Metro Transit is asking bus riders where its growing network of rapid bus lines should go, as the agency moves toward an ambitious goal of fast and frequent all-day service along some of the Twin Cities' most densely populated corridors.
Two rapid bus lines are already up and running, and this fall Metro Transit won bonding bill money to build two more. The four lines — plus another already in the planning stage — are the first of as many as 15 rapid bus lines the agency aims to build by 2040, likely replacing some of the busiest and slowest buses in the metro.
This week, Metro Transit is moving ahead with its Network Next initiative to expand and improve the bus network by asking riders to identify corridors where the next rapid bus lines should go.
Metro Transit staff had identified 19 corridors as possibilities for the new F, G and H lines. That list was later whittled to 10, and from those, four were identified for construction between 2025 and 2030.
The routes identified were along Central Avenue, (the current Route 10), Como/Maryland (Route 3), Johnson/Lyndale (Route 4), and Rice/Robert (Routes 62 and 68). Riders will be asked to weigh in on a survey starting Wednesday, and their feedback will help determine which of the four rapid bus lines should be built first, said Katie Roth, Metro Transit's assistant director of Bus Rapid Transit projects.
Arterial Bus Rapid Transit (ABRT) offers passengers an experience similar to light rail, but is far cheaper to build. Several BRT lines can be built for the cost of a single LRT line.
"We want to expand high-quality transit service, to make transit fast and more comfortable for customers," Roth said.
The region's first ABRT line, the A-Line, opened on Snelling Avenue in 2016. Then came the C-Line running from downtown Minneapolis to Brooklyn Center via Penn Avenue. With money from the state Legislature, plans to build the next two lines will proceed "full steam ahead," Roth said.