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3 (St. Paul) Renumbered Route 63 on September 16, 2000. [63] 4 (St. Paul) Renamed Route 84 on June 9, 2001, with streamlined service between Hamline University and Rosedale. Service on Pascal and Arlington east of Snelling and north of Como (Routes 4B, 4D and 4E) was replaced by new Routes 3, 65, 83 and 87.
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.
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 ...
Falcon Heights, Saint Paul: No routes: 79 Snelling & Midway Parkway [a] Saint Paul August 25, 2016: No routes: No regular service: Snelling & Como June 11, 2016: Route 3 269 Snelling & Hewitt Hamline-Midway: No routes: 135 Snelling & Minnehaha Route 67 240 Snelling & University: Hamline-Midway, Union Park: Green Line, Routes 16, 21, 84 1,120 ...
Two exceptions exist for Metro light rail services: fares within (but not between) downtown zones [nb 1] are less expensive than regular fares but may not be transferred; and there is no cost to ride between terminals 1 and 2 at the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport (MSP). [13] [14] Many stations connect with rail or bus routes.
An articulated bus in Minneapolis. Regular route bus transit systems exist in Rochester, Winona, Duluth, St. Cloud, East Grand Forks, Mankato (Mankato Transit System), Moorhead and the Minneapolis–St. Paul area. The last is served by the Metro Transit system, which has an extensive system with over 100 routes. Some portions of the Twin Cities ...
A limited stop bus, Route 53, operates during peak periods offering limited stop service along Lake Street and Marshall Avenue before traveling on I-94 to downtown Saint Paul. Average speeds for Route 21 and 53 are 10 and 13.2 miles per hour respectively, which makes Route 21 one of the slowest routes in the Twin Cities.