Metrobus (Miami-Dade County)

Metrobus
Slogan 'We"ll Take You There!'
Parent Miami-Dade County
Founded August 2, 1960
Headquarters Overtown Transit Village
Locale Miami, Florida
Service area Greater Miami, Broward, and Monroe Counties
Service type bus service, bus rapid transit
Alliance Broward County Transit
Routes 93 2 are contracted bus routes
Stops 8,000+ bus stops
Fleet 817 buses 40ft NABI, Gillig, 25 60ft New Flyer, 11 Commuter Coach Buses
Daily ridership 293,000 [1]
Fuel type Diesel, Hybrid Diesel Electric, soon (CNG)
Operator Miami-Dade Transit
Website www.miamidade.gov/transit

The Metrobus network provides bus service throughout Miami-Dade County 365 days a year. It consists of about 93 routes and 893 buses, which connect most points in the county and part of southern Broward County as well. Seven of these routes operate around the clock: Routes 3, 11, 27, 38, 77 (last bus from Downtown Miami 1:10am, first bus from Downtown Miami 4:10am), L (No 24-hour service to Hialeah, all trips terminate at Northside Station) and S. Routes 246 Night Owl & Route 500 Midnight Owl operate from 12am to 5am. Most other routes operate from 4:30am to 1:30am. All Metrobuses are wheelchair accessible, in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and equipped with Bicycle racks.

Bus route 301 (Dade-Monroe Express) extends into Monroe County, reaching Marathon, where a transfer is available to a Key West Transit bus proceeding further into the Keys. With the appropriate bus transfers, one can travel all the way from Key West to Jupiter entirely on public-transit buses.

South Miami-Dade Busway

North end of the busway in Dadeland.

The South Miami-Dade Busway (originally the South Dade Busway) began operating on February 3, 1997 and was extended in April 2005. The final 6.5-mile (10.5 km) segment of the Busway extension to Florida City opened on Sunday, December 16, 2007. It is parallel to US1/ S Dixie Highway, and replaced an abandoned Florida East Coast Railroad line. It is an alternative to daily traffic congestion. The 13-mile (21 km) roadway was built by the Florida Department of Transportation just for Metrobus routes and emergency vehicles. Express buses on the exclusive lanes shuttle passengers to and from Dadeland South Station (see Metrorail) in under 40 minutes.

Both full-size and Articulated buses operate on the Busway and in adjacent neighborhoods, entering the exclusive lanes at major intersections. Local and limited-stop service is offered between Florida City and Dadeland South Metrorail Station. Park & Ride lots along the busway are located at SW 152d Street (Coral Reef Drive), SW 168th Street (Richmond Drive), SW 112th Avenue, SW 244th Street, and SW 296th Street. At Dadeland South Station, riders transfer to Metrorail. Riders headed downtown can transfer from Metrorail to Metromover, which consists of three shorter downtown loops, at Government Center Station.

The South Miami-Dade Busway features 28 stops, all of which have been converted to light-rail style stations. A multi-use path stretches the length of the Busway.

South Miami-Dade Busway stations

  • SW 104th Street
  • SW 112th Street
  • SW 120th Street
  • SW 124th Street
  • SW 128th Street
  • SW 136th Street
  • SW 144th Street
  • SW 152nd Street (Park-N-Ride)
  • SW 160th Street
  • SW 168th Street (Park-N-Ride)
  • SW 173rd Street
  • W Indigo Street
  • SW 184th Street
  • Marlin Road
  • SW 200th Street
  • SW 112th Avenue (Park-N-Ride)
  • SW 216th Street
  • SW 220th Street
  • SW 232nd Street
  • SW 244th Street
  • SW 264th Street
  • SW 272nd Street
  • SW 280th Street
  • SW 296th Street (Park-N-Ride)
  • SW 312th Street
  • Historic Homestead (Future Park-N-Ride, currently under construction)
  • SW 324th Street
  • SW 328th Street
  • SW 344th Street (Park-N-Ride, currently open for service as of June 2015)

Former stations

Routes that use the Busway

Busway vs. rail controversy

The Busway has been the site of many accidents, as some car drivers driving south on US 1 (which runs parallel to the Busway for much of its length), and looking to turn west, do not stop at the red arrows that govern the right turn lane at an intersection that has a Busway crossing adjacent to it. They make a right turn and go right into the path of a bus that is entering the adjacent Busway intersection. Buses currently have to slow down to 15 mph (24 km/h) before crossing the intersection, and the police often patrol the intersections looking for red arrow runners. Surprisingly, even the intersections where the Busway runs as far as 2 blocks west of US 1 suffer the same problem, with car drivers either not seeing or flatly ignoring the red lights at SW 184th and 186th Streets. City planners and residents alike have commented that rather than dismantling the former Florida East Coast Railroad line for the busway, the Metrorail system could have been extended southward over the railway line.

See also

References

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