Beijing Bus

Beijing Public Bus

Beijing Bus 1 on Chang'an Avenue at Tiananmen Square. The vehicle is produced by Huanghai Bus.
Parent Beijing Public Transport Holdings, Ltd. ("BPT")
Beijing Xianglong Bus Co., Ltd. ("Yuntong")
Founded 1947 (BPT)
1999 (Yuntong)[1]
Headquarters Beijing
Locale Beijing Municipality
Service area Beijing
Service type local, express, bus rapid transit, shuttle, night
Routes 1085 (BPT)[2]
28 (Yuntong)[1]
Fleet 22,555 (BPT)[2]
1,348 (Yuntong)[1]
Daily ridership 12,509,000 (BPT daily avg.)[2]
684,931 (Yuntong daily avg.)[1]
Fuel type trolleybus, diesel, diesel-electric hybrid, CNG, hydrogen
Website BPT, Yuntong

Public bus service in Beijing is the among the most extensive, widely used and affordable form of public transportation in urban and suburban districts of the city. In 2015, the entire network consists of 876 routes with a fleet of 24,347 buses and trolleybuses carrying 3.98 billion passengers annually.[3]

Public bus service in the city began in 1921. Today there are two operators. The city's primary public bus operator, the state-owned Beijing Public Transport Holdings, Ltd. operates most routes and[4] the Beijing Xianglong Bus Co., Ltd., an independent operator, provides service on 30 "Yuntong" (运通) bus routes.[1]

The bus fare of both companies begin at RMB(¥)2.00 and are subject to a 50 percent discount when purchased with the mass transit IC card, Yikatong, which effectively lowers the cost of most bus rides in the city center to ¥1.00.

Beijing Airport Buses provide separate service to the city's two airports.

Basic information

Fares

Under the new fare scheme implemented on December 28, 2014, bus fares cost RMB(¥)2.00 for the first 10 km and ¥1.00 for each additional 5 km.[5] Yikatong card users are entitled to a 50% discount and students enjoy a 75% discount.[5]

Prior to the fare hike, bus fares were as low as ¥1 and the Yikatong discount was 60%.[6]

Riders carrying bulky luggage that take up the space of another passenger will have to purchase a second bus fare.[7] A child below the height of 1.2m rides for free when accompanied by a paying rider.[7] Bearers of Retired Cadres' Honorary Certificates and blind individuals can also ride public buses for free.[8]

Buying tickets

Right: Paper tickets sold on buses with ticket clerks. The upper ticket costs ¥2. The lower tickets, costing ¥7 and ¥12, are used on longer-distance routes.

On buses with a ticket clerk on board, the clerk can sell paper tickets and give exact change. The ticket clerk will ask riders deboarding the bus to show the paper ticket they had purchased, their bus pass or swipe their discount card. On bus routes designated as having no ticket clerks (无人售票), riders must pay exact fare in cash, show the driver their bus pass, or swipe a discount card when they board and deboard the bus.

Discount card

Riders paying with the Yikatong metrocard receive 50% discount off the cash fare.[6] Hence, with a Yikatong card, the starting becomes ¥1.00 per ride. Riders with the student metro card enjoy 70% discount off the cash fare.[6] Riders must swipe twice, both on boarding and deboarding the bus, so the trip distance can be calculated.

Until the introduction of the Yikatong metrocard in 2006, Beijing Bus Passes were a popular choice for discounted bus fare. Bus passes are available for three days (¥10 for a maximum of 18 rides), seven days (¥20 for 42 rides), 15 days (¥40 for 90 rides).[6] The Yikatong has no expiration date and has a lower per ride cost. The Yikatong card can be purchased or have value added at any Beijing Subway station or at any of 89 bus stops around the city.[9]

Hours

Beijing bus sign showing the bus route number (486), hours of service (5:30 - 22:00), name of the stop (Shifoying Dongli 石佛营东里), terminus (Sifangqiao Xi & Xinzhuang), fare schedule (flat rate ¥1, exact fare), stops along route, and direction of travel (red arrow pointing toward Xinzhuang)

Service on most bus lines begins between 5:00 and 6:00 and end between 20:00 and 23:00. The 夜-series night bus lines begin service at or after 23:00 and run until between 4:30 and 5:00.

Bus stops

Bus stops are marked with route signs that indicate the name of the stop, route number, hours of operation, fare schedule and each stop on the route. Bus route signs are only in Chinese.

Boarding protocol

On buses with two doors, the front door is used for entry and the back door for deboarding. On articulated buses with three doors, the middle door is used for entry and the front and rear doors for deboarding.

Routes

BPT's buses use the following route number scheme and fare schedule.

Line No. Line Description
1-140 Bus routes in the city's urban core inside the Third Ring Road, including all trolleybus lines (6,22,38, 42, 101-109, 111, 112, 114-116, 118, 124, BRT3(快速公交3), and BRT3区(快速公交3区)).
300-599 Bus routes that extend beyond the Third Ring Road to inner suburbs.
600-799 Longer bus routes that run through both the urban core and suburbs.
801-999[a] Bus routes that run to distant suburbs, including over 40 routes to Hebei Province.[10]
Double-decker 特2-19 [c] The prefix 特 (tè), meaning "special", denotes double-decker bus routes in the urban core and inner suburbs. Their number scheme is distinct from other buses, such that Bus 特2 follows a different route than Beijing Bus 2.
BRT 快速公交1-4 The prefix 快速公交 (kuàisù gōngjiāo) designates the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) routes which run on bus-only lanes.
Tourism 观光1-3 The prefix 观光 (guānguāng), meaning "tourism" or "sight-see", designates three bus routes that operate around popular tourist sites such as the Forbidden City, Tian'anman Square, the Summer Palace, and the Olympic Park.
Shuttle 专3-169[b] The prefix 专 (zhuān), meaning "shuttle", denotes short shuttle bus routes that serve particular neighborhoods. Their number scheme is distinct from other buses, such that Bus 专59 follows a different route from Beijing Bus 59.
Night 夜1-38[d] The prefix 夜 (yè), meaning "night", denotes buses serving the urban core and some of the larger suburbs that run from 23:20 to 4:50. Their number scheme is distinct from other buses, such that Bus 夜26 follows a different route from Beijing Bus 26.
Yuntong 运通
101-205
The prefix 运通 (yùntōng) designates bus routes operated by the Beijing Xianglong Bus Co. Ltd. Yuntong bus routes should not be confused with other Beijing bus routes. For example, Beijing Bus 110 and 运通110 are two distinct bus lines.

Other character designations in line numbers:

Yuntong (运通) Bus 115.
Double decker Bus 83 (now 特13) [c]
BRT Bus 1

Bus route enquiry service

The BPT provides enquiry services via both its official website and the 96166 telephone helpline.

Free Wi-Fi service

As of August 17, 2013, free wi-fi service is available on 5,823 buses on 248 bus routes, mostly inside the Third Ring Road.[11] By December 2, 2014, about 12,000 buses had been outfitted with free Wi-Fi service.[12]

History

Public bus service in Beijing dates to 1921 when the Beiyang Government established a trolley company in the city.[13] Tram service began in the city in 1924.[13] The first bus route in Beijing was launched in 1925 when the Beiping Bus Preparatory Committee acquired 30 buses for the city.[13] In 1947, the Beiping Municipal Bus Company was established with 133 buses, but the company shut down in August 1949 during the Chinese Civil War with 79 broken down buses and only five working buses.[13] In January 1949, after the capture of Beiping by the People's Liberation Army in the Beiping-Tianjin Campaign, there were only 103 trams and 61 buses in the city, which delivered 28.85 million trips that year.[13] From November 1949 to March 1950, 88 U.S.-made Dodge T234 buses were shipped from Shanghai and became the mainstay of the Beijing bus fleet.[14] Due to fuel shortages caused by a US-imposed trade embargo, the buses were converted to burn wood.[14]

In the early 1950s, the bus fleet expanded with imports from Eastern Europe, including 76 Ikarus Bus from Hungary.[14] Among the most advanced vehicles were Škoda buses from Czechoslavakia, which could carry 50 passengers and reach a speed of 60 km/h.[14] A total of 52 Škoda-built trolleybuses were acquired, all being of that maker's 8Tr model.[15]

From 1956 to 1966, tram tracks were pulled from city streets and trolleybuses took over tram routes.

The first domestic made buses entered service in 1956.[14] They were trucks made in Changchun with wooden carriages added by the Beijing Passenger Vehicle Factory.[14] Later, the BK640 bus used metal carriages modeled upon Skoda buses.[14] Domestic buses gradually replaced imports.[14]

By 1956, there were 27 bus and tram bus routes, totaling 357 km (222 mi) in length which delivered 235 million trips.[13] In 1958, the first long-distance bus company was established in the city with 114 vehicles, 54 routes and 9.69 million rides delivered.[13] From 1956 to 1966, trolleybuses gradually replaced trams in the city and the number of bus lines grew from 27 to 56 and the length routes reached 157 km (98 mi).[13] During the Great Leap Forward, due to diesel shortages caused by the cut-off of Soviet oil exports to China, 130 Beijing buses were converted to burn natural gas in 1960.[14] The buses, which carried fuel in an inflated bag on the roof, were converted back to burning diesel in 1964, after the discovery of oil in Daqing eased the energy shortage.[14]

Double-Decker 特8 buses (model Jinghua BK6126S) at Hangtianqiao West in 2011

In the 1980s to the mid-1990s, the capacity of bus service in Beijing grew slowly.[13] From 1984 to the end of 1995, the number of bus routes grew from 101 to 246, the number of vehicles increased by 558 or 16.6% to 3,927, and the number of rides rose by 1.06 billion to 3.11 billion, an increase of 293%.[13] In 1990, the first double-decker special bus line entered service, which increased to five lines by 1995.[13]

During the Tiananmen Square protests in the spring of 1989, residents and students used buses and trolleys to block the advance of the army into the city and many vehicles were destroyed during the armed crackdown.

A 1997-built air-conditioned bus (model Jinghua BK6980CFK) at Zhongguancun in 2005.

In March 1997, two bombs detonated on Beijing buses.[16] The first bomb hit a Route 22 Bus in Xidan on the night of March 7, killing three and injuring ten.[16][17] The second bomb, one day later, claimed two more lives.[16] The bombings, which followed the outbreak of protests and bombings in Xinjiang, took place during the annual session of the National People's Congress and the People's Consultative Conference in Beijing, and were widely blamed on Uyghur separatists.[16]

In July 1997, Beijing inaugurated air-conditioned bus service with the launch of Route 808 (currently Route 608) from the Summer Palace to Qianmen.[18]

The first compressed natural gas bus in Beijing Bus fleet (model Jinghua BK6111BCNG)

In 1999, the first compressed natural gas buses were introduced to the bus fleet. By the end of 2000, the city had 5,923 natural gas powered buses in operation, the most in the world.[13] Also in the 1999, the 24-hour bus information hotline 96166 was introduced to help riders plan bus trips.[13]

The electric bus fleet in service during the 2008 Olympics.

During the 2001 Summer University Games held in Beijing, the Beijing Bus Transit service provided free shuttle service, delivering 731,777 trips.[13] The first electric buses entered service in September 2003.[19]

In 2005, the first Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line entered operation.[13] In 2006, the city adopted a new bus fare scheme, fixing the flat-fare rate to ¥1.00 and giving 60% discount to Yikatong riders and 80% discount to student card holders.[13] Also in 2006, the first hydrogen powered bus entered service.[13] In 2007, after the introduction of the reduced fare scheme, the number of rides increased by 20% to 4.097 billion.[13]

Bus designated lane on Yuanmingyuan East Road in 2012

The city's first designated bus lanes were introduced in 2007 to increase bus travel speed during rush hours.[20] Buses are also exempt from the city's road rationing schemes, which was introduced in 2008, and restricts vehicle access to the city's roadways based on license plate number. On 31 July 2008, three more BRT lines entered operation.[13]

Free Wi-Fi service on city buses was initiated in 2013.[11]

On December 28, 2014, bus fare on all routes was changed to a distance-based fare schedule, which raised the starting fare to ¥2.00 per trip for the first 10 km with ¥1.00 added for each subsequent 5 km. The Yikatong discount was reduced from 60% to 50%.

Security

To enhance security on buses, over 1,000 uniformed security guards were assigned to some 16 bus routes on an experimental basis in late 2013.[21] As of June 2014, the practice is being continued with security personnel riding on 15 routes including 57, 特11 and 特12.[21] About 4,000 buses are being outfitted with surveillance cameras.[21]

Future concepts

Hydrogen fuel-cell bus

Hydrogen-powered fuel-cell buses began operating in Beijing on an experimental basis in 2006.[22] Three fuel cell buses, made by Daimler in Germany and purchased with a grant from the U.N. Development Programme, plied an 18.2-km route from the North Gate of the Summer Palace to Wudaokou.[22] They were the first fuel cell buses to enter operation in China.[22] The technology has not gained broader use in the city because air pollution reduced the efficiency and operating life of fuel cells.[23]

Straddling bus

The Beijing public transit authorities experimented with a new type of public transport vehicle called the 3D Express Coach, also known as the straddling bus. The first straddling bus was expected to begin trial operation in Mentougou District in late 2010.[24]

Cultural

The Beijing Public Transport Museum at 91 Fahua Temple Road in Dongcheng District, just east of the Temple of Heaven, has a collection of vintage bus, trolleybus and trams used in Beijing.

The Beijing Public Transport Holdings, Ltd. funded a football club called the Beijing Bus FC, which competed in China League Two and played home games at the Chaolai Football Centre. The team disbanded after the 2006 season.

See also

Notes

A Route 823 bus at the Fahua Temple stop in 2006. In November 2011, all routes numbered in the 800s were reassigned and the old 823 route became 623. In May 2014, Route 623 was renamed Bus 3.[c]

a. ^ In November 2011, bus routes numbered in the 800s were re-numbered to make way for a reorganization of the 800 route buses into long-distance buses, and the preexisting 8xx bus routes were renamed as follows: 800内外→特12内外; 801→601; 802→99; 808→608; 810→609; 814→614; 823→623; 826→626; 836→617; 846→619; 849→620; and 852→621.[25]

b. ^ On March 26, 2014, the following regular city bus routes were re-numbered as neighborhood shuttles with the 专 prefix: 427→专101, 429→专102, 442→专103, 444→专104, 491→专105, 492→专106, 517→专107, 58→专108, 311→专109, 564→专110, 440→专111, 446→专112, 495→专113, 424→专114, 566→专115, 572→专116, 417→专117, 522→专118, 533→专119, 540→专120, 548→专121, 590→专122.[26]

c. ^ On May 10, 2014,seven double-decker bus routes were renumbered with the 特 prefix such that all double-decker routes were uniformly named with the 特 prefix: 83→特13, 54→特14, 85→特15, 406→特16, 72→特17, 320→特18, 319→特19.[27] In addition, Bus 623 was renamed Bus 3, and the old Bus 3 merged into Bus 12.[27][28]

d. ^ In August 2014, Beijing renumbered Buses 201-215 to a number scheme with the 夜 prefix. Also, many of the routes were redrawn such that very few of the old routes were carried through to the new scheme.[29]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 (Chinese) Beijing Xianglong Bus Co., Ltd.
  2. 1 2 3 (Chinese) 集团简介 2013
  3. 北京市统计局 国家统计局北京调查总队 (2016-02-15). "北京市2015年暨"十二五"时期国民经济和社会发展统计公报". Archived from the original on 2016-03-12. Retrieved 2016-02-16.
  4. http://www.bjbus.com/elements/uploaded/material/2014nshzrbg.pdf
  5. 1 2 (Chinese) "北京公交票价年底调整 地铁3元起公交2元起" 新华网 2014-11-27
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Fare Information" bjbus.com Accessed 2013-05-08
  7. 1 2 "Trip Regulation" Bjbus.com Accessed 2013-05-08
  8. (Chinese) "Scope of Use for Retired Cadres Honorary Certificate and Blind Person Cost-Free Ride Certificate" bjbus.com Accessed 2013-05-11
  9. "Municipal Transport Card BPT Reload Station" bjbus.com Accessed 2013-05-09
  10. [hebei.sina.com.cn/news/m/2014-11-26/0739111425_3.html 北京通往河北公交车一览] 2014-11-26
  11. 1 2 (Chinese) "北京5800余公交车WiFi免费上网" 京华时报 2013-08-17
  12. 北京万余公交车开通免费WiFi 全车覆盖无死角 2014-12-02
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 "Milestones" bjbus.com Accessed 2013-05-03
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (Chinese) "穿越时空的记忆——北京公共汽车进化史" 《汽车纵横》 2013-10-24
  15. Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia. Yateley, Hampshire, UK: Trolleybooks. p. 97. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Dru C. Gladney, "Responses to Chinese Rule: Patterns of Cooperation and Opposition", S. Frederik Starr ed., Xinjiang: China's Muslim Borderland ISBN 9780765613172 M.E. Sharpe 2004 p. 380
  17. Seth Faison, "Bus Bombing Fails to Daunt Shopping Day In Beijing" N.Y. Times 2007-03-09
  18. "空调公交车 今夏送爽" 1997-07-22
  19. Cui Junqiang, "北京:20辆电动公交车即将上路" Xinhua 2013-09-15
  20. (Chinese) "首条"好运北京"公交专用线开通" 北京日报 2007-08-03
  21. 1 2 3 (Chinese) 北京10万信息员收集涉恐涉暴情报 北京青年报 2014-05-30
  22. 1 2 3 "First clean fuel buses running on Beijing roads" Gov.cn 2006-06-21
  23. (Chinese) 姜天海, "杨裕生院士:氢燃料电池拯救不了蓝天" 中国科学报 2013-03-20
  24. McDermon, Daniel (2010-08-05). "Riding High: A Chinese Concept for Bus Transit". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-09-20.
  25. (Chinese) "北京8字头公交线本月完成换号 路号全部空出" 新京报 2010-11-21
  26. (Chinese) 3月26日起,部分公交线路变更路号 bjbus.com 2014-03-18
  27. 1 2 (Chinese) 5月10日新开调整10条线路 bjbus.com 2014-05-06
  28. (Chinese) 北京 3路公交车线路
  29. (Chinese) 北京公交地图

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