Founded | March 29, 1873 |
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Headquarters | Mountain Transit Centre 2200 Upper James Street, Hamilton, Ontario |
Locale | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada |
Service area |
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Service type | Public transport |
Routes |
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Stops | 2,324 |
Fleet | 267 buses (2021) [1] |
Annual ridership | 15,216,234 (2022) [2] |
Fuel type | ULSD, CNG, RNG |
Operator | City of Hamilton |
Director of Transit | Maureen Cosyn Heath [3] |
Website | www |
The Hamilton Street Railway (HSR) is the public transport agency for Hamilton, Ontario. The name is a legacy of the company's early period, when public transit in Hamilton was primarily served by streetcars. Although streetcars are no longer used in the city today, the HSR operates bus and paratransit services, with a ridership of 21 million passengers a year.
External maps | |
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HSR 1930 routes | |
HSR 1950 routes | |
Trolley bus overhead 1959 |
On March 29, 1873, the HSR was established after Ontario passed An Act to incorporate "The Hamilton Street Railway Company." [4] It was owned by Lyman Moore and operated as a private business under a city franchise. [5] : 73 In 1899, HSR was bought out by the Hamilton Cataract, Power, Light and Traction Company, later known as Dominion Power and Transmission Company. [5] : 81 In April 1930, HSR was acquired by Ontario Hydro. [5] : 5 Provincial ownership ended in 1946 when HSR became a subsidiary of Canada Coach Lines. Through a corporate reorganization in 1954, CCL became a subsidiary of HSR. HSR and CCL were purchased by the city of Hamilton in 1960. [6] [7] CCL was sold to Trentway-Wagar in 1993. [7] In 1977, the Hamilton-Wentworth Region assumed ownership of HSR. [8] In 2001, regional amalgamation placed ownership back with the city of Hamilton. [9]
The HSR operated horsecars from 1874 to 1892. In May 1874, the first horsecar ran south on James Street, then east on King Street to Wellington Street, a distance of 4.8 kilometres (3 mi). [10] At the end of horsecar operation, there were 5 horsecar routes, [11] 19 kilometres (12 mi) of track, 45 horsecars, 9 sleighs and 160 horses. Fifteen of the horsecars would be converted into electric streetcars. [10] The horsecar system had three barns: North Barn at Stuart and Bay Streets, East Barn at Sanford Avenue and King Street (built 1890) and South Barn at Herkimer and Locke Streets (built 1891). These three locations would continue to be used after electrification. [11] On June 29, 1892, the first electric streetcars went into operation. [10]
In 1895, York Street was mostly double-tracked. In 1896, the first streetcar loop was constructed at Guise Street at the north end of James Street. In 1904, HSR provided rush-hour service north from Barton Street over the tracks of the Hamilton Radial Electric Railway (HRER) along Birch Avenue. In 1907, the 2.3-kilometre (1.4 mi), single-track, side-of-road Bartonville line was built east from Sherman Avenue along King Street East to Strongman Road. Barton Street was double-tracked in 1911. Tracks were extended east along Burlington Street from James Street (1910 and 1913), linking to the double-track HRER line at Birch Avenue. By 1916, tracks had been extended east on Barton Street, north and south on Kennilworth Avenue and west on Main Street; an enlarged Belt Line was created in October 1916 using the new double track and became the city's busiest streetcar line. By 1923, the tracks had been extended west along King Street to Cline Avenue in Westdale. After the Hamilton and Dundas Street Railway ceased operation in 1923, HSR took over a portion of its line along Aberdeen Avenue to Longwood Road. [5] : 80–93
In 1908, the South Barn was destroyed by fire after which the site continued to be used streetcar storage. In 1910, the Sanford Barn was opened near north-west corner of King and Sanford Streets, across the street from the East Barn. In 1928, new shops were opened near the East Barn to maintain streetcars and interurban cars. In 1929, the North Barn closed. [5] : 88
The HSR had a mixed fleet of single-end and double-end streetcars. Single-end streetcars were used on the Belt Line where no loops were required. In 1927, turning loops were added at the outer ends of the Aberdeen and Westdale lines. [5] : 93
Bus service was introduced in 1926 along Cannon Street. The first contraction of the streetcar system was the closure of the single-track line to Bartonville, replaced by buses in 1929. The first major streetcar abandonment was along York Street on 1939. [5] : 93, 97, 100
By 1940, the HSR operated the following seven routes: [10]
Route | Length | Description |
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Belt Line | 12.59 kilometres (7.82 mi) | circular route via Barton, Kennilworth, Main, Sherwood, King, James |
Burlington-James South | 12.23 kilometres (7.60 mi) | |
Westdale-James North | 6.89 kilometres (4.28 mi) | |
Aberdeen-King West | 6.45 kilometres (4.01 mi) | |
Wentworth | 2.66 kilometres (1.65 mi) | |
Crosstown | 2.70 kilometres (1.68 mi) | via Birch, Wilson, Sanford |
Incline | 1.50 kilometres (0.93 mi) | James Street South to foot of Hamilton Mountain |
After Canada Coach Lines purchased HSR in 1946, it announced the abandonment of streetcar service. Consequently, service was abandoned on Aberdeen Avenue in 1947, to Westdale in 1949 and on Burlington Street in 1950. The final abandonment was the Belt Line with April 5, 1951 being its last day of service, but with a ceremonial last run on the following day. [5] : 102–104
Hamilton had four interurban lines originating from downtown Hamilton. These lines were not part of the HSR but for many of their years of operation had the same parent company, Dominion Power and Transmission Company. In order to access downtown Hamilton, the interurbans shared some trackage with the HSR. [5]
From 1907, interurban cars ran out of a Hamilton Terminal Station located between Main and King Streets East at Catherine Street. The passenger terminal with several tracks was east of Catherine Street and a two-track interurban freight station was on that street's west side. In 1924, buses of Dominion Power subsidiaries started using the terminal, but loaded on Main Street. After interurbans were abandoned, the passenger station was renovated for buses. The station closed in 1955, and was later demolished. Today, its site is occupied by Terminal Towers. [5]
Hamilton-area interurban lines from 1873 to 1931 |
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Trolley buses were used by the HSR from 1950 to 1992. The trolley bus system opened on December 10, 1950, and the last day of trolley bus service was December 30, 1992. [12]
On December 10, 1950, the first Hamilton trolley buses went into service on the 6.6-kilometre (4.1 mi) Cannon route, replacing a busy bus route. In October 1951, several months after the termination of streetcar service, a second trolley bus route went into service as the 13.8-kilometre (8.6 mi) King-Barton route. In 1956, the city introduced one-way streets in downtown Hamilton; as a result, the King-Barton route was split into the separate King and Barton routes. Trolley bus operation was eventually extended as far east as Donn Avenue in Stoney Creek. [10] Trolley buses operated out of the Sanford facility which used to handle streetcars. [13] Originally designated only by names, as in streetcar days, the three routes were later given numbers, 1 for the King route, 2 for Barton, and 3 for the Cannon route. The fleet originally consisted of 50 Canadian Car–Brill vehicles, which by 1973 were replaced by 40 Flyer E700 trolley buses built in 1972–73. [14] Sixteen Flyer E800A vehicles were added in 1978–79. All 56 Flyer trolley buses used some electrical components, such as motors, from retired Brill trolley buses, but that in the E800s came not from HSR Brills but from Brills of the Thunder Bay trolley bus system (closed in 1972 [12] ), purchased by HSR for the parts. [14]
In the mid-1980s, the older Flyer trolley buses were nearing the end of their useful life, given that their electrical equipment had been recycled from 1950 trolley buses. HSR noted that new diesel buses were cheaper to buy than new trolley buses. However, in November 1986, the city council and Hamilton–Wentworth Regional Council both voted in favour of retaining trolley bus operation and endorsing buying new trolley buses, [15] and small investments in new infrastructure were still being made, such as the construction of a new turnaround loop for trolley buses at Eastgate Square mall, which came into use in September 1986. [16] However, temporary substitutions of diesel buses for trolley buses became increasingly common in the late 1980s. Diesel buses temporarily replaced trolley buses on routes 1–King and 3-Cannon in May 1989 [17] because of road construction projects, with trolley buses returning to both routes in November 1989. [18] However, both routes were again dieselized in early January 1990 for what would ultimately be the last time. [19] Only route 2–Barton then remained in operation with trolley buses.
At the time the King and Cannon routes were dieselized, the city moved trolley bus operations to a new bus garage at 330 Wentworth Street North which did not have trolley wires. This was possible because all but one of HSR's 16 newer trolley buses (model E800A) had been retrofitted in 1989–90 with a small auxiliary diesel engine for off-wire movements. [20] The last day for trolley bus operation on the Barton route was December 30, 1992, [12] [21] when only a single trolley bus (No. 7815) was in service. [22] At the time, the regional council was still planning to purchase new trolleybuses for routes 1 and 2, [21] and HSR issued a draft specification for new trolley buses in April 1993, [23] and subsequently, considered purchasing or leasing 40 trolley buses from the Edmonton trolley bus system that had been on loan to the Toronto Transit Commission since 1989–90 and were in storage in Toronto after the 1993 closure of the trolley bus system there. However, after HSR concluded that the Edmonton vehicles would require costly modifications for Hamilton, the regional council voted on March 1, 1994 to make the system's closure permanent. [24]
Name | Operated | Location | Usage |
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North Barn | 1875–1929 | Stuart St & Bay St | Horsecars, later streetcars [11] [5] : 88 |
East Barn | 1890–1928 | Sanford Ave & King St, SW corner | Horsecars, later streetcars [11] [5] : 88, 93, 97 |
South Barn | 1891–1908 | Herkimer St & Locke St | Horsecars, later streetcars [11] [5] : 88 |
Sanford Yard & Shops | 1910–1990 | King St & Sanford Ave, NW corner | Streetcars, later buses including trolley buses; shops added 1928 [13] [10] |
Mountain Transit Centre | 1984–present | 2200 Upper James St | Buses [25] |
Wentworth Street Transit Centre | 1990–2000 | 330 Wentworth St N | Buses, including off-wire trolley buses [25] |
HSR is proposing to build a new garage at the site of the former Wentworth Street Transit Centre. The garage would hold 200 natural-gas buses and have 30 repair bays, a bus wash facility and offices. In January 2023, HSR posted bid documents; it hopes to open the new facility in 2024 to supplement the overcrowded Mountain Transit Centre. [26]
Most bus routes in Hamilton operate all of the week, from early morning to late at a night, or past midnight. Headways mostly range from between 6 and 30 minutes, and most routes being 20 minutes or better on weekdays, usually between 12 and 20 minutes frequencies, depending on time of day. [27]
On weekends, frequencies are reduced, and services are usually altered or unavailable on holidays.
There are some special bus routes that only operate during certains times of year, enter Burlington, or otherwise operate in different ways from the majority of routes.
No. | Name | Inner Terminal | Outer Terminal | Notes |
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1 | King | Eastgate Square | Hamilton GO Centre | Sunday service no longer extends to Fiesta Mall as of September 2023. |
1A | King | Eastgate Square | University Plaza | Weekday daytime service only. |
2 | Barton | Hamilton GO Centre | Bell Manor Loop | |
3 | Cannon | Hamilton GO Centre | Reid & Dunsmure | |
4 | Bayfront | Downtown | Mt. Albion Loop | Limited Weekday & Saturday trips service Ferrie Ave |
5 | Delaware | KING AT HIGHWAY 8 | 52 HEAD STREET (Dundas) | Route 5 runs eastbound, Route 52 runs westbound. East end extended to King at Highway 8 after retirement of route 58 Stoney Creek Local |
5A/C | Delaware | GREENHILL AT COCHRANE | MEADOWLANDS (Ancaster) | Route 5A runs eastbound, Route 5C runs westbound. |
5B | Delaware | Mt. Albion Loop | 52 PIRIE at GOVERNORS (Dundas) | Route 5B runs eastbound, Route 52 runs westbound. 7-Day Service to Governors began in 2014. Late Evening Service to Stoney Creek began in 2014 |
6 | Aberdeen | Downtown (JAMES at MAIN) | Princess Point Loop | |
7 | Locke | Downtown (JAMES at KING) | Hillcrest Loop | |
8 | York | Downtown (JAMES at KING) | Lamoreaux & Strathcona | |
9 | Rock Gardens | Downtown | Holy Sepulchre Cemetery | Service operates on Sundays and holidays from May through November. Travels to Burlington. |
10 | B-Line Express | Eastgate Square | University Plaza | Now has 7 day a week daytime & early evening express service as of September 2023. Most trips interlined with 55 STONEY CREEK CENTRAL |
11 | Parkdale | Valley Park Loop | Burlington Bus Terminal | Only daily route that travels to Burlington. Does not serve Downtown. Weekday Trips service Canada Centre for Inland Waters |
12 | Wentworth | Wentworth & Mars | Victoria & King | Counterclockwise loop. Route only operates on weekdays, with no midday service. |
16 | Ancaster | Meadowlands | GARNER at WILSON | No Sunday service. Does not serve Downtown. Separate AM & PM Routing. Interlined with 43 Stone Church |
18 | Waterdown | Waterdown & Parkside | Aldershot GO Station | New Clockwise & Counter-Clockwise Routing. No Services the Wal-Mart & Horseshoe Crescent Plazas. Service runs Weekdays & Saturdays until 8:00pm. Does not serve Downtown. Limited Drop-Off Only trips travel to Downtown Hamilton via Plains Road & York Blvd. Is currently undergoing a MyRide On Demand trial. |
20 | A-Line Express | Hamilton Waterfront (Pier 8) | Hamilton International Airport | Services Mohawk College & Mountain Transit Centre Park & Ride. Southbound buses no longer service Frank A. Cooke Terminal as of September 2023 |
21 | Upper Kenilworth | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Heritage Greene Power Centre (as of Sept. 6, 2015) [29] | |
22 | Upper Ottawa | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Upper Ottawa & Rymal | No longer serves Anchor & Bigwin as of 2023 |
23 | Upper Gage | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Upper Gage & Rymal | |
24 | Upper Sherman | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Upper Gage & Rymal | Routing via St Jean de Brebeuf School cancelled 2014. |
25 | Upper Wentworth | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Lime Ridge Mall | |
26 | Upper Wellington | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal via Rymal | Lime Ridge Mall via Rymal | |
27 | Upper James | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Mountain Transit Centre Park & Ride | |
33 | Sanatorium | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | Mohawk & Scenic Loop | Routing through Chedoke Arena cancelled 2014. Serves new Mohawk College Terminal |
34 | Upper Paradise | Downtown (MAIN at MACNAB) | Glancaster Loop | |
34A | Upper Paradise | Downtown (Main & MacNab) | Upper Horning Loop | |
35 | College | Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | St. Elizabeth Village Loop | Alternating routing via Garth and via Upper James. Serves new Mohawk College Terminal |
41 | Mohawk | Meadowlands | Gage & Industrial | Does not serve Downtown. Alternating Routing via Ottawa & Kenilworth. Services Lime Ridge Mall. No longer services Chedoke Hospital as of September 2023 |
42 | Mohawk East | Lime Ridge Mall | Mohawk 4 Ice Centre | Does not serve Downtown. Formerly the Mohawk East Extra. Extension on trial until September 2017. Daily Service. |
43 | Stone Church | Meadowlands | HIGHLAND at SALTFLEET SCHOOL | 7-day a week service from 6AM–midnight began Aug. 31, 2014. [30] Does not serve Downtown. Services Lime Ridge Mall Interlined with 16 Ancaster (Weekdays & Saturdays Only) |
44 | Rymal | Confederation GO Station | Ancaster Business Park/Glancaster Loop (Weekends) | Does not serve Downtown. |
51 | University | Hamilton GO Centre via McMaster University | West Hamilton Loop via McMaster University | Route 51 is currently on hiatus due to the reduction in students attending in-class instruction at McMaster University. Students destined to McMaster University can take the 1A-KING or 5-DELAWARE (5C-WEST HAMILTON) routes to get to the campus. In addition, routes 10-B LINE EXPRESS and 5-DELAWARE (52-DUNDAS) will take students to the south side of campus on Main Street West. [31] |
52A | Dundas Local | York & Watson's Loop | Pleasant & Orchard | Weekday peak hour service only. Does not serve Downtown. |
55 | Stoney Creek Central | Eastgate Square | Hwy 8 & Jones | Via Queenston & Barton. Does not serve Downtown. |
55 | Stoney Creek Central | Eastgate Square | 55A Levi Loop | Does not serve Downtown. |
56 | Centennial | Eastgate Square | Confederation Park via Walmart | Weekend and holiday service only. Service via Confederation Plaza (Walmart Supercentre). Also serves Confederation Park during the summer. Does not serve Downtown. |
58 | Stoney Creek Local | Eastgate Square | Hwy 8 & Jones | Route has been retired as of September 2023 |
99 | Waterfront Shuttle | Downtown (King opp. Summer's Lane) | Pier 8 (Discovery Drive) | Seven-day summer-only service. |
Introduced in 1998 as a two-year pilot project, Trans-Cab is a shared-ride taxi service between HSR and specific local taxi providers, currently offered in portions of Glanbrook and Stoney Creek.
Accessible Transportation Services (ATS) is the section that administers a variety of accessible services on behalf of the City
In 2017, HSR launched a program called "Mountain Climber," that allows cyclists ride on the bus to get up and down Hamilton Mountain for free. [32] This program was made permanent in 2018 and has since been expanded to include more stops. [33]
Participating bus stops are located along major roads at the base and crest of the escarpment. People with bicycles load them onto the bus' front rack, [34] and when boarding, tell the bus operator they are riding under Mountain Climber for free. [35] The routes are very limited in length, and provide a safe way for cyclists to ascend or descend the mountain, in order to encourage active transportation. [36]
Metrolinx, the provincial public transit agency, is planning a 14-kilometre (8.7 mi) light rail line along the Main/King corridor from McMaster University to Eastgate Square. The line will have 17 stops. [37] Previously known as the B-Line, it is one of five BRT/LRT lines originating from the BLAST network proposal, and the only one in active planning. [38] As of 2023 [update] , the operator of the future line is unknown and might not be HSR. For example, Keolis will operate and maintain the Hurontario LRT, another Metrolinx project, even though the local public transit operator in Mississauga is MiWay. [39]
In 2023, a concept plan to prepare the bus routes in the city for the addition of the Hamilton LRT project was presented. [40] This plan was intended to feed LRT ridership, and the HSR will use this operations plan when the LRT is operational. [41]
HSR routes from downtown to the Mountain (21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 33, and 35) currently use the Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal (former MacNab Transit Terminal), while several lower city routes (4, 6, 7, 8 and 9) have an on-street terminal layover at the intersection of Main and James Streets. Route 34 has a layover location on Main at MacNab.
On September 4, 2022, the City of Hamilton renamed the MacNab Transit Terminal to Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal to honour an employee of the HSR that retired as a general manager and died at the age of 100. The terminal is located at 1 MacNab Street South and was opened in 2011. It serves 10 bus routes with 7,250 weekly arrivals and departures in 2022. The wheelchair accessible terminal has heated platforms, bus shelters, public washrooms and a green roof. [42] [43]
HSR connects with GO Transit at Hamilton GO Centre, which serves as the terminus for four HSR routes (1, 2, 3, and 51). The station, located at 36 Hunter Street East, a few blocks south of King and James, is the terminus of the Lakeshore West railway line and express Highway 407 and Queen Elizabeth Way GO Buses. It is also the former home of the main Greyhound Lines bus stop, prior to Greyhound Canada's Canada-wide closure in 2021. [44] It is also the former Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway (TH&B) passenger station, and there is a small museum above the public concourse. HSR routes 2 and 4 also connect with GO at Barton Street & Nash Road in East Hamilton, where a GO bus travels between there and the Burlington GO Station.
At the Mountain Transit Centre transfer point (served by route 27) and a contract with Blue Line Taxi, the HSR also connects with other areas in the northwest portion of the former Glanbrook.
In addition, the HSR is connected with Burlington Transit, as one route (11 Parkdale) travels into Burlington via Burlington Beach, 18 Waterdown connects with BT at Aldershot GO Station, and BT Route 1 enters downtown Hamilton from Plains Road West. Also '9 Rock Gardens' travels into Burlington going into the Royal Botanical Gardens during the summer months.
Location | Routes |
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Bell Manor Loop | 2, 55A |
Eastgate Transit Terminal | 1, 10, 44, 55/55A, 56, 58 |
Frank A. Cooke Transit Terminal | 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 33, 35 |
Glancaster Loop | 34, 44 |
Hillcrest Loop | 7 |
Lakeland Loop | 56 |
Levi Loop | 55A Stoney Creek Central Terminus. Also a Trans-Cab Transfer Point |
Lime Ridge Transit Terminal | 25, 26, 41/41A, 42, 43 |
McMaster University | 1A, 5A/5C, 51 run through or terminate at the university 5B/5E, 10, 52 pass nearby on Main Street GO Transit bus service to & from Burlington GO Station |
Meadowlands | 5A/5C, 16, 41, 43 |
Princess Point Loop | 6 |
Mohawk College Transit Terminal | 20, 21, 33, 35 [45] |
Scenic & Lavender Loop | 33 |
Strathcona & Lamoreaux | 8 |
Upper Horning Loop | 34A |
West Hamilton Loop | 51 |
HSR fares can be paid with exact cash (no change given), Presto card or the mobile Presto e-tickets app. [46] Starting in 2023, riders could tap their credit or debit card on the Presto reader to pay the cash fare amount. [47]
A single-ride fare provides a 2 hour transfer window which allows customers to get on and off HSR buses as many times as they want on a single fare.
Children ages 0 to 5 years old can ride fare-free when travelling with an accompanying paying adult. Children ages 6 to 12 and Hamilton senior residents aged 80 and over can ride fare-free only when travelling with a valid Presto card, for those who do not have a Presto card, they are required to pay a regular fare. [48]
HSR bus drivers and mechanics (800 employees as of 2019) are members of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107. [49] The local does not represent those working on city's paratransit service, Disabled and Aged Regional Transportation System (DARTS), which is a separate, non-profit charitable organization that contracts with HSR. [50]
After regular collective bargaining talks broke down, ATU Local 107 workers went on strike at 12 am on November 9, 2023. [51] The union cited wage increases that did not keep up with the rate of inflation in a handout given to passengers in the days proceeding the job action. [52] The strike came as the city was preparing and hosting festivities for the 110th Grey Cup, for which HSR had been planning to run a shuttle service for fans. [53] The transit union said that any shuttle service would be considered as using scab labour and would be targeted by picket lines. [53] In the early hours of November 16, Mayor Andrea Horwath announced that a deal had been made and that there would be a return to regular service on November 17, 2023. [54] The new 4-year contract was ratified by Local 107 members on November 23 with 81% voting in favour [55] of the deal that in lieu of a changed wage offer, gave transit workers a one-time payment as well as benefit increases. [56]
The Boston-area trolleybus system formed part of the public transportation network serving Greater Boston in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. It opened on April 11, 1936, with a large network operating for the next quarter-century. Measured by fleet size, the Boston-area system was the second-largest trolleybus system in the United States at its peak, with only the Chicago system having more trolleybuses than Boston's 463. After 1963, the only remaining portion was a four-route cluster operating from the Harvard bus tunnel at Harvard station, running through Cambridge, Belmont, and Watertown. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority took over the routes in 1964.
As with many large cities, a large number of Boston-area streetcar lines once existed, and many continued operating into the 1950s. However, only a few now remain, namely the four branches of the Green Line and the Ashmont–Mattapan High-Speed Line, with only one running regular service on an undivided street.
Hamilton GO Centre is a commuter rail station and bus terminal in downtown Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. As the terminal stop for evening rush-hour Lakeshore West line trains, it is a major hub for GO Transit bus and train services.
The Shore Line Trolley Museum is a trolley museum located in East Haven, Connecticut. Incorporated in 1945, it is the oldest continuously operating trolley museum in the United States. The museum includes exhibits on trolley history in the visitors' center and offers rides on restored trolleys along its 1.5 mi (2.4 km) track as the Branford Electric Railway. In addition to trolleys, the museum also operates restored subway cars, a small number of both trolleybuses and conventional buses.
The Kitchener Public Utilities Commission was the municipal public utilities commission for the city of Kitchener, Ontario, Canada, as well as the surrounding area. Its former office in downtown Kitchener, constructed in 1931 in Beaux-Arts style, has been designated under the Ontario Heritage Act as both historically and architecturally significant, and is one of the Kitchener's few surviving historic public buildings.
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Route 29 is a former streetcar and trackless trolley line and current bus route, operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) in South Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The line runs between the Gray's Ferry neighborhood and the vicinity of Pier 70 along the Delaware River.
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The Seattle trolleybus system forms part of the public transportation network in the city of Seattle, Washington, operated by King County Metro. Originally opened on April 28, 1940, the network consists of 15 routes, with 174 trolleybuses operating on 68 miles (109 km) of two-way parallel overhead lines. As of the second quarter of 2024, the system carries riders on an average of 39,900 trips per weekday, comprising about 18 percent of King County Metro's total daily ridership.
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The Coimbra trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network in the city of Coimbra, Portugal. Opened in 1947, it supplemented, and then eventually replaced, the Coimbra tramway network. Service has been temporarily suspended since March 2021 and is not expected to resume before late 2024.
The Philadelphia trolleybus system forms part of the public transportation network serving Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, United States. It opened on October 14, 1923, and is now the second-longest-lived trolleybus system in the world. One of only four such systems currently operating in the U.S., it presently comprises three lines and is operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA), with a fleet of 38 trolleybuses, or trackless trolleys as SEPTA calls them. The three surviving routes serve North and Northeast Philadelphia and connect with SEPTA's Market–Frankford rapid transit line.
The Edmonton trolley bus system formed part of the public transport network in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada between 1939 and 2009. Operated by Edmonton Transit System (ETS), the system had, at its peak, a fleet of 137 trolley buses, and a total route length of 127 km (79 mi).
30 Stockton is a trolleybus line operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway. The line is notable for being the slowest trolleybus route in the city of San Francisco because it travels through the densely populated neighborhood of Chinatown.
33 Ashbury/18th Street is a trolleybus line operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway. The route is descendant from the first trolleybus service to open in San Francisco, California, United States.
3 Jackson is a suspended trolleybus line operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway.
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(help)15. Enbridge Gas RNG Bus Trial: http://enbridgegas.mediaroom.com/2021-03-04-Enbridge-Gas-Partners-with-City-of-Hamilton-to-Fuel-Ontarios-First-Carbon-Negative-Bus