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The Philly PHLASH Downtown Loop (also known as the Philly PHLASH or PHLASH) is a visitor-friendly public transit service in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, managed by the Independence Visitor Center Corporation (IVCC). [1] PHLASH vehicles are ADA-compliant, temperature-controlled New Flyer MiDi buses.
Some trips terminate at Yeadon Loop in Yeadon: 30: 1915 Haddington: 65th & Vine Streets Haverford Avenue, Vine Street Callowhill: Rerouted and replaced by bus service 31: 1956 Overbrook Park: Lansdowne & Haverford Loop 63rd Street, Market Street Callowhill: Replaced by bus service 34: 4.8 (7.7) 1890 Angora: 61st–Baltimore: Baltimore Avenue ...
A Philly Phlash bus. The Philly PHLASH Downtown Loop is a visitor-friendly public transit service in Philadelphia, managed by the Independence Visitor Center Corporation (IVCC). [18] PHLASH vehicles are ADA-compliant, temperature-controlled New Flyer MiDi buses. The IVCC contracted Krapf Transit to manage vehicle operations.
SEPTA Metro is an urban rail transit network in and around Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority . The network includes two rapid transit lines, a light metro line, a suburban trolley line with 2 branches, a surface-running streetcar line, and a subway–surface trolley ...
Route 103 replaced service in the Overbrook Park section of Philadelphia. Service on Route Z was a former "Montgomery Bus Lines" service acquired by the Red Arrow in 1936. Due to duplicate service with SEPTA Bus Route 106, route was truncated from Paoli to Rosemont (at SEPTA's Rosemont train station on the Paoli/Thorndale Line ) effective June ...
The Downtown Loop uses the East Durham Road underpass under the railroad tracks, so it won’t get hung up at the downtown crossings. The new shuttle is expected to cost the town about $465,000 a ...
The South Loop project would put a cap over Interstate 670 in downtown Kansas City, creating a large, urban park that would connect the city’s business district and the Crossroads Arts District.
The L, [a] [4] formerly known as as the Market Frankford Line, [b] is a rapid transit line in the SEPTA Metro network in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.The MFL runs from the 69th Street Transportation Center in Upper Darby, just outside of West Philadelphia, through Center City Philadelphia to the Frankford Transportation Center in Near Northeast Philadelphia.