List of bus rapid transit systems

BRT systems by country

This is a list of bus rapid transit (BRT) systems which are in operation or under construction. The term "BRT" has been applied to a wide range of bus services. In 2012, the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) published a BRT Standard to make it easier to standardize and compare bus services.

Blue articulated bus at a station
Marechal Floriano BRT station on Curitiba's RIT Green Line (Linha Verde)
Glider (Belfast) bus, Fisherwick Place

Africa

Egypt

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  Egypt
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Cairo (Still under construction) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Kenya

BRT systems in  Kenya
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Nairobi MRTS BRT July 2022 1 - 20 km (12 mi) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]

Morocco

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  Morocco
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Marrakesh BRT Marrakesh 29 September 2017 1 8 8 km (5.0 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Casablanca Casablanca Busway 1 March 2024 2 42 24.5 km (15.2 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Agadir (Still under construction) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Nigeria

  • The Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) BRT corridor is about 22 kilometres long.[2] Two operators, NURTW Cooperative and the state-owned Lagos BRT, contributed about 180 high-capacity buses to the first phase. It is the world's most economical BRT, costing $1.6 million per km for the 22-km route.[citation needed] The first phase cost N4.5 billion (about US$35 million) and included elevated segregation barriers, road repairs on bus and service lanes, de-silting of blocked drainage channels, and bus stops. Included in this group includes the Oshodi - Abule-Egba BRT Lane and many others.
BRT systems in  Nigeria
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Lagos Lagos Bus Rapid Transit System 17 March 2008 1 28 22 km (14 mi) The Nigerian government is building a BRT system for the Lagos Metropolitan Area, and the project's first phase has been completed.[3] The first phase, from mile 12 through Ikorodu Road and Funsho Williams Avenue to CMS. Not BRT certified in 2016.[1]

Senegal

  • The Dakar, ongoing construction since 2019, delivery planned by the end of 2023. It will work together with the Train Express Regional Dakar-AIBD to improve the public transportation system around and in Dakar.
BRT systems in  Senegal
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Dakar BRT Dakar[4] 2022 3 23 18.3 km (11.4 mi) eBRT using electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

South Africa

MyCiTi bus in the Foreshore, Cape Town
  • The City of Cape Town, MyCiTi system began operations in May 2010, just before the World Cup. Its first service was a shuttle from the airport to the central business district. The initial Phase 1A trunk and feeder services began operation in May 2011. The remaining Phase 1A construction was completed in 2014, and phase 1B construction was completed in 2015.[5]
  • The City of Johannesburg, Rea Vaya ("We're moving") line opened its first phase (phase 1A) to the public on 30 August 2009, and BRT expansion is under construction; stations and roadworks are mainly completed or are in the final stages. The system was partially opened for the 2010 World Cup, with the full system linking most of Johannesburg from Soweto in the south to beyond Sandton in the north. Buses include those able to use the BRT stations and general bus stops, to be feeders for the network; others are articulated, and can only use BRT stations.[6][7] Like most transport projects, the system will be implemented in phases. Phase 1 of the estimated two-billion-rand projects has run articulated right-of-way buses along dedicated median bus lanes in both directions across Johannesburg since 2010, covering almost half the city.[6] The 120-km Phase 1 route includes 150 stations, eight terminals, and six depots. Phase 1A, consisting of a 40-km route with 48 stations, was completed in April 2009 (before the FIFA Confederations Cup); Phase 1B added 86 km and 102 stations to the system before the 2010 World Cup. According to the city's website, the system is fully integrated with other transport networks. Rea Vaya will not compete with other transport systems, such as the South African Rail Commuter Corporation or the Gautrain.[8]
  • The Nelson Mandela Bay: A BRT system was implemented by Libhongolethu IPTS in the city for the 2010 World Cup.[9] Bus lanes have been built through the city, with buses built by Marcopolo.
  • The City of Tshwane, Construction began in July 2012,[10] and the system was to be operational by A Re Yeng BRT bus from five in the morning to midnight and opened in December 2014.[11]

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  South Africa
City System name Began Routes Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Cape Town MyCiTi May 2010 36 42 120 km (75 mi) Bronze BRT certified in 2022.[1]
George Go George BRT[12] August 2015 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Johannesburg Rea Vaya 30 August 2009 21 58 59 km (37 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
City of Ekurhuleni, Johannesburg Harambee BRT[13] October 2017 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Gqeberha Libhongolethu IPTS[14] 2010 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Pretoria A Re Yeng BRT[15] December 2014 7 12 14 km (8.7 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Rustenburg Yarona BRT[16] September 2022 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Polokwane Leeto La Polokwane BRT[17] March 2021 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Durban GO Durban BRT[18] (Still under construction) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Bloemfontein Hauweng IPTN 14 July 2024 3 Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Tanzania

BRT bus in Dar es Salaam
  • The Construction of the first phase was completed in December 2015 at a total cost of €134 million funded by the African Development Bank, World Bank and the Government of Tanzania.[19]
BRT systems in  Tanzania
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Dar es Salaam UDART 10 May 2016 1 29 21.1 km (13.1 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Asia

Azerbaijan

Baku Bus

BakuBus is a company in the capital of Azerbaijan providing Baku city with an upgraded bus network. BakuBus LLC was founded on April 3, 2014, to provide passenger transport services in Baku city.

Afghanistan

Bangladesh

China

  • Passengers and a bus at a station
    Guangzhou BRT
  • Articulated bus
    Beijing BRT Line 1; the doors are on the left side because the line uses center-island platforms on most of its route.
  • Blue articulated bus at a station
    Xiamen BRT

More than 30 projects are being implemented or studied in China's large cities. In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction. Kunming developed the country's first BRT system in 1999.[20]

BRT systems in  China
City System name Chinese name Began Corridors Stations[a] Length (km)[b] Notes
Hangzhou Hangzhou BRT 杭州BRT 2006 2 50 55.4
Beijing Beijing BRT 北京BRT 2004 4 60 54
Kunming Kunming BRT 昆明BRT 1999 5 63 46
Changzhou Changzhou BRT 常州BRT 2008 2 51 44
Xiamen Xiamen BRT 厦门BRT 2008 3 31 40 [c]
Jinan Jinan BRT 济南BRT 2008 6 46 56
Zaozhuang Zaozhuang BRT 枣庄BRT 2010 2 49 62
Zhengzhou Zhengzhou BRT 郑州BRT 2009 5 97 70
Guangzhou Guangzhou BRT 广州BRT 2010 1 26 22
Suzhou Suzhou BRT 苏州BRT 2008 5 106 95
Dalian Dalian BRT 大连BRT 2008 1 13 13
Hefei Hefei BRT 合肥BRT 2010 4 43 42
Yancheng Yancheng BRT 盐城BRT 2010 2[21] 33 33
Ürümqi Ürümqi BRT 乌鲁木齐BRT 2011 4 66 42.2
Changde Changde BRT 常德BRT 2012 1 25 20.9
Lianyungang Lianyungang BRT 连云港BRT 2012 1 29 34
Lanzhou Lanzhou BRT 兰州BRT 2012 1 15 9.1
Yinchuan Yinchuan BRT 银川BRT 2012 1 22 21.2 [22][23]
Chengdu Chengdu BRT 成都BRT 2013 3 38 40.1
Nanchang Nanchang BRT 南昌BRT
Zhongshan Zhongshan BRT 中山BRT 2014 1 13 13 [24]
Yichang Yichang BRT 宜昌BRT 2015 1 22 23
Wenzhou Wenzhou BRT 温州BRT 2015 1 17 13 [25]
Wuhan Wuhan BRT 武汉BRT 2016 1 14 13.6 [26]
Shanghai Yan'an Road Medium Capacity Bus Transit System 延安路中运量公交 2017 1 25 17.5 eBRT using trolleybuses[27]
Guiyang Guiyang BRT 贵阳BRT 2017 1 24 29 [28]
Hohhot Hohhot BRT 呼和浩特BRT 2017 1 40 47 [29]
Yiwu Yiwu BRT 义乌 BRT 2017 1 17 12.1 [30]
Linyi Linyi BRT 临沂 BRT 2017 1 14 12.3 [31]
Nanning Nanning BRT 南宁BRT 2017 2 33 27 [32][33]
Shanghai Fengpu Express 奉浦快线 2018 1 12 20.6 [34][35]
Fuzhou (Jiangxi) Fuzhou BRT 抚州BRT 2019 1 18 18.5[36][37] [38]
Zigong Zigong BRT 自贡BRT 2021 June 1 [39][40]
Shenzhen Shenzhen BRT 深圳BRT
Wuxi Wuxi BRT 无锡BRT
Xi'an Xi'an BRT 西安BRT
Shenyang Shenyang BRT 沈阳BRT
Shijiazhuang Shijiazhuang BRT 石家庄BRT
Harbin Harbin BRT 哈尔滨BRT
  1. ^ Stations connected by transfers are counted as one station, unless otherwise noted.
  2. ^ Corridor length; lines which sharing the same corridor are counted once.
  3. ^ Portions (BRT 1 33.4 km, BRT 1 Interchange 18.7 km and BRT 2 15.3 km) are on dedicated, elevated roads.

Georgia

India

Government-designated BRT systems (BRTS) with segregated lanes:[41] India is rapidly building new BRTS systems around the country. Several systems are operational while many are under construction and are also proposed.

  • White background: Operational
  • Yellow background: Under Construction
BRT systems in  India
City System name Native name Acronym Began Main lines Stations[a] Length (km)[b] Notes
Pune Rainbow Bus Rapid Transit System पुणे BRT PNBRTS 2006 6 102 113
Ahmedabad Ahmedabad BRTS અમદાવાદ BRT AHMDBRTS 2009 14 150 89
Indore Indore Bus Rapid Transit System इंदौर BRTS INDBRTS 2013 10 - 12.046
Rajkot Rajkot Bus Rapid Transit System રાજકોટ BRT RAJBRTS 2008 1 18 10.5
Surat Surat Bus Rapid Transit System સુરત BRT SURBRTS 2013 15 148 114
Bhopal Bhopal Bus Rapid Transit System भोपाल BRTS BHPBRTS 2006 10 230 186
Jaipur Jaipur Bus Rapid Transit System जयपुर BRTS JAIBRTS 2010 - - -
Mumbai Mumbai Bus Rapid Transit System मुंबई BRTS Planned - 1(Planned) - -
Bhubaneshwar Bhubaneswar Bus Rapid Transit System ଭୁବନେଶ୍ୱର BRTS - 2019 2 - -
Hyderabad Hyderabad Bus Rapid Transit System హైదరాబాద్ BRTS SZBRT - 2 - -
Jodhpur Jodhpur Bus Rapid Transit System जोधपुर BRTS JodhpurBRTS 2016 1 6 10
Amritsar Amritsar Bus Rapid Transit System ਅੰਮ੍ਰਿਤਸਰ BRTS AMRSTRBRTS 2018 7 84 31
Vijayawada Vijayawada Bus Rapid Transit System విజయవాడ BRT VJWDABRTS - 6 - -
Hubli-Dharwad Hubli-Dharwad Bus Rapid Transit System ಚಿಗರಿ HDBRTS 1 November 2018 6 33 70
Raipur-Naya Raipur Raipur and Naya Raipur Bus Rapid Transit System रायपुर-नया रायपुर BRTS 2016 2 10 60
Visakhapatnam Visakhapatnam Bus Rapid Transit System విశాఖపట్నం BRTS 2016 2 42

Indonesia

Blue and White bus
TransJakarta Scania K310IB 6x2 serving Corridor 2 towards Harmoni
Suroboyo Bus Mercedes-Benz O500U 1726 LE serving Corridor R5
  • TransJakarta is the longest BRT network in the world (251.2 km),[42] carries more than 1 million passengers daily[43] with a fleet of over 3,900 buses. Despite being branded as BRT systems, practically all bus networks in Indonesia except for TransJakarta does not have right of way.[44]
BRT systems in  Indonesia
City System name Began Main lines Main Stations[c] Length (km)[d] Passengers (daily) Source
Jakarta TransJakarta 15 January 2004 13 244 251.2 1,006,579 [42][45][43]
Batam Trans Metro Batam 24 September 2004 8 39 [46]
Yogyakarta Trans Jogja 17 February 2008 11 267 20,000 [47][48]
Pekanbaru Trans Metro Pekanbaru (id) 18 June 2009 10 80 [49]
Bandung Trans Metro Bandung (id) 23 September 2009 5 52 [50]
Palembang Trans Musi (id) January 2010 6 129 156 22,000 [51]
Surakarta Batik Solo Trans 1 September 2010 8 72 10,000 [52][53]
Semarang Trans Semarang 1 October 2010 8 35 33,000 [54][55][56]
Denpasar metropolitan area Trans Sarbagita 18 August 2011 4 31 42 5,000 [57][58]
Bandar Lampung Trans Bandar Lampung (id) 14 November 2011 3 30 [59]
Padang Trans Padang (id) January 2014 2 26 42 10,000 [60][61][62]
Makassar metropolitan area Trans Mamminasata (id) March 2014 11 154 [63]
Banda Aceh Trans Koetaradja (id) 2 May 2016 5 90 15,342 [64][65]
Bali Trans Metro Dewata (id) 7 September 2020 4 30 [66][67]
Banjarmasin BRT Banjarbakula 14 August 2019 3 37+ [68]
Surabaya Trans Semanggi Suroboyo 29 December 2021 6 [69]
Surabaya Suroboyo Bus 7 April 2018 4 4,432

Iran

Israel

Japan

Bus with a driver on a guideway
Yutorīto Line

Jordan

Amman BRT in Amman.

Kazakhstan

  • Almaty: Almaty Bus Rapid Transit project started in 2014, now operational, 102 km under construction or approved.[70] The first post-Soviet BRT.

Malaysia

Green-and-silver bus
RapidKL BYD K9 electric bus on an elevated guideway, separate from road traffic

Pakistan

Two red articulated buses
Rawalpindi-Islamabad Metrobus in Islamabad
TransPeshawar Buses
BRT systems in  Pakistan
City System name Region Opening Year Length (km) No of Stations[Note 1] BRT certified
Lahore Lahore Metrobus[71][72] Punjab 2013 27 27 BRT certified (2014)[1]
Rawalpindi and Islamabad Rawalpindi-Islamabad Metrobus[71][73][74][75][76] Punjab and ICT 2015 83.6 52 Bronze BRT Certified (2014)[1]
Multan Multan Metrobus[77][72][78][79] Punjab 2017 18.5 21 Not BRT Certified (2022)[1]
Peshawar TransPeshawar[80][81][82] Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 2020 27 32 Gold BRT Certified (2016)[1]
Karachi Karachi Breeze[83][84] Sindh 2021 21 22 Not BRT Certified (2022)[1]

Philippines

South Korea

Orange-and-white bus
Sejong BRT bus near Government Complex
  • Goyang-Susaek BRT: Opened in April 2010.[86] First BRT in South Korea with bus priority signal system.
  • Hanam-Cheonho BRT: Opened in March 2011.[87]
  • Sejong: Opened in September 2012.
  • Cheongna International City-Gangseo BRT: Opened in July 2013.[88]
  • Daejeon-Osong BRT: Opened July 20, 2016, utilizing Sejong dedicated corridor.

Taiwan

Center-running bus lane and platform in Taipei
  • Taipei has a network of 60 kilometers of dedicated bus lanes, constructed starting in 1996, which include many BRT features, such as raised station platforms. They are used by the Taipei Joint Bus System, including a system of 16 trunk lines that aim to provide "MRT-like" service along arterial roads, with peak headways of four to six minutes.
Bus pulling into a stop
Chiayi BRT

Thailand

Modern green-and-yellow bus
Bangkok BRT
  • Bangkok: The Bangkok BRT runs 16.5 kilometres from Sathon to Ratchapruek. The route begins at Sathon and runs along Narathiwat Ratchanakharin Road, turns right at Rama III Road, crosses the Chao Phraya River on the Rama III Bridge and follows Ratchadaphisek Road before turning right at Ratchahruek Road. At the Sathon-Narathiwat Ratchanakharin intersection, a walkway connects BRT Sathon and the BTS Chong Nonsi station. The system began operating on 29 May 2010. Bronze BRT certified in 2014.[1]

Turkey

  • Istanbul: Metrobus, between Tuyap and Söğütlüçeşme, is Turkey's first full-service bus rapid transit system. It has a fully separated right-of-way (except crossing the Bosphorus Bridge) and off-bus fare collection. Silver BRT certified in 2014.[1]
  • Malatya: Trambus is a mixed-traffic BRT system with bi-articulated trolleybuses. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Vietnam

Green bus on a rainy day
Hanoi BRT 01 (Line 99) bus at the Kim Ma terminal
  • Hanoi: The 14.7-km Hanoi BRT system runs from the downtown Kim Mã terminal to the Yên Nghĩa terminal in Hanoi's southern suburbs. The line opened on 31 December 2016 with a one-month free trial. The system is a component of the Hanoi Urban Transport Development Project, which was approved by the Hanoi People's Committee in Decision 1837/QĐ-UBND on May 10, 2007. The World Bank-funded ODA project is a step in improving the city's urban transport network and increasing public-transport capacity. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Europe

Austria

  • Vienna's entire bus system includes many BRT features such as stop distancing, place name signs on all bus stop signs, all door boarding and an entirely proof of payment, off-board fare collection system. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Belgium

Denmark

  • The city of Aalborg launch it "Plusbus" BRT it is a 12 km route from the eastern to the western most part of the city - 1 km yet to be finalized. It features bus exclusive lanes, all electric busses, each 25 meters long and with room for 153 passengers, and priority at all intersections on the route.[90]
BRT systems in  Denmark
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Aalborg Plusbus [91] 23 September 2023 2 22 12 km (7.5 mi) eBRT using electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Finland

  • Helsinki: Bussi-Jokeri BRT Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Tampere: BRT in their city Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Turku: Have extensive bus-lane networks in their city centers.[92] None is BRT certified in 2022.[1]

France

Light-blue articulated bus
Évéole bus in Douai
  • Belfort: BHNS Optymo. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Cannes: Le Palm Express BRT of Cannes, Mandelieu-la-Napoule and Le Cannet Line 1. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Chalon-sur-Saône: BRT Flash. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Clermont-Ferrand: T2C lines B and C. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Dijon: BRT Lianes. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Douai: Évéole, Le Tram. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Évry: has a segregated, elevated system. Tice, France's first line (1975).[93] Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Île-de-France (Greater Paris): Trans-Val-de-Marne (TVM), line 393 and T Zen 1. Silver BRT certified in 2014.[1]
  • La Rochelle: ILLICO Line. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Lille: Liane network of Lille Métropole. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Lorient: BRT Triskell, BHLS Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Lyon: C-lignes - lines C1, C2 and C3. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Marseille: Five TGB lines . Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Martinique: TCSP [fr]. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Maubeuge: BHLS - Viavil, BusWay lines of the du Stibus network. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Metz: BRT Mettis. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Nancy, France: Trolleybus BRT (Under Construction). Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Nantes: Nantes Busway. Bronze BRT certified in 2013.[1]
  • Nîmes: Line T1, Tango+. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Rennes: Chronostar line 4. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Rouen: Three TEOR lines. Silver BRT certified in 2014.[1]
  • Strasbourg: Ligne G du BHNS de Strasbourg (Gare Centrale–Espace Européen de l'Entreprise). Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Saint-Nazaire: Hélyce. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Sophia-Antipolis: Bus-Tram. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Toulouse: Toulouse BSP BRT. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Tours: Line 2 Tempo. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Le Mans: Tempo. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Paris

  • Créteil Tvm (Trans-Val-de-Marne), operated by RATP, is a BRT system linking the RER A, B, C, D, Metro line 8 and tramway line T7 in Paris' southern suburbs. It was the second BRT system implemented in France during the 1980s; in Saint-Maur-des-Fossés, for political reasons, there are no bus lanes through the conservative city. It has been BRT certified with Silver Excellence in 2014.[1]
  • Créteil 393 (Ligne de bus RATP 393 [fr]) also operated by RATP, is an 11-km line which opened in 2011. Like the TVM, the line links the southern Paris suburbs in the département of Val de Marne. Line 393 shares the bus lane and stations with TVM for five kilometres, and serves Metro line 8 and recently developed districts.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Corbeil-Essonnes TZen 1 (Ligne 1 du T Zen [fr]) opened in 2011, connecting two branches of the RER D and providing public transport to Sénart's business and commercial parks.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Germany

  • Essen: Guided buses use a busway in the center of a motorway. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Oberhausen: Nahverkehr in Oberhausen (Under Construction) BRT certified in 2024.[1]

Italy

Van Hool ExquiCity 18 trolleybus on Rimini, Metromare

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  Italy
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Rimini and Riccione Metromare 23 November 2019 1 17 9.8 km (6.1 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Taranto Linee della rete BRT (Embracing the concept of the eBRT electric busses system under construction) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Genoa (4 Assi di Forza - Superbus - project of 4 BHNS lines, scheduled to enter service between 2024 and 2026 under construction) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Netherlands

Red articulated bus at a station
Zuidtangent, Hoofddorp
  • Almere: All city bus lines, Keolis allGo. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Eindhoven: Bravo. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Schiphol: R-net lines 300 and 397 . Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Utrecht: Line 28 to the De Uithof university campus and Vleuten. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Enschede: Agglonet. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Norway

  • Rogaland: Bussveien is an under-construction (planned finished phase one: 2026) bus rapid transit system planned to be the longest in Europe (50 km, 80% dedicated right of way). Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Poland

  • Kraków: There is a bus rapid transit system shared with trams, consisting of two sections, one at Monte Cassino Street and another one at Grzegórzki Street, Warsaw Uprisers' Avenue and in the north part of Old Town ring, as well as bus lanes on the Three Wisemen Avenues. Not BRT certified in 2024.

Portugal

  • Coimbra: Metro Mondego - Portugal's first Bus Rapid Transit system was announced in 2020 and is expected to launch by the end of 2025. With an extension of 42 km, 42 stations, 35 vehicles, and initially connecting 3 municipalities. (To be completed by 2025, with the first phase operational by the end of 2024. Construction is currently underway.) [94] Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
  • Porto: A Bus Rapid Transit System will be built between Boa Vista and Praça do Império. It will be 8 kilometres long and is scheduled to be completed by the last quarter of 2023.[95] It plans to have a fleet of 8 hydrogen powered articulated buses.[96] Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
  • Braga: Braga BRT (Under construction, to be completed by 2025) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
  • Loulé - Faro - Olhão (Under construction, to be completed by 2029) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]

Spain

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  Spain
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Barcelona Red Ortogonal de Autobuses de Barcelona(es)[97] 1 October 2012 28 - - eBRT electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Castellón de la Plana TRAM de Castellón(es) 25 June 2008 1 19 8 km (5.0 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Granada Granada LAC 29 June 2014 1 19 8.4 km (5.2 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria MetroGuagua(es) (expected for 2027) 12 20 11.7 km (7.3 mi) (Embracing the concept of the eBRT electric busses system under construction) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
Madrid EMT de Madrid[98][99] May 2023 8 31 km (19 mi) eBRT using electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Murcia Tranvibus de Murcie[100] - 3 - 20.84 km (12.95 mi) eBRT using electric busses Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
Seville Tranvibus de Séville[101] 2025 2 17 12.1 km (7.5 mi) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
Pamplona Red Troncal

Sweden

A modern bi-articulated bus in Malmö, Sweden
  • Gothenburg: Stombussar [sv] Four bus lines (16-19) have frequent service. Routes usually share the right-of-way with trams or have a busway.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Stockholm: Blåbussar [sv] (Blue buses). Five bus lines (1-4, 6) run frequently and have a higher priority than other buses. The buses are blue; other buses are red. Differences between blue and red buses are very slight however.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Malmö: Huvudlinjer (main lines) Eight lines (1-8), which run every seven or eight minutes on weekdays.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Jönköping: Citybussarna [sv] Three lines (1-3), which usually run about every 10 minutes.. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Örebro: Stombussar [sv]. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
  • Linköping: Stomlinjer [sv]. Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Switzerland

  • Zurich: VBZ Zurich line 1 has 27 Stations and Corridor length 11(km) (running ways) of line 31.Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Turkey

  • (See also: Asia/Turkey section)

United Kingdom

Van Hool Exqui.City 18 bus on route G2 in the Titanic Quarter, Belfast, N. Ireland
BRT systems in  United Kingdom
Location Description BRT certified
in 2022?
Belfast Glider is a bus rapid transit system operating on a 15.2 mile (24.5 km) route. Service G1 serves east–west and service G2 serves Titanic Quarter. It opened in September 2018. No[1]
Bradford 1 mile (2 km) of guided busway and a further 0.6 miles (1 km) of unguided bus lanes on Manchester Road to the city centre.
Bristol MetroBus is a three-line bus rapid transit network which opened in stages from 2018 to 2019; with a section of guided busway in Ashton Gate and a bus-only exit and bridge on the M32 motorway No[1]
Cambridgeshire guided busway, opened in 2011, runs north-west from Milton Road to St Ives and south from the station to the Trumpington park and ride. Yes, Bronze (2013)[1]
Crawley Fastway. No[1]
Hampshire South East Hampshire Bus Rapit Transit between Gosport and Fareham. A 2.8-mile (4.5 km) bus-only road along the former Fareham–Gosport line has been opened from Titchborne Way in Gosport to Redlands Lane in Fareham as phase one of a larger scheme. Operated by First Hampshire & Dorset as Eclipse. No[1]
Leeds Guided busway along York Road (the A64) No[1]
London East London Transit, a bus rapid transit system consisting of three routes. No[1]
Luton The Luton to Dunstable Busway, running between Luton Airport and Houghton Regis via Dunstable following the Dunstable branch line, which closed in 1989, running parallel to the A505 (Dunstable Road) and A5065 (Hatters Way). It runs for 6.1 miles, of which 4.8 is guided track with a maximum speed of 50 mph. The £91 million scheme opened on 25 September 2013. No[1]
Manchester Leigh-Salford-Manchester Bus Rapid Transit, from Leigh and Atherton to Manchester via Tyldesley and Ellenbrook. The 29-stop scheme totals 14 miles (22 km) and uses part of a former railway line to form a 4 miles (7 km) guided busway with a pedestrian and cycle lane and bridleway. It then joins the East Lancashire Road in a dedicated bus lane.[102] No[1]
Runcorn The Runcorn Busway, opened in 1971, was the first BRT system in the world and runs for 22 kilometres (14 mi) in a figure of 8 across the town.[103][104] No[1]
Swansea Swansea FTR Metro – partially segregated, specialised BRT vehicles, on-board payment to customer-care attendant, runs every 15 minutes from 7 am to 7 pm (a conventional bus at other times). No[1]

North America

Canada

Red bus at a station
The Ottawa Transitway, one of North America's largest BRT systems
R4 41st Ave departing UBC
Blue bus at a station
YRT's Viva bus in York Region, north of Toronto
  • Brampton, Ontario: Brampton Transit's Züm has a pay-on-board system, similar to its local Brampton Transit counterpart.[105]
  • Calgary, Alberta: Calgary Transit's MAX System and BRT System make up their network of rapid transit along with their light rail.
  • Durham Region, Ontario (suburban Toronto): Durham Region Transit's DRT Pulse
  • Gatineau, Quebec: Société de transport de l'Outaouais's Rapibus
  • Halifax, Nova Scotia: Metro Transit's MetroLink was a BRT system with three routes linking Portland Hills, Woodside and Sackville and downtown Halifax. Fares were higher than the conventional Metro Transit.
  • Kelowna, British Columbia: Kelowna Regional Transit System's RapidBus (part of BC Transit)
  • London, Ontario: London Transit's Rapid Transit will make up their network of bus rapid transit once completed.
  • Montreal, Quebec (STM BRT): The SRB (Service rapide par bus) Pie-IX is currently under construction on Pie-IX Boulevard, with dedicated right of way and station-like stops, including indoor transfer to a metro station also under construction. Other lines have preferential traffic signals and dedicated lanes.[106]
  • Mississauga, Ontario: MiWay's Mississauga Transitway
  • Ottawa: OC Transpo Transitway is one of North America's largest BRT systems, with over 200,000 passengers daily and peak capacities of 10,000 passengers per hour per direction. Most sections of the Transitway have a speed limit of 70–90 km/h (43–56 mph) between stations and 50 km/h (31 mph) in station areas. Many routes converge at the Transitway, providing frequent service.
  • Quebec City: Réseau de transport de la Capitale's Métrobus has four BRT routes throughout the city: routes 800, 801, 802, 803, 804 and 807
  • Saint John, New Brunswick: Saint John Transit's three ComeX (Community Express) routes link Grand Bay-Westfield, Rothesay, Quispamsis and Hampton to uptown Saint John. The fare is higher than the conventional Saint John Transit.
  • Saskatoon: Saskatoon Transit had four DART (Direct Access Rapid Transit) routes which connected downtown Saskatoon, Confederation Mall, The Centre, the University of Saskatchewan, The Mall at Lawson Heights, University Heights Suburban Centre and the Saskatchewan Polytechnical Institute campus. The service was expanded to a greater set of suburban connector routes, but rebranded into STS's regularly scheduled service. (e.g. 81, 82, 83, 84, and 86 serving outgoing routes, and are all consolidated as 8 when returning to the downtown terminal after serving their respective neighbourhoods.)
  • Toronto: Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) formerly operated the BRT route, 196 York University Rocket on the York University Busway. Although it has been successful, the TTC planned to close the BRT route once the extension to Line 1 of the Toronto subway was completed.[107] Following completion of the subway extension, the small portion near York University was closed and turned back to the university, whereas the just under 2 km section between Finch West station and Dufferin Street remains in operation. The busway is still used by a handful of routes. Elsewhere, dedicated bus lanes are starting to be installed on city roadways, starting with Eglinton Avenue East, Kingston Road and Morningside Avenue in 2020. Jane Street is being planned through 2021, with three additional corridors (Dufferin, Steeles West and Finch East) to be designed afterwards. A sixth corridor (Lawrence East) is in consideration.[108]
  • Vancouver: TransLink's RapidBus started in 2020 as a successor to its B-Lines, with more passenger features and amenities. The 99 B-Line is the last remaining B-Line route and has been successful, but TransLink estimates that its SkyTrain costs about $0.75 per ride compared to $1.04-$2.22 for its BRT routes. Two B-Line routes have been replaced by rapid-transit lines; the 98 B-Line was replaced with the Canada Line in 2009 and the 97 B-Line by the Evergreen Extension in 2016. Another two B-Lines, the 95 and 96, were replaced with RapidBus routes, the R5 and R1 respectively. Along with the two upgraded B-Lines, there are also three other RapidBus routes, R2, the R3 and R4.
  • Victoria, British Columbia: Victoria Regional Transit System's Blink RapidBus service started in 2023, providing faster and more frequent service on an existing bus corridor using bus priority lanes.[109] The service has its own branding with larger and differently colored bus shelters.
  • Waterloo Region, Ontario: Grand River Transit's iXpress has two routes, one of which (Route 200) has been converted to the ION light rail.[110]
  • Winnipeg: Winnipeg Transit's Winnipeg RT operates similarly to Ottawa's, with dedicated lanes outside the downtown core and HOV lanes within it. The first phase connects downtown with Fort Rouge, with current routes servicing the University of Manitoba along Pembina Highway and a few suburban communities in the south-west. It will be eventually extended to Bison Drive.[111]
  • York Region, Ontario (suburban Toronto): York Region Transit's Viva began service in 2005. In response to escalating congestion on the region's roads, the region's transit plan included a provision for a BRT system along the Yonge Street and Highway 7 arterial corridors.[112] Most of the system does not contain transit-priority measures, other than an honor system of fare payment. However, construction is underway on dedicated busways, and the first segment opened on March 6, 2011.[113]

El Salvador

BRT systems in  El Salvador
City System name Began Close Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
San Salvador Sistema Integrado de Transporte del Área Metropolitana de San Salvador(es) 23 December 2013 March 2020 1 9 6 km (3.7 mi) Not BRT certified in 2014.[1]

Guatemala

Biarticulated bus
Transmetro in Guatemala City
  • Guatemala City's Transmetro has 7 lines and 107 stations, and 1 line with 14 stations under construction. The first line (Line 12) opened on February 3, 2007, and crosses Aguilar Batres Avenue from Villa Nueva to the city's downtown. The second line (Line 13) began operation on August 12, 2010, and crosses 6th and 7th Avenue in a one-way-per-avenue scheme. Lines 1, 2, 6, 7, and 18 have been added recently, and Line 5 is under construction. The line number represents the main zone each line serves (For example, most of Line 7 runs through Zone 7's neighborhoods, Line 1 runs through Zone 1, and so on).
BRT systems in  Guatemala
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Guatemala City Transmetro 3 February 2007 7 30 24 km (15 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Transurbano 3 July 2010 41 400 - Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
TuBus(es) 6 July 2023 4 - 12 km (7.5 mi) Not BRT certified in 2024.[1]
Mixco Rutas Express(es) 25 February 2017 3 - - Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Villa Nueva TransMIO(es) 20 December 2017 3 - 27 km (17 mi) Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Santa Catarina Pinula TransPinula(es) 29 January 2022 2 22 - Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

Honduras

BRT systems in  Honduras
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Tegucigalpa Metrobús Tegucigalpa(es) - 2 14 10 km (6.2 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]

Mexico

Articulated bus
Metrobús on Avenida de los Insurgentes, crossing Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City
Modern bus station
Amistad station of the SITT BRT system in Tijuana
BRT systems in  Mexico
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Mexico City Trolebús de la Ciudad de México(es) 9 March 1951 11 303 203.64 km (126.54 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Mexico City Metrobus(es) 19 June 2005 7 283 174.6 km (108.5 mi) The first line runs in dedicated lanes along Avenida Insurgentes, and there are seven lines (including one along Paseo de la Reforma).[114] Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
State of Mexico Mexibús(es) 2 October 2010 4 161 104.4 km (64.9 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
León, Guanajuato SIT Optibús(es) 28 September 2003 10 65 65.1 km (40.5 mi) [115] Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Villahermosa Sistemas Transbus Transmetropolitano(es) 1 August 2008 1 100 47.4 km (29.5 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Guadalajara, Jalisco Guadalajara Mi Macro 10 March 2009 2 69 58.2 km (36.2 mi) [116] Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Puebla - San Andrés Cholula, Puebla Red Urbana de Transporte Articulado (RUTA)(es) 16 January 2013 3 104 47.6 km (29.6 mi) [117] Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Chihuahua City Bowí Ecological Transportation System(es) 24 August 2013 1 42 20.4 km (12.7 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]

Panama

BRT systems in  Panama
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Panama City MiBus 28 December 2010 10 15 5 km (3.1 mi) Not BRT certified in 2012.[1]

Puerto Rico

BRT systems in  Puerto Rico
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
San Juan Urban Metro(es) 26 October 2012 1 - 16.5 km (10.3 mi) Not BRT certified in 2014.[1]

Trinidad and Tobago

BRT systems in  Trinidad and Tobago
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Port of Spain Public Transport Service Corporation 1 May 1965 1 - 24.9 km (15.5 mi) Not BRT certified in 2014.[1]

United States

Irisbus Civis of the MAX system in Las Vegas
Orange Line bus in the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles

Oceania

Australia

Two yellow buses
The O-Bahn Busway in Adelaide, South Australia is one of the world's longest, fastest and most heavily used guided busways.[citation needed]

New Caledonia

BRT systems in  New Caledonia
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Nouméa Néobus de Nouméa SMTU(fr)[135] 12 October 2019 1 23 13.3 km (8.3 mi) eBRT electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]

New Zealand

South America

Argentina

Metrobus del Bajo Buenos Aires
Metrobús de Buenos Aires, Estación Garrahan
BRT systems in  Argentina
City System name Lines Date opened Stations Length (km) Notes
Buenos Aires Metrobús(es) Juan B. Justo 31 May 2011 21 12.5 km (7.8 mi)
9 de Julio 24 July 2013 17 3 km (1.9 mi)
Sur 14 August 2013 37 23 km (14 mi)
25 de Mayo 5 October 2015 0 7.5 km (4.7 mi)
San Martín 27 April 2016 12 5.8 km (3.6 mi)
Norte Etapa 2 24 November 2016 21 2.8 km (1.7 mi)
del Bajo 6 June 2017 25 2.9 km (1.8 mi)
Norte 17 June 2015 39 2.7 km (1.7 mi)
Vicente López Partido 2.2 km (1.4 mi)
La Matanza Partido Metrobús La Matanza(es) 1 5 May 2017 17 16 km (9.9 mi)
Neuquén Metrobús Neuquén Under construction
Rosario Metrobús Rosario Norte 30 June 2016 6 1.8 km (1.1 mi)
Santa Fe Metrobús (Santa Fe)(es) 1 3 May 2017 15 5.7 km (3.5 mi)
Tres de Febrero Partido Metrobús Tres de Febrero 1 6 October 2017 7 3.3 km (2.1 mi)

Brazil

Two articulated buses
RIT's double articulated buses servicing tube stations in downtown Curitiba
See caption
Passengers boarding a Transoeste articulated bus at the Barra da Tijuca terminal in Rio de Janeiro
Blue articulated bus at an airport stop
Transcarioca station at Galeão International Airport in Rio de Janeiro
BRT systems in  Brazil
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Curitiba Rede Integrada de Transporte[136] 1974 6 21 81.4 km (50.6 mi) 6 Silver + 1 Gold BRT corridors certified in 2013.[1]
São Paulo São Mateus–Jabaquara Metropolitan Corridor(pt) December 1988 3 110 33 km (21 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Basic + Bronze +Silver BRT corridors certified in 2013.[1]
Expresso Tiradentes 8 March 2007 2 10 8.2 km (5.1 mi) Basic + Bronze +Silver BRT corridors certified in 2013.[1]
Rio de Janeiro TransOeste 6 June 2012 4 66 56 km (35 mi) 2 Silver +2 Gold BRT corridors certified in 2013[1]
TransCarioca 1 June 2014 2 46 39 km (24 mi) 2 Silver +2 Gold BRT corridors certified in 2014.[1]
TransOlímpica(pt) 9 July 2016 3 21 26 km (16 mi) 2 Silver +2 Gold BRT corridors certified in 2016.[1]
TransBrasil 24 February 2024 2 22 26 km (16 mi) 2 Silver +2 Gold BRT corridors certified in 2024.[1]
Goiânia Eixo Anhanguera(pt) 1976 6 19 13.5 km (8.4 mi) Bronze BRT certified in 2014.[1]
Porto Alegre Companhia Carris Porto-Alegrense 8 March 2014 11 9 55 km (34 mi) Basic + Bronze BRT corridors certified in 2016.[1]
Belo Horizonte BRT Move(pt) 8 March 2014 29 56 23.1 km (14.4 mi) 1 Silver + 1 Gold BRT corridor certified (2014).[1]
Salvador BRT Salvador(pt) 1 October 2022 3 6 6 km (3.7 mi) eBRT using electric busses Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Campinas BRT de Campinas(pt) 36.6 km (22.7 mi) (Under construction) from 2017 to 2020, it will have two main parallel lines (Campo Grande and Ouro Verde) and a secondary link (Perimetral)
Uberlândia BRT SIT(pt) 8 September 1996 174 16 16 km (9.9 mi) Silver BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Belém BRT Belém(pt) 2019 4 33 20 km (12 mi) Not BRT certified in 2019.[1]
Uberaba BRT Vetor 31 January 2015 2 10 6.4 km (4.0 mi) Silver BRT certified in 2016.[1]
Fortaleza Expresso Fortaleza(pt) 18 April 2015 2 15 17.4 km (10.8 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]
Brasília BRT Expresso DF(pt) 2 April 2014. 4 20 25.9 km (16.1 mi) Bronze BRT certified (2014).[1]
Recife BRT Via Livre(pt) 2014 2 44 49.9 km (31.0 mi) Bronze BRT certified (2014).[1]

Chile

Articulated bus pulling out of a station
Transantiago articulated buses in Santiago
BRT systems in  Chile
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Santiago Red Metropolitana de Movilidad 2007 1 29 90 km (56 mi) Bronze BRT certified (2014).[1]
Concepción SEREMITT Biobús(es) 26 May 2006 3 46 15.2 km (9.4 mi) A transit system is integrated between the electric Biotren and BioBus, based on dedicated bus rights-of-way. Not BRT certified in 2014.[1]
Red Concepción de Movilidad(es) 2024 2 - 50 km (31 mi) eBRT using electric busses

Colombia

Red articulated bus
TransMilenio bus in Bogotá
Orange-and-white articulated bus
Transcaribe bus in Cartagena, Colombia

Bogotá's segregated, four-lane TransMilenio system has a maximum peak-load capacity of 45,000 passengers per hour per direction (pphpd) on its busiest line.[137] The system uses modular median stations that serve both directions and enable prepaid, multiple-door, level boarding.[137] The average stop time is 24 seconds. Trunk-line terminals have integrated bicycle parking; the fare card opens a gate to a secure bicycle parking area. Two lanes in each direction permit "Quickways" (local service on the inside lane combined with express service, skipping four or five stations at a time).[138] TransMilenio was described as a "model BRT system" in the National Bus Rapid Transit Institute's May 2006 report. It serves Bogotá with high-capacity, articulated, three-door buses. Bi-articulated buses are used on the busiest routes, and a smart card system is used for fare collection. Despite its large capacity, Transmilenio had problems with overcrowding.[139]

BRT systems in  Colombia
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes
Bogotá TransMilenio December 2000 12 142 113 km (70 mi)
Cali MIO March 2011 8 77 49 km (30 mi) Phase I completed; phase II under construction
Medellín es:Metroplús December 2011 3 27 12.5 km (7.8 mi) Line 2 opened 2013[140]
Barranquilla Transmetro April 2010 2 13.3 km (8.3 mi)
Bucaramanga Metrolinea February 2010 11 50 km (31 mi)
Pereira Megabús August 2006 3 60 27 km (17 mi)
Cartagena Transcaribe November 2015 1 16 15.3 km (9.5 mi)

Ecuador

Green-and-white articulated bus leaving an underpass
The Quito trolleybus system has lines running on exclusive BRT lanes with underpass crossings.
  • El Trole is a trolleybus BRT system operated by Compañía Trolebús Quito. Plans exist to convert the northernmost portion of the system to light rail. Ecovía and Metrobus diesel BRT lines have several subsystems: Trolebús (Corredor Trole), Ecovía (Corredor Ecovía), Metrobús (Corredor Central Norte), Corredor Sur Oriental and Corredor Sur Occidental. Trolebús electric trolley buses can also operate on gas. Except for local routes, all buses are articulated.
BRT systems in  Ecuador
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Quito Metrobus-Q(es) 17 December 1995 3 124 83.8 km (52.1 mi) eBRT using trolleybuses Bronze BRT certified (2013).[1]
Guayaquil Metrovía 30 July 2006 7 26 30.51 km (18.96 mi) Bronze BRT certified (2013).[1]
Cuenca Sistema Integrado de Transporte (Línea 100, Línea 200)(es) 2014 2 - - Not BRT certified in 2014.[1]
Loja Sistema Intermodal de Transporte Urbano de Loja(es) 18 November 2015 10 - 50 km (31 mi) Not BRT certified in 2015.[1]

Peru

Metropolitano bus in Lima, Peru
BRT systems in  Peru
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Lima Metropolitano October 2010 1 38 33 km (21 mi) Metropolitano is Peru's first mass transit system implemented in several decades. It runs from the northern district of Independencia to the southern district of Chorrillos, on roads such as Avenida Paseo de la República, Av. Alfonso Ugarte and Av. Tupac Amaru. Bronze BRT certified (2013).[1]
Arequipa Sistema Integrado de Transporte de Arequipa (SIT)(es) 30 May 2019 11 - 20 km (12 mi) Pre-operational Phase (May 2019 - November 2024) Under Construction Not BRT certified in 2022.[1]
Trujillo Sistema Integrado de Transporte de Trujillo (SITT)(es) September 2011, 2 - - Not BRT certified in 2012.[1]

Uruguay

BRT systems in  Uruguay
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Montevideo Corredor Agraciada/Garzón(es) 2012 2 17 6 km (3.7 mi) Bronze BRT certified (2014).[1]

Venezuela

Caracas Bus
Trolleybuses in Mérida

In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.

BRT systems in  Venezuela
City System name Began Lines Stations Length (km) Notes BRT certified
Caracas BusCaracas October 2012 1 11 5.2 km (3.2 mi) Silver BRT certified in 2014.[1]
Mérida Trolmérida 18 June 2007 3 22 15.2 km (9.4 mi) BRT. Certified in 2022.[1]
Barquisimeto Transbarca(es) 14 September 2013 2 41 24 km (15 mi) BRT. Certified in 2022.[1]
Guayana City BTR TransBolivar(es) December 2015 1 2 20 km (12 mi) BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Greater Barcelona TransAnzoategui(es) 19 November 2015 4 20 33 km (21 mi) BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Maracay TransMaracay(es) 18 April 2015 1 13 8.1 km (5.0 mi) BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Valencia TransCarabobo(es) 11 July 2014 6 156 - BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Barinas Barinas Bus(es) 11 March 2013 10 10 33 km (21 mi) BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Coro TransFalcón(es) 27 March 2014 1 7 - BRT. Certified in 2016.[1]
Maracaibo TransMaracaibo

See also

  • iconTransport portal
  • Bus portal

Notes

  1. ^ Stations connected by transfers are counted as one station, unless otherwise noted.
  1. ^ Stations connected by transfers are counted as one station, unless otherwise noted.
  2. ^ Track length; lines which share track are counted once.
  3. ^ Stations connected by transfers are counted as one station, unless otherwise noted.
  4. ^ Corridor length; lines which sharing the same corridor are counted once.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj fk fl fm https://www.itdp.org/library/standards-and-guides/the-bus-rapid-transit-standard/best-practices-2013/ Retrieved 2022-09-28
  2. ^ "BRT/BFS – Lagos State Transport Management". lamata-ng.com. Retrieved 2017-10-11.
  3. ^ "Lamata Assures On Bus Rapid Transit Project". allAfrica. 22 April 2007. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  4. ^ "Projet BRT - Bus Rapid Transit".
  5. ^ "MyCiTi IRT: Project information". capetown.gov.za. Archived from the original on 2013-07-25. Retrieved 2013-08-01.
  6. ^ a b BRT offers celebratory free rides on opening day M&G
  7. ^ Laura Tyrer. "REA VAYA BRT SYSTEM". Engineering News.
  8. ^ {{Cite web|url=http://www.joburg.org.za/content/view/3043/266/ |title=City of johannesburg - All aboard for a greener Joburg |access-date=2008-10-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081010234524/http://www.joburg.org.za/content/view/3043/266/ |archive-date=2008-10-10 |url-status=dead }}
  9. ^ "Host Cities for 2009 Confederations Cup: City of Mangaung (Vodacomd Park), City of Johannesburg (Ellis Park), City of Tshwane (Loftus Versveld), City of Mafikeng (Royal Bafokeng), Nelson Mandela Metro (PE) | PMG". pmg.org.za.
  10. ^ Independent Newspapers Online. "BRT marches to Pretoria". Independent Online.
  11. ^ Irma Venter. "City of Tshwane bus rapid transit (BRT) system". Engineering News.
  12. ^ "Go George Bus Rapid Transit". gogeorge.org.za.
  13. ^ "City of Ekurhuleni Harambee Bus Rapid Transit". harambeebrt.co.za.
  14. ^ ""NELSON MANDELA BAY MUNICIPALITY BRINGS YOU LIBHONGOLETHU!"". Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  15. ^ "GET GOING WITH A RE YENG". areyeng.co.za.
  16. ^ "Rustenburg Yarona Bus Rapid Transit". yaronabus.org.za.
  17. ^ "Polokwane Leetola Bus Rapid Transit". leetolapolokwane.co.za.
  18. ^ "Go Durban Bus Rapid Transit". godurban.co.za.
  19. ^ "African Development Bank - Building today, a better Africa tomorrow" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Institute for Transportation and Development Policy". www.itdp.org. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09.
  21. ^ "盐城市区今年新建30座BRT站台_中国江苏网". jsnews.jschina.com.cn. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  22. ^ "银川新闻网--快速公交 幸福在路上". www.ycen.com.cn. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  23. ^ "银川公交公司-银川市公共交通有限公司". www.ycgjgs.com. Archived from the original on 2019-04-01. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  24. ^ "我市首条快速公交示范线今开通_本地新闻_新闻频道_中山网". www.zsnews.cn. Archived from the original on 2019-04-01. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  25. ^ "温州快速公交BRT一号线试运营". 2016-03-04. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  26. ^ "武汉首条BRT开通:快速公交贯通雄楚大道-武汉新房网-房天下". newhouse.wuhan.fang.com. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  27. ^ "体验过中运量公交 有一句话我一定要讲 | 观察-搜狐汽车". auto.sohu.com. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  28. ^ "Go, free to sit Guiyang BRT! January 21 opening of February 12 are free Oh - News". www.top-news.top. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  29. ^ "呼和浩特开启全新交通出行方式——BRT快速公交 —— 新华网内蒙古频道". www.nmg.xinhuanet.com (in Chinese (China)). Archived from the original on 2017-09-27. Retrieved 2017-09-27.
  30. ^ "浙江义乌开通首条城区快速公交BRT - 津范儿". tjfer (in Chinese (China)). Retrieved 2017-06-28.
  31. ^ "临沂BRT快速公交模拟线路B-1开通 设站点28处". www.ql1d.com. Retrieved 2017-09-10.
  32. ^ "南宁快速公交1号线开通运营 无缝对接地铁高铁-广西新闻网". www.gxnews.com.cn. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  33. ^ "南宁市快速公交(BRT)荣获2020年推动中国快速公交发展先进集体称号-交通新闻-广西壮族自治区交通运输厅". zizhan.mot.gov.cn. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  34. ^ "奉浦快线运营:像坐地铁一样坐公交 感觉真不错-brt 快线 公交专用道 收藏 单程票-上海频道-东方网". sh.eastday.com. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  35. ^ ""奉浦快线"首日通车,邀请20位市民一起见证历史_发布台_新民网". newsxmwb.xinmin.cn. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  36. ^ "抚州BRT二期试运行_抚州新闻网". www.zgfznews.com. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
  37. ^ "该文章已不存在_手机新浪网". k.sina.cn.
  38. ^ "江西日报整版报道:抚州快速公交成功运营的启示_政务_澎湃新闻-The Paper". www.thepaper.cn. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
  39. ^ 网易 (2021-05-15). "自贡高铁公交快线即将开行". www.163.com. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  40. ^ "站台6月底前亮相!自贡高铁公交快线将首现BRT公交站 - 自贡网 - 在这里,读懂盐都". www.zgm.cn. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  41. ^ "Growth of Bus Rapid Transit in India -". 2016-04-06. Retrieved 2017-10-11.
  42. ^ a b "Koridor". transjakarta.co.id (in Indonesian). Transjakarta. 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  43. ^ a b Sutrisno, Budi (5 February 2020). "Achievement unlocked: Transjakarta breaks record for serving one million customers in a day". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  44. ^ "Konsep Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) di Luar Jakarta Masih Belum Tepat". Bisnis.com (in Indonesian). 22 September 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  45. ^ "Transjakarta – PT Transportasi Jakarta". Transjakarta. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  46. ^ "Jadwal Keberangkatan Bus Trans Batam di Semua Koridor (Masa Pandemi Covid-19)" (in Indonesian). Government of Batam. 11 August 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  47. ^ "Data Trans Jogja" (in Indonesian). Government of Yogyakarta. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  48. ^ Husna, Maruti Asmaul (1 May 2020). "Penumpang Trans Jogja Menurun 93 Persen Lebih, Mulai 1 Mei 2020 Jumlah Armada Dikurangi 30 Persen". Tribunjogja.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 24 January 2022. Normal passenger figures of 20,000 are used, not the figures during COVID-19 pandemic (1,402).
  49. ^ "Ada Dua Rute Koridor Baru Bus TMP" (in Indonesian). Government of Pekanbaru. 20 February 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  50. ^ Solehudin, Mochamad (12 November 2019). "Pemkot Bandung Operasikan TMB Rute Antapani-Stasiun Hall" (in Indonesian). detik.com. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  51. ^ "BUS RAPID TRANSIT (BRT) TRANS MUSI" (in Indonesian). PT Sarana Pembangunan Palembang Jaya. 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  52. ^ "BATIK SOLO TRANS (BST)" (in Indonesian). Government of Surakarta. 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  53. ^ Adhi, Irawan Sapto (5 February 2017). "TRANSPORTASI SOLO : Baru 10.000 Orang Per Hari, Jumlah Penumpang BST Belum Sesuai Target" (in Indonesian). Solopos. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  54. ^ "COMPANY PROFILE BLU UPTD TRANS SEMARANG" (in Indonesian). Government of Semarang. 31 August 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  55. ^ "Trans Semarang's Main Corridor Line Diagram" (in Indonesian). BLU Trans Semarang. 1 October 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  56. ^ Hafiyyan (19 July 2019). "Penumpang BRT Semarang Tumbuh 57%". Semarang Bisnis.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  57. ^ Erviani, Ni Komang (25 May 2011). "New traffic control system, buses hoped to ease congestion". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  58. ^ "Trans Sarbagita: Denpasar-Jimbaran route starts Friday". 10 August 2012. Archived from the original on 24 August 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2012.
  59. ^ H.N., Oyos Saroso (22 September 2011). "Bandarlampung to unveil BRT as passenger-friendly transport". The Jakarta Post. Archived from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  60. ^ "InfoPublik - Penumpang Trans Padang Melonjak, Laba Perumda PSM Meningkat". infopublik.id (in Indonesian). 13 December 2023. Retrieved 11 July 2024.
  61. ^ Yermadona, Helga (January 2019). "Evaluasi Fasilitas dan Jarak Tempat Perhentian Kendaraan Penumpang Umum Trans Padang" (PDF). Rang Teknik Journal (in Indonesian). 2 (1): 40–48. doi:10.31869/rtj.v2i1.1080. S2CID 189406184. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  62. ^ "Sudah Beroperasi, Ini Jadwal Bus Trans Padang Teluk Bayur – Kalumpang" (in Indonesian). Laggam. 3 February 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  63. ^ "Tak Dilewati Bus, 105 Halte BRT di Makassar Mangkrak" (in Indonesian). Tempo. 11 October 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  64. ^ "Bus Trans Koetaradja" (in Indonesian). Visit Aceh. December 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  65. ^ "Lokasi Halte Trans Koetaradja" (in Indonesian). Government of Banda Aceh. 26 February 2018. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  66. ^ Yusuf, Naufal Fikri; Yudha, Pande (11 December 2020). "Pemkab Tabanan luncurkan Bus Trans Metro Dewata Koridor I" (in Indonesian). Antara. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  67. ^ Simabur, Chairul Amri (14 January 2021). "Melongok Bus Trans Metro Dewata yang Sudah Beroperasi Empat Bulan" (in Indonesian). Bali Express. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  68. ^ "BRT Banjarbakula". BPTD XV KALSEL. 2021-01-19. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
  69. ^ "Teman Bus Segera Hadir di Jalanan Surabaya". Trisnews (in Indonesian). December 2021. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  70. ^ "BRT в Алматы протянется на 102 километра и охватит основные улицы". Главные новости Казахстана - Tengrinews.kz. January 27, 2023.
  71. ^ a b Newspaper, the (2015-11-22). "Expensive metro bus". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  72. ^ a b Correspondent, Sana Jamal (2018-05-31). "Pakistan government completes its five year term". GulfNews. Retrieved 2018-06-09. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  73. ^ "Rawalpindi - Islamabad: Metro buses to be running from May 1 - PKKH.tv". PKKH.tv. 2015-04-18. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  74. ^ "PM to inaugurate Rawalpindi/Islamabad Metro Bus Project". The Nation. 2014-03-22. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  75. ^ "Islamabad Starts Trial of Orange Line Metro Bus Service". INCPAK. 2022-04-16. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  76. ^ "PM Shehbaz Sharif confident his 'speedy work' will frighten ex-premier Imran Khan". GEO News. 2022-04-18. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  77. ^ "Multan Metrobus System | Punjab Masstransit Authority". pma.punjab.gov.pk. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  78. ^ "NAB chief approves probe into Multan Metro". www.pakistantoday.com.pk. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  79. ^ "Experts say it may take up to a year". The Nation. 2018-06-01. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  80. ^ Report, Bureau (2017-10-05). "CM to open work on BRT project on 20th". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2018-06-09. {{cite news}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  81. ^ "CM Khattak inaugurates Bus Rapid Transit project in Peshawar". Geo News. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  82. ^ "KP CM to inaugurate bus rapid transit Peshawar on Oct19 - Samaa TV". www.samaa.tv. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  83. ^ Dawn.com (2014-07-10). "PM announces Rs15bn for Karachi 'Green Line' bus project". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  84. ^ "Ground-breaking ceremony: Green Line BRT finally gets go-ahead - The Express Tribune". The Express Tribune. 2016-02-27. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  85. ^ Zurbano, Joel (June 24, 2020). "EDSA Busway seamless and faster—DOTr". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved July 13, 2020.
  86. ^ 헤럴드경제. "고양~수색 BRT 개통 1주일 연기". heraldcorp.com.
  87. ^ 기호일보 (29 September 2013). "하남 BRT 차고지 준공 1200명 참가 축하 인사". 기호일보.
  88. ^ "[인천/경기]'청라~강서 BRT' 이용객 꾸준히 증가". donga.com. 12 February 2014.
  89. ^ "優化公車專用道" (PDF). Bureau of Transportation, Taichung City. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  90. ^ "Om Plusbus". plusbus (in Danish). Retrieved 2023-08-17.
  91. ^ "Offiziell: An diesem Tag eröffnet der Plusbus". migogaalborg (in Danish). Retrieved 2024-02-10.
  92. ^ Hsy / Hsl Archived 2008-03-30 at the Wayback Machine
  93. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20071013160451/http://www.bhns.fr/IMG/pdf/Evry_monographie_2005.pdf. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-10-13. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  94. ^ "Inaugurada a nova Praça 25 de Abril (Opening of the new Praça 25 de Abril)". metromondego.pt. 25 April 2024.
  95. ^ "Bus Rapid Transit System tender launched to link Boavista to Foz in 2023". Porto.pt. 6 July 2021.
  96. ^ "Metrobus vai ligar Império à Boavista no Porto em 2023 (Metrobus will connect Império to Boavista in Porto in 2023)". SAPO. 6 July 2021.
  97. ^ Ann Brody Guy. "Using ITS Research, Barcelona Launches BRT Network". Berkeley Transportation Letter. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
  98. ^ Azaola, Guillermo (26 September 2022). "Busrapid circulará por la periferia y ampliará su red para conectarla con el centro de Madrid". 20minutos.es (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  99. ^ "La primera línea de bus rápido comienza a operar entre Valdebebas, Sanchinarro y el Hospital Ramón y Cajal". diario.madrid.es (in Spanish). Madrid: Ayuntamiento de Madrid. 30 May 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  100. ^ ""Tranvibus de Murcie"".
  101. ^ ""Tranvibus de Séville"".
  102. ^ "Greater Manchester bus priority package consultation" (PDF). Transport for Greater Manchester. August 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-15.
  103. ^ Lesley, Lewis (1983). "Runcorn - A Rapid Transit New Town?". Built Environment. 9 (3/4): 234. JSTOR 23286723.
  104. ^ "Runcorn New Town - 7.3 Transport". rudi.net. Archived from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  105. ^ "City of Brampton - Planning". www.brampton.ca. Archived from the original on 2010-05-09.
  106. ^ "Integrated PIE-IX BRT Project". Société de transport de Montréal. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  107. ^ "Spadina Subway Extension""TTC Overview". Archived from the original on 2010-01-10. Retrieved 2010-03-13..
  108. ^ "TTC RapidTO: Priority bus lane implementation" http://www.ttc.ca/About_the_TTC/Projects/5_year_plan_and_10_y/Priority_Lanes.jsp.
  109. ^ Chan, Kenneth (April 12, 2023). "BC Transit launches first RapidBus route serving Victoria". Daily Hive. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  110. ^ "Transit Programs in GRT". www.grt.ca. Archived from the original on 2011-01-25.
  111. ^ "What is Bus Rapid Transit (BRT)?". myride.winnipegtransit.com. Archived from the original on 2010-06-12.
  112. ^ "Viva Rapid Transit Construction Underway."http://www.vivanext.com/391, December 14, 2009.
  113. ^ "Viva buses operate along new Enterprise rapidly, starting March 6" http://transittoronto.ca/archives/weblog/2011/03/04-viva_buses.shtml.
  114. ^ "Metrobus". Archived from the original on September 30, 2013. Retrieved July 3, 2018.
  115. ^ "Gmail". correo.leon.gob.mx. Archived from the original on 2005-04-09.
  116. ^ Hidalgo, D.; Voukas, Y.; Freiberg, G.; Lopez, A.; Alveano, S. (16–18 July 2010). The macrobus system of Guadalajara, Mexico: an evolved concept in BRT planning and implementation for medium capacity corridors. XVI Pan-American Conference of Traffic and Transportation Engineering and Logistics. Lisbon, Portugal. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  117. ^ "Route Puebla: Urban Articulated Transport Network". Retrieved July 3, 2018.
  118. ^ ""Bowi"".
  119. ^ "Tuzobus". Archived from the original on 2015-10-12. Retrieved 2015-10-07.
  120. ^ "Rutasymapas – SISTEMA INTEGRAL DE TRANSPORTE DE TIJUANA". www.sitt.org.mx. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17.
  121. ^ "Albuquerque, NM Opens First USA Gold Standard BRT on Historic Route 66". 27 November 2017.
  122. ^ "ART System Receives Rare Gold Standard from ITDP" (Press release). 27 November 2017.
  123. ^ "Albuquerque BRT receives rare 'Gold Standard' recognition".
  124. ^ "Birmingham Xpress – MAX Transit – Birmingham Jefferson County Transit Authority". Retrieved 2022-10-08.
  125. ^ "Columbus Avenue Bus Lanes". Retrieved 2023-03-03.
  126. ^ www.ridetherapid.org https://web.archive.org/web/20150905191854/https://www.ridetherapid.org/silver-line. Archived from the original on 2015-09-05. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  127. ^ "Laker Line". Laker Line. The Interurban Transit Partnership. Retrieved 2019-05-25.
  128. ^ "CTfastrak.com - HOME". ctfastrak.com.
  129. ^ "Bus Shuttles METRO".
  130. ^ "METRORapid | Bus Rapid Transit | Public transportation | Houston, TX".
  131. ^ "About - First Coast Flyer". JTA First Coast Flyer. Jacksonville Transportation Authority. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  132. ^ www.estreet-sbx.com https://web.archive.org/web/20110710203129/http://www.estreet-sbx.com/docManager/1000000450/sbx%20Winter2011%20FINAL.pdf. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-10. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  133. ^ "Route 522". Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  134. ^ "Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority : Tri-Valley Rapid". Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  135. ^ ""IVECO CREALIS KEY TO NEW CALEDONIA BUS RAPID TRANSIT NETWORK"". www.busnews.com.au/. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  136. ^ "HISTÓRIA: Vídeo retrata primeiros anos do BRT pioneiro no mundo" (in Portuguese). 30 December 2018. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
  137. ^ a b Institute for Transportation and Development Policy, Appendix 1 System Comparisons, BRT Planning Guide
  138. ^ FTA_ Commissioned report, Advanced Network Planning for Bus Rapid Transit The Quickway Model as a Modal Alternative to "Light Rail Lite"
  139. ^ "Applicability of Bogotá's TransMilenio BRT System to the United States" Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine NBRTI (May 2006). Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  140. ^ "Global BRT Data". BRTDATA.ORG. Retrieved 22 August 2014.
  • Bus Rapid Transit Planning Guide - Institute for Transportation & Development Policy - (available for download in pdf)
  • Bus Rapid Transit Practitioner's Guide - TCRP Report 118 - sponsored by FHWA (available for download in pdf)
  • BRT in China and selected worldwide systems