Downtown circulator
In the United States, a downtown circulator is a road, bus or tram system to distribute traffic or people through a downtown area.
Examples include:
- Miami, Florida's Downtown Distributor
- Pawtucket, Rhode Island's Downtown Circulator
- The DC Circulator bus system in Washington, D.C.
- Tulsa, Oklahoma's Inner Dispersal Loop formed by I-444 (Unsigned) and I-244.
- Kansas City, Missouri's downtown freeway loop
- Molly the Trolley of Trinity Metro in downtown Fort Worth[1]. One everyday line and one lunch weekday line.
- Lymmo of LYNX (Central Florida Regional Transportation Authority) in Orlando[2]. Four lines.
- Music City Circuit of WeGo of Nashville[3]. Two free lines.
Circulator bus
A circulator bus is a bus serving an area confined to a specific locale, such as a downtown area (downtown circulator) or suburban neighborhood, with connections to major traffic corridors.[4]
gollark: I agree, Syl, APIONET actually is:- all- inescapable
gollark: Anima: many, although technically APIONET doesn't connect them, ABR-EB does.
gollark: osmarksrobot omnipresence CONFIRMED.
gollark: Hello.
gollark: ++tel link apionet #a
See also
Notes
- https://ridetrinitymetro.org/services/molly-the-trolley
- https://www.golynx.com/plan-trip/riding-lynx/lymmo/
- http://www.nashvillemta.org/Nashville-MTA-Music-City-Circuit.asp
- M. Scott Ball (March 2012). Livable Communities for Aging Populations: Urban Design for Longevity. John Wiley & Sons. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-118-19728-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.