- Source: List of bus rapid transit systems
The term bus rapid transit system (BRT system) has been applied to a wide range of bus, trolleybus, and electric bus systems. In 2012, the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) published a BRT Standard to make it easier to standardize and compare bus services.
The below list only includes BRT systems that are in operation or under construction.
Legend
Status (background color)
White: Operational
Light blue: Under construction
City
Primary city served by the buses and trolleybus.
System name
The English name of the bus rapid transit or overview article for city.
Description
A short objective description and subjective of routes bus rapid transit ridership and passengers (daily).
Began
The year that the bus rapid transit began oprating for passenger service.
Stations
Stations connected by transfers are counted as one station, unless otherwise note.
Length (km)
Track length; lines which share track are counted once or Corridor length; lines which sharing the same corridor are counted once.
Notes
eBRT using trolleybuses and eBRT using electric buses other source.
BRT certified
ITDP standards-and-guides and bus-rapid-transit-standard year rewards.
Africa
= Egypt
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Ivory Coast
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Kenya
== Mayotte
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Morocco
== Nigeria
=The Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) BRT corridor is about 22 kilometres long. 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.
= 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.
= South Africa
=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.
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.
In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Tanzania
=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.
= Uganda
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
Asia
= Azerbaijan
== Afghanistan
== Bangladesh
== China
=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.
= Georgia
=Tbilisi: Vake district and Ilia Chavchavadze Avenue pilot BRT project, completed in 2020-2022.
= India
=Government-designated BRT systems (BRTS) with segregated lanes: India is rapidly building new BRTS systems around the country. Several systems are operational while many are under construction and are also proposed.
In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Indonesia
=TransJakarta is the longest BRT network in the world (251.2 km), carries more than 1 million passengers daily 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.
Banyumas: Trans Banyumas
Bekasi: Trans Patriot
Bogor: Trans Pakuan
Central Java: Trans Jateng
Cirebon: Trans Cirebon
Depok: BRT Depok
East Java: Trans Jatim
Medan: Trans Metro Deli
Medan metropolitan area: Trans Mebidang
South Tangerang: Trans Anggrek
Tangerang: Trans Kota Tangerang
Palangka Raya: Trans Palangka Raya
Pontianak: Trans Metro Pontianak
Jayapura: Trans Jayapura
= Iran
== Israel
=Haifa: Metronit
Jerusalem: Egged Transportation: six lines (71, 72, 74, 75, 77, 78)
Ashdod: Two lines (1, 10)
= Japan
== Jordan
== Kazakhstan
=Almaty: Almaty Bus Rapid Transit project started in 2014, now operational, 102 km under construction or approved. The first post-Soviet BRT.
= Malaysia
== Pakistan
== Philippines
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= South Korea
=Goyang-Susaek BRT: Opened in April 2010. First BRT in South Korea with bus priority signal system.
Hanam-Cheonho BRT: Opened in March 2011.
Sejong: Opened in September 2012.
Cheongna International City-Gangseo BRT: Opened in July 2013.
Daejeon-Osong BRT: Opened July 20, 2016, utilizing Sejong dedicated corridor.
Seoul, Seoul Express Bus Terminal BRT: Opened in 2004 (line 122) Station - 329.
= Taiwan
== Thailand
== Turkey
== Vietnam
=Europe
= Austria
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Belgium
== Denmark
== Finland
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= France
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Germany
== Greece
== Iceland
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Italy
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Netherlands
== Norway
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Poland
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Portugal
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Spain
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Sweden
== Switzerland
== Turkey
=(See: Asia/Turkey section)
= United Kingdom
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
North America
= Canada
== El Salvador
== Guatemala
=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).
= Honduras
== Martinique
== Mexico
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Panama
== Puerto Rico
== Trinidad and Tobago
== United States
=Oceania
= Australia
== New Caledonia
== New Zealand
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
South America
= Argentina
== Bolivia
== Brazil
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= Chile
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
= 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. The system uses modular median stations that serve both directions and enable prepaid, multiple-door, level boarding. 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). 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.
= Ecuador
=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.
= Peru
== Uruguay
== Venezuela
=In the following table, BRT systems in light blue are under construction.
See also
Articulated bus
Autonomous Rail Rapid Transit
Bus
Bus lane
Bi-articulated bus
BRT Standard
Bus rapid transit
Bus rapid transit creep
Capacitor electric vehicle
Double-decker bus
Electric bus
Fuel cell bus
Guided bus
List of bus operating companies
List of guided busways and BRT systems in the United Kingdom
List of trolleybus systems
Public transport bus service
Quality Bus Corridor
Queue jump
Single-deck bus
Trolleybus
Notes
References
External links
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
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Angkutan cepat
- MRT Singapura
- Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
- Daftar jaringan metro
- Indonesia
- Sistem Angkutan Kereta Ringan Manila
- Mumbai
- Moda terpadu ramai
- Pandemi Covid-19
- Pembatasan sosial
- List of bus rapid transit systems
- List of bus rapid transit systems in India
- Bus rapid transit
- List of United States rapid transit systems
- List of rapid transit systems in Pakistan
- Ahmedabad Bus Rapid Transit System
- List of bus rapid transit systems in North America
- List of guided busways and BRT systems in the United Kingdom
- List of bus transit systems in the United States
- Lagos Bus Rapid Transit System