College Park–White Flint Line

The College Park–White Flint Line, designated Route C8, is a bus route that operates Monday to Saturday that is operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority between College Park–University of Maryland station of the Green Line and White Flint station of the Red Line of the Washington Metro. The line operates every 30–33 minutes at all times. Trips are roughly 70-90 minutes long.

C8
College Park–White Flint Line
Overview
SystemMetrobus
OperatorWashington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority
GarageMontgomery
LiveryLocal
StatusIn Service
Began serviceJuly 25, 1998
Route
LocalePrince George's County, Montgomery County, Maryland
Communities servedCollege Park, Adelphi, Hillandale, White Oak, Colesville, Glenmont, North Bethesda
Landmarks servedWhite Flint station, Randolph Road, Glenmont station, Colesville, White Oak, Food & Drug Administration/Federal Research Center, Hillandale, Adelphi, Archives II, University of Maryland, College Park–University of Maryland station
StartCollege Park–University of Maryland station
ViaAdelphi Road, Nicholson Lane, Randolph Road, New Hampshire Avenue, Campus Drive
EndWhite Flint station
Length70-90 minutes
Service
LevelNo Sunday Service
Frequency30-33 minutes
Operates5:08 AM – 9:19 PM (Weekdays)
6:30 AM – 9:23 PM (Saturday)
TimetableCollege Park–White Flint Line
 C4  {{{system_nav}}}  C11 

Current Route

Route C8 operates between College Park and White Flint stations from Monday through Saturday with no Sunday service. The C8 operates out of Montgomery division at all times.

History

Route C8 was known for two different lines, prior to its current line being named under the Aspen Hill-Montgomery Mall Line and Glenmont-College Park Line.

Aspen Hill–Montgomery Mall Line

C8 originally operated as part of the former Aspen Hill–Montgomery Mall Line between Aspen Hill, Maryland and Montgomery Mall from February 19, 1978, until 1996.[1] Before operating between Aspen Hill and Montgomery Mall, the route operated from Layhill to Congressional Plaza in Rockville. The route was discontinued in 1996, and was replaced by a combination of several Montgomery County Ride On bus routes.[2] The only route change that the C8 went through between this time period, was in 1985, when C8 was minorly rerouted to serve the newly opened Grosvenor and Twinbrook stations in the middle of its route.[3]

Glenmont–College Park Line

Route C8 was then reincarnated on July 25, 1998, to operate as part of WMATA's new Glenmont–College Park Line. The line was created at the request of the Action Committee for Transit in February, 1998, which sought to enhance transportation between University of Maryland, College Park and Washington Metro stations that are located in the upper northwestern region of Montgomery County, Maryland. The Action Committee for Transit had a very strong ambition for the C8 to operate all the way between College Park–University of Maryland station & White Flint station, via Glenmont station between Monday-Saturday.[2]

WMATA initially began operating the C8 between College Park and the newly opened Glenmont station during weekday peak-hours only, as an experimental route as WMATA wasn't sure if the new route would be successful in drawing enough riders to be able to sustain the route. The route mostly operated along River Road, Paint Branch Parkway, Campus, Adelphi Road, New Hampshire Avenue, Randolph Road, and Georgia Avenue.[2] If the route succeeded, the line would become permanent and can be extended to White Flint station.

1999 Changes

On July 18, 1999, as a result of the success of the route in attracting a high volume of riders, WMATA made the C8 a permanent Metrobus route. WMATA also all all day on weekday and Saturday service, as opposed to operating only during rush hours in order to meet the Action Committee for Transit's request for the C8 to operate more frequently throughout the day and Saturdays.[4]

2001 Changes

On January 13, 2001, WMATA finally meet the full request of the Action Committee for Transit, of extending the C8 route beyond Glenmont station, to White Flint station along Randolph Road replacing Ride On route 40. As a result, the name of the route was changed to the College Park-White Flint Line.[5][6]

2010 Proposed Changes

During WMATA's 2011 Fiscal Year, route C8 was proposed to be rerouted to operate to Prince George's Plaza station instead of College Park–University of Maryland station to replace route R3. It was also proposed to divert Food and Drug Administration and Federal Research Center in White Oak, Maryland and into Archives II in College Park, Maryland. But route C8 would revert to a weekday peak hour route only discontinuing all midday, weekday evening, and Saturday service. This would lead to a loss of ridership for the C8 since it will only have reduced weekday service instead of Monday through Saturday service.[7]

2012 Changes

On June 17, 2012, route C8 was rerouted to divert off the intersection of Adelphi Road and directly enter the National Archives at College Park, replacing route R3. Route C8 also diverted into the Food and Drug Administration and Federal Research Center. Route C8 would skip its diversion into both the National Archives Building and White Oak FDA/FRC building on Saturdays as both buildings were closed.[8]

2016 Proposed Changes

In 2016 as part of WMATA's FY2018 budget, it was proposed to eliminate the C8 segment between Glenmont station and White Flint station in order to reduce costs. Performance measures according to WMATA goes as follows:[9]

Performance MeasuresRoute C8WMATA GuidelinePass/Fail
Weekday Daily Riders2,632>432Pass
Cost Recovery27.8%>16.6%Pass
Subsidy/Rider$3.03<$4.81Pass
Riders per Rev Trip38.6>10.7Pass
Riders per Rev Mile2.2>1.3Pass
  • Discontinued segment averages 591 eastbound weekday boardings (19.1 per trip) and 401 westbound weekday boardings (12.5 per trip) according to WMATA automatic passenger counter data, which, accounts for 44.4% of eastbound boardings and 26.6% of westbound boardings.
  • Discontinued segment averages 354 eastbound Saturday boardings (9.1 per trip) and 248 westbound Saturday boardings (7.8 per trip) according to WMATA automatic passenger counter data, which, accounts for 46.2% of eastbound boardings and 29.7% of westbound boardings.

2017 Changes

On July 29, 2017, Saturday service to National Archives at College Park was discontinued due to the National Archives was now closed during Saturdays. Route C8 would skip the diversion on Saturdays but still serve the diversion on weekdays.[10]

2019 Changes

Beginning on September 1, 2019 for nine months, the College Park Metrobus loop was temporarily closed for construction of the Purple line at College Park station having all stops located along River Road. As of result, route C8 was temporarily rerouted along River Road having to turn around on the roundabout along Haig Drive to return to its regular route going to White Flint.[11]

2020 Changes

Beginning on April 20, 2020, parts of Calvert Road was closed due to the ongoing construction of the Purple line, route C8 was temporarily rerouted along Baltimore Avenue and to turn on Calvert Road to serve the west side of College Park–University of Maryland station since vehicles cannot travel along parts of Calvert Road.[12] However the reroute has not operated due to the 2019-20 COVID-19 outbreak and Metro's reduced service since March 16.[13] Route C8 resumed service on August 24, 2020 running the detour along Baltimore Avenue and Calvert Road.[14]

gollark: It just seems weird that they defined one of the base units as 1000 of some unit.
gollark: We can't rename kilograms grams without confusing everyone who doesn't also adopt that, but I guess renaming them to "standard weight units" or some abbreviation would work.
gollark: Also, it would be very hard, considering.
gollark: They should have just made kilograms be called "grams" and we could say milligrams for smaller amounts.
gollark: For SI, I mean.

References

  1. Feaver, Douglas (February 19, 1978). "Major Bus Route Changes Set Tuesday". Washington Post. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  2. Kwan, Quon (September 1, 1998). "ACT Succeeds in Getting New Metrobus Route C8" (PDF). Action for Transit Committee Transit Times. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  3. Lynton, Stephen J. (1984-08-24). "Metro Plans to Revise D.C., Montgomery Bus Routes for Red Line". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2019-11-22.
  4. Kwan, Quon (September 1, 1999). "WMATA Approves C8 as Permanent Service" (PDF). Action for Transit Committee Transit Times. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  5. "FY2001 Approved Budget (263 Pages) | Washington Metro | Public Transport". Scribd. Retrieved 2019-11-22.
  6. "Metrobus service changes effective January 13, 2001 Maryland". February 10, 2001. Archived from the original on February 10, 2001. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
  7. "MARYLAND PROPOSED BUS SERVICE CHANGES" (PDF). Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  8. "Metro News Release | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 2019-11-22.
  9. "MARYLAND Proposed Metrobus Service Changes" (PDF). Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  10. "Metrobus Service Changes, September 24 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  11. "Temporary Stop Relocation: MDOT MTA Purple Line Construction at College Park Station Bus Loop, September 1". Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  12. "MDOT MTA Purple Line Construction Project | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  13. "Metro Covid-19 Service | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  14. "Metrobus Service Changes beginning August 23 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
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