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17 (St. Paul) Renumbered Route 65 on September 16, 2000. [61] 19 (St. Paul) Replaced by Route 72S by 1998. 20 (first use) Discontinued on June 26, 2004; replaced by an extension of Route 7 north of Downtown and by then-new Route 24 south of Downtown. The then-new Route 23C branch replaced service to the Vets home. [67] 20
A Metro Transit Route 5 bus stopped at a current Metro C Line station and future Metro D Line station. The D Line runs every 10–15 minutes on all days of the week. While Route 5 offered 24-hour a day service prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the D Line only runs from 4:00 AM to 1:30 AM daily.
Bus routes that primarily serve Minneapolis are numbered 1–49, 50–59 are inner-city limited-stop routes, 60–89 primarily serve St. Paul, and route 94 is an express route that connects the core areas of Minneapolis and St. Paul via I-94. 100 series routes are primarily commuter routes connecting outlying neighborhoods of Minneapolis and St ...
The Metro A Line is a bus rapid transit line in the Twin Cities, Minnesota operated by Metro Transit.The A Line operates primarily along the Snelling Avenue corridor and travels through the cities of Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Falcon Heights, and Roseville.
Metro (styled as METRO) is a transit network in Minnesota serving the cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul.It also provides service to some suburban areas. As of 2022, the system consists of two light rail lines (Blue and Green Lines) and five bus rapid transit (BRT) lines (Orange Line, Red Line, A, C, and D Lines) all of which are operated by the local public transit company: Metro Transit.
The route will operate mostly on Lake Street in Minneapolis before crossing the Mississippi River into St. Paul and operating mostly on Selby Avenue and ending in downtown St. Paul. The route was identified in Metro Transit's 2014 Arterial Transitway Corridors Study as one of eleven local routes to be upgraded to bus rapid transit. The route ...
The Blue Line is operated by Metro Transit, the primary bus and train operator in the Twin Cities. As of December 2022, the service operates from approximately 3:19 am to 12:50 am with 15‑minute headways most of the day. [4] The route averaged 32,928 daily riders in 2019, representing 13 percent of Metro Transit's ridership.
Minneapolis – Saint Paul: Maple Grove: Metro Area Transit: Fargo, North Dakota–Moorhead, Minnesota metropolitan area: Fargo: Metro Transit: Minneapolis – Saint Paul: Minneapolis and Saint Paul: 100,900 Minnesota Valley Transit Authority: Minneapolis – Saint Paul: Burnsville: 4,400 Plymouth Metrolink: Minneapolis – Saint Paul: Plymouth ...