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Viva Blue is a BRT line on the Viva bus rapid transit system in York Region, located north of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is operated by Tok Transit, under contract from York Region Transit. This is the busiest bus route in the York Region Transit network, and one of the busiest in the Greater Toronto Area.
Routes displayed on TTC bus stop pole in front of Lawrence station; routes colour-coded by type: 124 regular service, 162 limited service, 352 Blue Night Network; the stop is an accessible stop. The Toronto Transit Commission operates six types of bus routes: [1]
1 to 199 — Regular bus (including TTC contracted routes) 300 series — Express; 400 series — High school specials; 500 series — Community bus; 600 series — Viva (used internally) Separate routes with duplicate names are distinguished by showing cardinal directions in brackets for the portions of the streets each serves.
Viva is integrated with YRT's conventional bus network. Routes connect to Toronto subway stations both in Toronto, on the Yonge branch of Line 1 Yonge–University, and within York Region itself on the University branch of Line 1, with two stations – Vaughan Metropolitan Centre and Highway 407 in Vaughan – having opened on December 17, 2017.
On 3 June 2019, the first electric bus (from New Flyer) went into revenue service on the 35 Jane bus route. [23] On 26 October 2019, Proterra Catalyst BE40 electric buses went into service on the 6 Bay bus route. [24] By September 2020, the BYD K9M buses had arrived, and on 8 September, the first BYD bus went into service on the 116 Morningside ...
The times of Blue Night service vary according to individual scheduling situations on each route. Most regular service bus and streetcar routes cease operations at approximately 1:30 a.m. If there is a Blue Night route on the same street, its first trip will then follow at a suitable interval after the last regular run.
Station Code Location Coordinates Platforms Parking Fare zone Opening year (for GO service) All Union Station: UN: 65 Front Street, Toronto: 17: 0: 2: 1967 Lakeshore West: Exhibition: EX: 100 Manitoba Drive, Toronto
It extends from Union Station in Toronto in a generally northward direction to Barrie, and includes ten stations along its 101.4 kilometres (63.0 mi) route. [2] From 1982 to 1990 and again from 1993 to 2007, it was known as the Bradford line, named after its former terminus at Bradford GO Station until the opening of Barrie South GO Station .