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News from King County Transportation
Release date:
May 31, 2005
Metro Transit making bus service changes in June
Adjustments also include Saturday closure of downtown bus tunnel
These
changes in June – and particularly those in September – will affect all
bus passengers who travel to, from, or through downtown Seattle. There will
also be modifications in June to routes serving Rainier Valley, Capitol
Hill, the University District, Kent, and the Kingsgate-Totem Lake area.
Metro updates its routes and scheduling
three times a year in February, June and September to improve service and
keep up with the changing needs of transit passengers.
Here are the highlights
of the upcoming service change:
Saturday
tunnel closure – Beginning June
4, the
Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel (DSTT) will be closed on Saturdays in
addition to the regular Sunday closure. This is in preparation for light
rail coming to downtown.
Buses
that would normally operate in the tunnel on Saturdays will operate via
surface streets, just as they currently do at night and on Sundays and
holidays. When the tunnel completely closes on Sept. 24, all tunnel buses
will move to new surface street routings.
Work has
begun on Sound Transit's project to build Link light rail between SeaTac and
downtown Seattle. The project includes upgrading and retrofitting the DSTT
so both buses and light rail can use it. The tunnel will be closed for up to
two years.
Sound
Transit, Metro Transit, the City of Seattle, and Community Transit are
implementing bus service changes and a $16 million mitigation package of
projects and programs to support transit operations and keep traffic flowing
through downtown Seattle during the closure.
There will be additional
service changes made in September to both tunnel and non-tunnel routes to
more evenly distribute bus service in downtown, and to provide reliable
schedules.
Route 7 split
– Starting June 4, Metro Transit will split the 15-mile long Route 7 into
two separate routes. This is being done to speed up service for passengers.
Historically, Route 7 is one of Metro’s longest routes and one of the most
popular, with more than 5 million passenger trips a year. It currently
operates between Rainier Beach and the University District via downtown
Seattle and Capitol Hill.
The two routes - Route 7 and
new Route 49 - will operate as separate routes from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. During split times, Route 7 will operate between Rainier
Beach and downtown Seattle, and Route 49 will provide service between
downtown and the University District via Capitol Hill. Passengers wanting to
travel beyond downtown on either route will need to transfer.
The last northbound bus stop
for Route 7 on Third Avenue will be at Pike Street. To continue to Capitol
Hill and the University District, transfer to Route 49 eastbound on Pike
Street at Fourth Avenue.
The last southbound stop for
Route 49 will be on Pine Street at Second Avenue. To continue to Rainier
Beach, transfer to Route 7 southbound on Third Avenue at Pine Street.
The two routes will be
connected in the early morning and after 7 p.m. and all day on Sundays.
During those times, all Route 7 trips from Rainier Beach will continue
through downtown Seattle as Route 49 trips to Capitol Hill and the
University District. And, all Route 49 trips from the University District
and Capitol Hill will continue as Route 7 trips to Rainier Beach.
Route 7 service between
downtown Seattle and Rainier Beach will operate with the same frequency as
today; however, service in the evening Monday through Saturday will be more
frequent, every 15 minutes until 9:30 p.m.
Route 49 will operate Monday
through Saturday every 15 minutes until 9:30 p.m., and on Sunday every 15
minutes until 6:30 p.m. At other times, Route 49 will operate every 30
minutes.
Commute routes via SR520 –
The June service
change will include new routing in the mornings for some routes traveling
from the Eastside to downtown Seattle. Routes 250, 257, 261, 268 and 311
will operate via Fifth Avenue on their morning trips into Seattle from State
Route 520. Currently these routes travel southbound through downtown on
Second Avenue. Changes to these non-tunnel routes are being made in order to
more evenly distribute service in the downtown area and maintain reliable
operation.
Revised Kent service –
Metro will begin
serving Sound Transit’s Kent Sounder Train Station in June with service on
routes 150, 153, 154, 158, 159, 162, 164, 166, 167, 168, 169, and 183, along
with Boeing Route 952, and Sound Transit routes 564 and 565.
Routes 150, 154, 158, 159, 162, 164, 166, and 168 will continue to serve the
old Kent Park-and-Ride at Lincoln and James (formerly called the Kent
Transit Center); however, the lot will be reduced to 100 parking spaces.
Buses will serve only the new stops on James Street near the north end of
the lot. All existing bus bays along Lincoln Avenue will be closed and
removed.
The Kent commuter rail
station includes 880 parking spaces (surface and garage). The rail station
is closer to most Kent destinations, such as the Regional Justice Center,
the Kent Library, downtown businesses, and the soon-to-open Kent Station
retail and entertainment center.
Kingsgate changes –
Metro’s Kingsgate
Freeway Stations, located northbound and southbound on Interstate 405, will
be closed due to the construction of new access ramps being built by Sound
Transit. A new Totem Lake transfer point will replace the Kingsgate Freeway
Station.
During construction, a Sound Transit-funded King County Metro shuttle -
Route 630 - will operate between the Kingsgate Park-and-Ride lot and
downtown Bellevue during peak commute times. Metro passengers traveling to
the Totem Lake area to and from the north will need to transfer at the
Brickyard Park-and-Ride to routes 236, 238, or 255.
University District
summer service –
University District routes 31, 48,
68, 75, 167, 197, 205, 271, 272, 330, and 372 will have some trips suspended
during the summer due to lower usage. Please check the new timetables to
make sure your trip has not changed.
Fares
– Sound Transit will increase its express bus
fares on June 1. This may
affect passengers who transfer between Metro and Sound Transit buses, but
Metro fares are not changing. A Metro transfer is worth $1.50 toward an
adult fare on Sound Transit Express buses after June 1.
____
All of these changes are detailed in new teal-colored
Metro timetables and a special Rider Alert brochure. Those materials will be
available in late May. Look for them on buses in the racks near the front of
the coach. The brochures and timetables are also available at Metro
information racks, libraries, and work sites.
The
new timetables will be available on
Metro Online on Friday, June 3. Or, call Metro Rider Information at
(206) 553-3000. |