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On December 5, 2009, the N Judah was cut to Embarcadero on weekends as part of widespread service reductions. [14] Weekend service was re-extended on October 15, 2011. [15] After concerns from riders of constant overcrowding of the trains on the N Judah line, Muni debuted an express bus route called the NX Judah Express on June 13, 2011. [16]
The stop is also served by routes 7, 7X (a weekday peak hours express service) and the N x bus, a weekday peak hours route that provides express service from the east end of the N Judah line to the Financial District, plus the N Bus and N Owl bus routes, which provide service along the N Judah line during the early morning and late night hours ...
The station pair is also served by bus route 44, plus the N Bus and N Owl bus routes, which provide service along the N Judah line during the early morning and late night hours respectively when trains do not operate. [3]
Judah and 9th Avenue is a light rail stop on the Muni Metro N Judah line, located in the Sunset District neighborhood of San Francisco, California. The station opened with the N Judah line on October 21, 1928. The station has two side platforms in the middle of Judah Street (traffic islands) where passengers
The stop is also served by the N Bus and N Owl bus routes, which provide service along the N Judah line during the early morning and late night hours respectively when trains do not operate. [ 2 ] In March 2014, Muni released details of the proposed implementation of their Transit Effectiveness Project (later rebranded MuniForward ), which ...
Judah and 19th Avenue station is a light rail stop on the Muni Metro N Judah line, located in the Sunset District neighborhood of San Francisco, California where Judah Street crosses 19th Avenue (California Route 1). The station opened with the N Judah line on October 21, 1928. The station has two short side platforms in the middle of Judah ...
The route was replaced on January 20, 1951, [39] with the 30 Stockton bus route, which still runs today, and is notable for being the slowest trolleybus route in the city of San Francisco because it travels through the densely populated neighborhood of Chinatown [citation needed]. This was one of four routes planned as a result of the 1915 ...
N Judah trains at 4th and King. 4th and King hosts a number of Muni bus lines, the E Embarcadero historic streetcar line, the Muni Metro N Judah light rail line runs to Market St downtown, and the Metro’s T Third Street service runs to Chinatown via Muni's Central Subway. [13]