Transport in Istanbul Istanbul public transport websites Edit These official websites include timetables and maps Buses amp Funicular Municipal Bus Transport Authority of Istanbul IETTTrains amp Trams Metro Istanbul operator of Istanbul s modern rail systems Marmaray contains general information about the line project including timetables Ferry Services IDO Istanbul Sea Ferries catamaran Sehir Hatlari operator of traditional ferries Interactive Transit Maps Edit http www istanbulmetromap com Metrobus Metro TramwayOther links Edit Timeline of the Istanbul Turkey Rail Transit Network CityRailTransit com The Istanbul metro UrbanRail net Public Transport by Rail in Turkish Cities Rail Turkey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public transport in Istanbul amp oldid 1136354420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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