99 B-Line

99 B-Line
A 99 B-Line bus
Overview
SystemTransLink
OperatorCoast Mountain Bus Company
Began serviceSeptember 3, 1996
Route
StartUBC Exchange
EndCommercial–Broadway station
Length14.3 km (8.9 mi)[1]
Stops13[2][3]
Service
Ridership30,780 (avg. weekday 2022)[4]
Route map
Map 99 B-Line highlighted in orange; limited service segment in red
UBC Exchange
Allison
Sasamat
Alma / W 10th
Macdonald
Arbutus
Granville
Heather / Willow
Right arrow
Canada Line
to Waterfront
Cambie
Broadway–City Hall
Main
Fraser
Clark
UpperRight arrow
Expo Line
to Waterfront
Commercial–Broadway
Down arrow
Millennium Line
to Lafarge Lake–Douglas
Key
Bus
SkyTrain
99 B-Line
Expo Line
Entire route is
Millennium Line
in Fare Zone 1
Canada Line

Handicapped/disabled access All stations are accessible
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The 99 B-Line is an express bus line with bus rapid transit elements in Metro Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It travels along Broadway, a major east–west thoroughfare, and connects the University of British Columbia (UBC) to Commercial–Broadway station on the SkyTrain system. It is operated by Coast Mountain Bus Company and funded by TransLink.

It is the first and the most popular of the B-Line routes in the regional system. The other B-Lines that followed are based on the 99 B-Line in terms of the use of articulated buses (which can carry 120 passengers) and frequent arrivals for buses. The waiting time for a bus during peak hours on a weekday is 1.5–3 minutes. All of the buses on this route are built by New Flyer Industries of Winnipeg, Manitoba. On average it takes 42 minutes to complete the entire route, or half an hour near the last runs at the end of the night.

The 99 B-Line is the busiest bus route in Canada and the United States,[5][6][7] with a 2018 average weekday ridership of 55,900 passengers.[1] This number is up from approximately 45,000 passengers per day in 2007.[8] The COVID-19 pandemic lowered the ridership of the line; by 2022, it saw around 30,780 trips per weekday, about 54 percent of its peak levels of 57,240 in 2019.[9]

  1. ^ "TransLink NextBus". TransLink. January 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  2. ^ "TransLink NextBus". TransLink. January 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  3. ^ "2022 TSPR – Bus/SeaBus Summaries". public.tableau.com. TransLink. Retrieved October 4, 2023.
  4. ^ "TransLink's UBC Line Rapid Transit Study Shortlist of Alternatives" (PDF). City of Vancouver. October 5, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2011.
  5. ^ "SkyTrain to UBC". TransLink. January 13, 2020. Archived from the original on January 13, 2020. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  6. ^ "2022 TSPR – Bus/SeaBus Summaries". public.tableau.com. TransLink. April 27, 2023. Retrieved October 3, 2023.

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