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The Missoula Urban Transportation District (MUTD) was established via a ballot measure in June 1976. The MUTD formed the Mountain Line and began operating buses in December 1977. [1] On January 5, 2015, the Mountain Line began a three-year demonstration project that provided free bus service to all passengers. [4]
Some individual cities have their own bus network provided by a transit corporation. Missoula is served by ASUM Transportation [8] [9] and Mountain Line; [10] The Mountain Line public transit system runs twelve services around the city and the University of Montana. It is indirectly controlled by the local government which have appointed ...
Mountain Line operates 14 bus routes [178] within a 36-square-mile (93 km 2) area, serving Missoula, East Missoula, Bonner, Target Range, Rattlesnake, and the airport. Additionally the line has offered paratransit services since 1991 to assist the disabled, senior van since 2008, and has four park‑and‑ride lots throughout Missoula. [ 179 ]
Since January 2015, all Mountain Lines buses are free to the public. The university can be reached on the Mountain Line bus system on routes 1,8, & 12. Buses do not run on Sundays. [36] The university has two Park and Ride lots located to the north, and south of the main campus. They service the Missoula College on East Broadway, Main Campus ...
Mountain Line may refer to: Mountain railway, a railway that operates in a mountainous region; Mountain Line (Arizona), a bus service in Flagstaff, Arizona, U.S. Mountain Line (Montana), a public transport system in Missoula, Montana, U.S. Mountain Line Transit Authority, in Morgantown, West Virginia, U.S. Taichung line, or Mountain line, in Taiwan
Mountain Line: Missoula and the University of Montana: Missoula 5,600 17 1,741 [350] ... Bee-Line Bus System: Westchester County: White Plains, Yonkers: 109,422 329
The Missoula station in Missoula, Montana, was built by the Northern Pacific Railway in 1901. The current structure is the third depot built in Missoula by the Northern Pacific, which reached Missoula in 1883. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985, as the Northern Pacific Railroad Depot.
The Milwaukee Depot in Missoula, Montana, was built by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (otherwise known as The Milwaukee Road) in 1910 as part of the railroad's transcontinental "Pacific Extension". The depot complex consists of two buildings, both made of brick.