Express Bus Systems
The Federal Transit Administration on Bus Rapid Transit
is a repackaging and enhancement of express bus service to make it more like
rail service, but at the same time offer a speed of deployment over a wider
geographic area than is possible with light rail lines.
Express Bus
SystemsFTA's
Bus Rapid Transit SiteBus Rapid Transit is
an enhanced bus system that operates on bus lanes or other transit ways in order
to combine the flexibility of buses with the efficiency of rail. By doing so,
BRT operates at faster speeds, provides greater service reliability and
increased customer convenience.
FTA's Bus
Rapid TransitTRB's Bus Rapid Transit
List of PublicationsTCRP is an applied
research program that develops near-term, practical solutions to problems facing
transit agencies. The Transportation Research Board of the National Academies
manages the program. The Federal Transit Administration funds TCRP, and
independent oversight and project selection for the program is provided by the
Transit Development Corporation, Inc., a nonprofit educational and research
organization established by the American Public Transportation Association.
TRB's
Bus Rapid Transit PublicationsBus
Rapid Transit Practitioner's GuideTRB's
Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Report 118: Bus Rapid Transit
Practitioner's Guide explores the costs, impacts and effectiveness of
implementing selected bus rapid transit (BRT) components.
Bus Rapid Transit
Practitioner's GuideBus Rapid
Transit, Volume 1: Case Studies in Bus Rapid TransitTRB's Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Report
90: Bus Rapid Transit, Volume 1: Case Studies in Bus Rapid Transit identifies
the potential range of bus rapid transit (BRT) applications through 26 case
studies, and provides planning and implementation guidelines for BRT.
Case Studies in Bus
Rapid TransitBus Rapid Transit,
Volume 2: Implementation GuidelinesThis
report presents planning and implementation guidelines for bus rapid transit
(BRT). The guidelines are based on a literature review and an analysis of 26
case study cities in the United State and abroad. The guidelines cover the main
components of BRT - running ways, stations, traffic controls, vehicles,
intelligent transportation systems (ITSs), bus operations, far collection and
marketing, and implementation.
Implementation
GuidelinesNorth American Light
RailLow-floor light rail technology is the
updated version of streetcar technology, re-engineered to meet contemporary
needs for accessibility by seniors, parents with strollers, and persons in
wheelchairs, and that the new light rail vehicles carry more passengers than
either the old trolleys or buses, cutting operating costs.
North American Light RailLight Rail NowThe
Light Rail Now Project is a charitable educational enterprise designed to
support efforts both within North America and worldwide to develop and improve
light rail transit (LRT) and other rail transit and mass transportation systems.
Light Rail
NowLouisville Transportation Tomorrow
(T2)After initial studies and analysis,
rapid transit was prioritized over other alternatives and the locally preferred
South Central Corridor was selected. The project entered into the Federal New
Starts Program, and it was approved as a project in Horizon 2030, the region's
long-range transportation plan.
Louisville Transportation
TomorrowLouisville Area
TransitEstablished in 1971, the Transit
Authority of River City (TARC) provides safe, courteous and comfortable public
transportation in Louisville, Kentucky and surrounding counties. TARC's mission
is to explore and implement transportation opportunities that enhance the
social, economic and environmental well being of the greater Louisville
community.
Transit Authority River
CityNorthern Kentucky Area
TransitThe Transit Authority of North
Kentucky (TANK) has provided transit services to Boone, Campbell and Kenton
counties as well as downtown Cincinnati since 1973. TANK offers a "Downtown
Connection" taking people from their homes in Northern Kentucky to jobs downtown
as well as service to work sites in the southern areas of the Northern Kentucky
region, with fast "reverse-commute" bus service.
Transit Authority of North
KentuckyLexington Area
TransitPublic transportation in Lexington
dates back to the late 19th Century. Beginning with city omnibuses in 1874, the
mule car days of 1882, the electric street car in 1890, the motor bus in 1938,
and the trolley bus introduced in 1982, Lexington has experienced a continuing
evolution in its public transportation system.
Lexington Area Transit