Montreal bus rapid transit
Rendering of the planned busways | |
Parent | Société de transport de Montréal (STM) |
---|---|
Founded | 2022 |
Locale | Montreal, Laval |
Service type | Bus rapid transit |
Routes | 2 (planned) |
Stations | 17 (planned) |
Daily ridership | 70,000 (projected) |
Operator | STM |
Website |
Montreal Bus Rapid Transit is a planned bus rapid transit network in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is to operate starting 2022 on Pie-IX Boulevard.
Pie-IX BRT line
2022 future service
Service is project to be restored by 2022, with two dedicated lanes in the middle of the street and 24-hour service.[1][2] The service will be transferred from the MUCTC, which operated the BRT line until its suspension in 2002, to the AMT. The rebuilt line was originally projected to cost $150 million CDN.[3] The new service will extend into Laval, and is projected to cost $300 million CDN, as of 2010.[4] The portion in Laval will extend 5 kilometres (3.1 mi), and include parking lots. As the portion in Laval will operate on a grade separated expressway (the former trace of Autoroute 25, since moved to a new right-of-way further east) and have dedicated on-ramps and off-ramps.[5] The system will extend from Autoroute 440 in Laval, all the way to Notre-Dame Street near the southern shore of Montreal Island against the Saint Lawrence River.[6]
List of 2022 revised system BRT stations
As originally envisioned, the BRT route would extend from Henri Bourassa Boulevard to René Lévesque Boulevard.[7]
At the issue of an early planning study made by Genivar/CIMA+ for the AMT, the planned line is to have the following stop.
- Montée Saint-François and 440 highway (Laval) (500 park-and-ride spots)
- Saint-Martin (Laval) (500 park-and-ride spots)
- de la Concorde (Laval)
- d'Amos
- Castille
- Fleury / Forest
- 56e Rue / Gare Montréal-Nord — intermodal station with Mascouche commuter rail line.
- 47e Rue
- 39e Rue
- Robert
- Jarry
- Jean-Talon — intermodal station with projected future Line 5 Blue Montreal Metro station
- Belanger
- Beaubien
- Rosemont
- Laurier
- Mont Royal
- Métro Pie-IX
- Ontario
- Sainte Catherine
- Notre-Dame
Replacement with LRT
There are plans to replace the BRT with a true LRT tramline on the street using the shared right-of-way. A Montreal Metro line was also once planned to run underneath Pie-IX Boulevard, but this never came to fruition. At one time, a tram line ran on Pie-IX, prior to the establishment of regular bus service along the thoroughfare.
Henri Bourassa BRT line
There is a planned BRT line along Henri Bourassa Boulevard, running for 5 kilometres (3.1 mi), projected for operation in 2018. It would create two dedicated reserved lanes in the middle of the street, and operate 24 hours a day. The plan is projected to cost $25 million CDN as of 2010.[7]
References
- ↑ CTV Montreal, "Reserved bus lane coming to Pie-IX Boulevard", Thu Dec. 17 2009 7:07:00 PM
- ↑ (French) Montreal 2025, VOIE RÉSERVÉE SUR PIE-IX - MONTRÉAL LANCE LES TRAVAUX AU CARREFOUR HENRI-BOURASSA / PIE-IX , 11.02.10
- ↑ (French) La Presse (Montreal), "Voie réservée sur Pie-IX: 154 millions pour faire rouler les autobus", Bruno Bisson, 23 octobre 2009 à 06h43
- ↑ (French) 24H (Montreal), "Le Service rapide par bus du boulevard Pie-IX coûterait 305 M $", QMI, 18/09/2010 10h42
- ↑ The Gazette (Montreal), "Reserved bus lanes from Laval to Montreal to cost $305M", René Bruemmer, Monday, September 20, 2010
- ↑ (French) Metro (Montreal), "Disparition des derniers vestiges de la voie réservée sur Pie-IX", Jennifer Guthrie, 03 août 2010 21:49
- 1 2 McGill University, "Bus Rapid Transit: Montreal's Plan", Julie Bachand & Julie Lafrance, 2010
External links
- STM 505 R-BUS Pie-IX route map and stop listing
- Innovative Service Design Among Bus Rapid Transit Systems In The Americas (PDF)