MBTA Bus
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (abbreviated MBTA and known colloquially as "the T") is the public agency responsible for operating most public transportation services in Greater Boston, Massachusetts. The MBTA transit network ...
(MBTA) operates 170 bus routes in the Greater Boston area. The MBTA has a policy objective to provide transit service within walking distance (defined as ) for all residents living in areas with population densities greater than within the MBTA's service district. Much of this service is provided by bus. In , the system had a ridership of , or about per weekday as of . Most MBTA bus routes are local service operated in
Boston Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the state capital and most populous city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financial center of the New England region of the United States. It is the 24th- mo ...
and its inner suburbs and connect to
MBTA subway The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) operates rapid transit (heavy rail), light rail, and bus rapid transit services in the Boston metropolitan area, collectively referred to as the rapid transit, subway, or the T system. Th ...
stations. Fifteen high-ridership local routes are designated as key routes, with higher frequency at all operating hours. The MBTA operates a five-route bus rapid transit service branded as the Silver Line, as well as two limited-stop crosstown routes. Three smaller local networks are based in the nearby cities of Lynn, Waltham, and Quincy. Several express routes operate from suburbs to downtown Boston. The MBTA has an active bus fleet around 1,140 buses with diesel-electric hybrid or
compressed natural gas Compressed natural gas (CNG) is a fuel gas mainly composed of methane (CH4), compressed to less than 1% of the volume it occupies at standard atmospheric pressure. It is stored and distributed in hard containers at a pressure of , usually in ...
propulsion. Several Silver Line routes use dual-mode buses that operate as
trolleybuses A trolleybus (also known as trolley bus, trolley coach, trackless trolley, trackless tramin the 1910s and 1920sJoyce, J.; King, J. S.; and Newman, A. G. (1986). ''British Trolleybus Systems'', pp. 9, 12. London: Ian Allan Publishing. .or trol ...
in the Waterfront Tunnel and as diesel buses on the surface. Replacement of the full fleet with battery electric buses is planned. The entire bus system is
accessible Accessibility is the design of products, devices, services, vehicles, or environments so as to be usable by people with disabilities. The concept of accessible design and practice of accessible development ensures both "direct access" (i. ...
; all vehicles are low-floor buses with fold-out ramps. Most routes are operated directly by the MBTA. Five suburban routes are run by private operators under contract to the MBTA, while several small circulator systems are run by other operators with partial MBTA subsidy. MBTA-operated buses operate from nine garages, one of which is under reconstruction and a second planned for replacement. Several sections of dedicated right-of-way for MBTA buses have been opened in the 21st century, including two off-street busways for the Silver Line and a number of dedicated bus lanes. The modern bus system descends from a network of horsecar and electric streetcar lines built in the 1850s to 1910s, which were consolidated under the West End Street Railway and later Boston Elevated Railway (BERy). The BERy introduced buses in 1922 to replace lightly-used streetcar lines and expand into new areas. Over the next four decades under the BERy and Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA), all but six streetcar routes were converted to bus or trolleybus. (Most trolleybuses were phased out by the 1960s, but four routes lasted until 2022.) The MBTA took over the MTA in 1964, and several private suburban bus operators over the following two decades. Many routes have been modified during the MBTA era; the agency introduced crosstown routes in 1994 and the Silver Line in 2002.


History

A number of
horsecar A horsecar, horse-drawn tram, horse-drawn streetcar (U.S.), or horse-drawn railway (historical), is an animal-powered (usually horse) tram or streetcar. Summary The horse-drawn tram (horsecar) was an early form of public rail transport, w ...
lines were built in Boston and surrounding towns in the second half of the 19th century, beginning with the Cambridge Railroad in 1856. Several smaller companies were consolidated into the West End Street Railway in 1887. The West End began electrifying existing lines and constructing new streetcar lines; the last horsecar lines ended in 1900. The West End was purchased in 1897 by the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy), which had been created to build a rapid transit system in Boston. As that system was constructed in the first two decades of the 20th century, many streetcar lines were cut back from downtown Boston to rapid transit stations. Stations like , , , , and were built as transfer stations with easy connections between subway and rapid transit. Some small companies operated buses in Boston as early as the 1910s. BERy bus service began on February 23, 1922, when buses replaced the North Beacon Street streetcar line. Initial bus routes largely replaced lightly-used streetcar lines or expanded service to new areas. The BERy also attempted in the 1920s to make the Tremont Street streetcar subway operate more like a rapid transit line, using trains of streetcars entering the subway from a small number of feeder lines, rather than single streetcars from numerous surface lines. The Harvard–Lechmere streetcar line was converted to trackless trolley (
trolleybus A trolleybus (also known as trolley bus, trolley coach, trackless trolley, trackless tramin the 1910s and 1920sJoyce, J.; King, J. S.; and Newman, A. G. (1986). ''British Trolleybus Systems'', pp. 9, 12. London: Ian Allan Publishing. .or trol ...
) on April 11, 1936 – the first route in what would become an extensive trackless trolley system. As increased automobile usage reduced ridership and increased congestion, the BERy and its 1947 replacement Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) continued to convert streetcar lines to bus and trolleybus. Most trolleybus lines were replaced by buses in the late 1940s to early 1960s, as buses offered increased flexibility and no need to maintain overhead lines. When the
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (abbreviated MBTA and known colloquially as "the T") is the public agency responsible for operating most public transportation services in Greater Boston, Massachusetts. The MBTA transit network ...
(MBTA) replaced the MTA in 1964, all surface lines were operated by buses except six streetcar lines (the five Green Line branches plus the Mattapan Line) and four trolleybus lines. The MBTA rebranded many elements of Boston's public transportation network in its first decade. After being found unsuitable in 1965 for the Orange Line because it did not show up well on maps, yellow was chosen for the color of bus operations on January 8, 1972. The MBTA had primarily been formed to subsidize the suburban commuter rail network. However, the agency also took over unprofitable suburban bus operations – much of which was former streetcar lines – from several private companies. The MBTA took over the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway in 1968, inheriting large networks based in Lynn and Quincy plus several lines in Norwood and
Melrose Melrose may refer to: Places United Kingdom * Melrose, Scottish Borders, a town in the Scottish Borders, Scotland ** Melrose Abbey, ruined monastery ** Melrose RFC, rugby club Australia * Melrose, Queensland, a locality in the South Burnett R ...
. (Networks serving Lowell, Lawrence, and Brockton outside the MBTA district were briefly operated by the MBTA. They were transferred to new public agencies: the LRTA in Lowell in 1976, a predecessor of the MVRTA in Lawrence in 1968, and a predecessor of the BAT in Brockton in 1969.) The MBTA began subsidizing
Middlesex and Boston Street Railway The Middlesex and Boston Street Railway (M&B) was a streetcar and later bus company in the area west of Boston. Streetcars last ran in 1930, and in 1972 the company's operations were merged into the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MB ...
service based in Newton and Waltham in 1964, and took over the remaining routes in 1972. Five former Service Bus Lines routes in northeast suburbs were taken over in 1975, and a single Brush Hill Transportation line in Milton was taken over in 1980. The geographic scope of the MBTA bus network has remained relatively constant since these additions, though many services have been created, discontinued, and modified during the MBTA era. The openings of new sections of the Red Line (1971, 1980, 1984–85) and the Orange Line (1975–77, 1987) have resulted in significant changes as routes were modified to serve new transfer stations. Three limited-stop crosstown routes were created in 1994 as a prelude to the Urban Ring Project, a never-implemented circumferential bus rapid transit (BRT) corridor. Silver Line BRT service began in 2002 with conversion of existing bus service on Washington Street, and was expanded in 2004–05 with new routes serving the Waterfront Tunnel in the Seaport District. A second Silver Line service using the Washington Street corridor was added in 2009, and service from the Waterfront Tunnel to began in 2018 with a new surface busway in Chelsea. The BERy and MTA operated overnight Owl service until 1960. From September 2001 to June 2005, the MBTA operated bus service on 17 routes (7 normal bus routes and 10 routes replicating subway lines) until 2:30am on Friday and Saturday nights. Similar service on the key routes was operated from March 2013 to March 2014. In 2017, the MBTA Board rejected a proposal to run all-night service on several routes with pulsed connections at a central hub.


Fleet


Active fleet

This is the current bus roster for the MBTA . All buses are wide; most buses are length, while 107 are articulated buses.


Future

In November 2020, the MBTA exercised a contract option for 45 additional 60-foot hybrid buses with extended battery range (similar to test bus #1294) to replace the dual-mode Silver Line fleet. The buses will be delivered in 2022. The MBTA may begin a phased 500-bus order in 2021, with delivery from 2022–2026. Under that plan, the agency would establish a continuous procurement process with 100 new buses per year, and buses retired after 12 years.


Facilities

MBTA buses are operated out of eight facilities. The MBTA plans to replace Quincy Garage with a larger facility near Quincy Adams station. The parcel was purchased for $38.2 million in March 2021. Bids in May 2022 came in higher than expected – $360 million versus $280 million – prompting the MBTA to switch to Construction Management at Risk bidding for the project. A replacement of Arborway Garage on-site is planned for 2027. In July 2022, the MBTA indicated plans to purchase an adjacent parcel to expand Southampton Garage.


Private buses

Most local bus routes in Massachusetts outside the immediate MBTA operating area are operated by the state's other regional transit authorities (RTAs). However, some routes that connect with MBTA bus or subway service are operated by outside private contractors with partial subsidy by the MBTA. Five routes – the , /, , and – are numbered like other MBTA buses. The five routes are primarily commuter routes which connect with other MBTA services at their inbound terminals. They were taken over from various private operators (Hudson Bus Lines for the 710 and 716, Rapid Transit Inc. for the 712/713, and Nantasket Transportation for the 714). The 712 and 713 use MBTA-provided buses and accept Charliecards; the other routes do not. Four suburban municipalities contract with outside operators for local circulator routes, most with partial MBTA subsidy.
Bedford Bedford is a market town in Bedfordshire, England. At the 2011 Census, the population of the Bedford built-up area (including Biddenham and Kempston) was 106,940, making it the second-largest settlement in Bedfordshire, behind Luton, whilst t ...
and Beverly run single routes, Burlington runs five routes, and
Lexington Lexington may refer to: Places England * Laxton, Nottinghamshire, formerly Lexington Canada * Lexington, a district in Waterloo, Ontario United States * Lexington, Kentucky, the largest city with this name * Lexington, Massachusetts, the oldes ...
runs six. Most are run by private operators, except for the Beverly Shuttle, which is part of the Cape Ann Transportation Authority system. Additionally, a nonprofit shuttle is run in Boston's Mission Hill neighborhood. Those routes appear on MBTA system maps and connect with MBTA services at designated transfer points, but are numbered separately and do not accept MBTA passes.


Bus lanes

Several sections of dedicated right-of-way for MBTA buses have been opened in the 21st century. Two sections of the Silver Line have off-street busways: The 2004-opened South Boston Piers Transitway tunnel in the Seaport (used by the , , , and ), and a 2018-opened surface busway in Chelsea used by the SL3. A direct ramp to the
Ted Williams Tunnel The Ted Williams Tunnel is a highway tunnel in Boston, Massachusetts. The third in the city to travel under Boston Harbor, with the Sumner Tunnel and the Callahan Tunnel, it carries the final segment of Interstate 90 (the Massachusetts Turnpike) ...
is proposed for use by the SL1 and SL3. A number of dedicated bus lanes on surface streets are also in use: * Washington Street, Boston: ** between
Melnea Cass Boulevard Melnea Cass Boulevard is a street in Boston, Massachusetts, running perpendicular to the line between Dudley Square in Roxbury and the South End. It is named after local community and civil rights activist Melnea Cass. The road's right-of-wa ...
and Kneeland Street (including a short southbound contraflow section), with an additional northbound-only between Stuart Street and Temple Place. The lanes are used by Silver Line routes and , as well as local routes , , and . The southern section was opened in 2002 with the introduction of Silver Line service; the portion north of Herald Street (northbound) and Marginal Street (southbound) was added in mid-2020 along with a lane on Temple Place. ** of northbound morning-peak-only bus/bike lane between Roslindale and was added in June 2018 following a test that May. The section is used by routes , , , , , , , , and . of southbound evening-peak-only lane was added in early 2021. *Essex Street, Boston: Two eastbound segments totaling , opened in 2009 for use by the SL4. *Broadway, Sweetser Circle, and Main Street, Everett: A morning-peak-only southbound bus lane on Broadway from Henry Street to Sweetser Circle (routes , 104, 109, , ) was opened in 2017 after a 2016 test. A northbound evening-peak-only lane on Broadway from Sweetser Circle to Chelsea Street, a northbound evening-peak-only lane on Main Street from Sweetser Circle to Oakes Street (routes , 105, ), and an all-day lane around Sweetser Circle were added in October 2020. *Prospect Street, Somerville: a northbound bus/bike lane (routes , ) opened in 2017. *Mount Auburn Street and Belmont Street, Cambridge and Watertown: Three segments totaling , installed in October 2018 for routes and . * Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge and Arlington: of southbound bus lane from Sidney Street to Memorial Drive for route , opened in November 2018. of southbound morning-peak-only bus/bike lane from Varnum Street to
Alewife Brook Parkway Alewife Brook Parkway is a short parkway in Cambridge and Somerville, Massachusetts. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It begins at Fresh Pond in Cambridge (linking to Fresh Pond Parkway via Concord Avenue), and heads nor ...
for route was installed in October 2019 after a successful test a year before. of bus lanes between Dudley Street and Alewife Brook Parkway (route 1) opened in November 2021. *Sullivan Square, Boston: Three short sections of bus-only turn lane on Beacham Street (routes , 91, CT2), Maffa Way (, , , ), and Main Street (, , , , ) for buses entering Sullivan Square station, installed as part of a 2018–2019 reconfiguration of the station. *Brighton Avenue, Boston: of bus/bike lanes between Commonwealth Avenue () and Union Square, used by routes , , and . The eastbound lane was opened in June 2019, followed by the westbound lane that October. *Broadway, Somerville: of bus/bike lanes between
Magoun Square Magoun Square is a neighborhood centered on the intersection of Broadway and Medford Streets on the border of Medford and Somerville, Massachusetts. It is located between the neighborhoods of Ball Square and Winter Hill. It is a mixed-use urb ...
and Fellsway West for routes and , opened in August 2019. *North Washington Street, Boston: of southbound bus/bike lane (route 92, 93, , , and ) from Causeway Street to Beverly Street opened in August 2019. A northbound bus lane from Sudbury Street to Causeway Street opened in August 2021. *Summer Street, Boston: of westbound bus lane between Dorchester Avenue and Atlantic Avenue for routes and , opened in October 2019. *
Davis Square Davis Square is a major intersection in the northwestern section of Somerville, Massachusetts where several streets meet: Holland Street, Dover Street, Day Street, Elm Street, Highland Avenue, and College Avenue. The name is often used to refer ...
, Somerville: queue jumps on Holland Street (routes and ) and College Avenue (89, , ) opened in 2020. *Broadway, Chelsea: a westbound bus lane from 5th Street to 3rd Street for routes , , , and opened in November 2020. *
Tobin Memorial Bridge The Maurice J. Tobin Memorial Bridge (formerly the Mystic River Bridge) is a cantilever truss bridge that spans more than two miles (3 km) from Boston to Chelsea over the Mystic River in Massachusetts. The bridge is the largest in New Eng ...
: of westbound bus lane for route 111 (a 12-month pilot) opened in December 2020. *Florence Street, Malden: a westbound bus/bike lane opened in December 2020. *Washington Street, Somerville: a westbound bus/bike queue jump at McGrath Highway (routes , , ) and queue jumps west of Union Square (route 86) were added in 2020-21. *North Common Street, South Common Street, and Market Street, Lynn: of bus/bike lanes for routes / and opened in April 2021. * Mystic Avenue, Somerville and Medford: a pilot of a morning-peak-only southbound bus lane for route 95 opened in June 2021. * Columbus Avenue, Boston: of center-running lanes between Walnut Street and (routes , , ) with boarding islands opened in October 2021 – the first center bus lanes in New England. * Broadway, Revere: pilot of southbound morning peak bus/bike lane from Revere Street to
Revere Beach Parkway Revere Beach Parkway is a historic parkway in the suburbs immediately north of Boston, Massachusetts. It begins at Wellington Circle in Medford, where the road leading to the west is Mystic Valley Parkway, and the north–south road is the F ...
for routes , , , and 411 opened in November 2021. *
Route 2 The following highways are numbered 2. For roads numbered A2, see list of A2 roads. For roads numbered B2, see list of B2 roads. For roads numbered M2, see list of M2 roads. For roads numbered N2, see list of N2 roads. International * AH2, As ...
eastbound ramp to Alewife station: of bus lane for routes , , , , and was opened in November 2021. * Interstate 93 north of Boston: A two-year pilot began in December 2021 for use of the
breakdown lane A shoulder, hard shoulder (British) or breakdown lane, is an emergency stopping lane by the verge of a road or motorway, on the right side in countries which drive on the right, and on the left side in countries which drive on the left. Many wi ...
by MBTA buses (routes , , , and ), MVRTA buses, and Logan Express buses between Somerville and I-95. The lanes can be used during peak periods when traffic speeds are below . *Dedicated lanes were added on several streets in Boston during the August–September 2022 closure of the Orange Line, of which four were made permanent: Boylston Street from Ring Road to Clarendon Street (routes , , and ), Clarendon from Boylston to Columbus Avenue (39 and 55), St. James Avenue from near Berkeley Street to Dartmouth Street (9, , 39, 55, , and ), and Huntington Avenue from Brigham Circle to Gainsborough Street (39 and ). An additional of center lanes on Columbus Avenue and Tremont Street between Jackson Square and is planned for construction in 2024. Other funded projects include Western Avenue in Lynn between Ida Street and the Belden Bly Bridge,
Lynnway Route 1A is a north–south state highway in Massachusetts. It is an alternate route to U.S. 1 with three signed sections and two unsigned sections where the highway is concurrent with its parent. Due to the reconfiguration of tunnel intercha ...
in Lynn, Washington Street at Brookline Village, and Centre Street in downtown Malden. Additional lanes in Boston announced in 2020 but not yet implemented include Malcolm X Boulevard between and , Warren Street between Nubian Square and Grove Hall, and Hyde Park Avenue between Forest Hills and Metropolitan Avenue. Center-running bus lanes are also proposed for Summer Street in the Seaport and Blue Hill Avenue between Grove Hall and


References


External links


MBTA – bus schedules and maps

MBTA – Better Bus Project
{{Authority control MBTA bus Bus transportation in the Boston area