Laker Line Explained

Color:014987
Type:Bus rapid transit
Start:Kirkhof Center
End:Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences
Connectinglines: Silver Line
Stations:13
Operator:The Rapid
Linelength Mi:13.3

The Laker Line is a bus service in the Grand Rapids metropolitan area of Michigan, operated by The Rapid. The Laker Line connects three campuses of Grand Valley State University: the main campus in Allendale and two satellite campuses in Downtown Grand Rapids. The service is named after the GVSU athletic teams, and funded primarily by the university. The Laker Line is free to ride for GVSU students and employees, and is open to the general public with the payment of regular The Rapid bus fares.

The Rapid promotes the Laker Line as a bus rapid transit service, and it features some characteristics of bus rapid transit services, including limited stops, transit signal priority, and offboard fare payment. Short segments of the route in Downtown Grand Rapids feature dedicated bus lanes.[1]

Route and service

The Laker Line is a 13.3abbr=NaNabbr= route, connecting the GVSU main campus in Allendale to its two satellite campuses in Downtown Grand Rapids.[2] The line operates via Lake Michigan Drive, serving a total of 13 stations in Allendale, Walker, and Grand Rapids. Destinations along the Laker Line include the Kirkhof Center, the John Ball Zoo, the GVSU Pew Campus, DeVos Place, the Medical Mile, and the GVSU Center for Health Sciences.[3] [4]

Laker Line buses operate every 10 minutes on weekdays during the GVSU fall and winter semesters, with reduced service during summer semesters and breaks. Weekday evening service operates every 20 minutes, and weekend services are every 30 minutes. All daytime trips operate the full route, and some evening trips are short turn services between the Allendale and Pew campuses. The Laker Line is a limited-stop service, with parallel local service within Kent County provided by The Rapid Route 12 from Monday to Saturday.

Scheduled travel times for the full route range from 37 minutes during weekday peak hours to 30 minutes in late evenings, an average speed of 21.6to.

Stations

The Laker Line serves 13 stations in each direction, located on the curb at major intersections. All stations feature ticket machines, automatic snowmelt systems in the pavement, and emergency intercoms. 3 stations are shared with the Silver Line.

!Station!Locale!The Rapid connecting services!Notes
Kirkhof CenterGVSU Allendale 37, 48, 85
Mackinac HallGVSU Allendale 37
Ferndale AveWalker 7, 12
Cummings AveWalker 12
Standale TrailWalker 12
Maynard AveGrand Rapids 12
Covell AveGrand Rapids 12
Zoo/Garfield AveGrand RapidsEastbound station signed as John Ball Zoo, westbound signed as Garfield Ave, serving the John Ball Zoo
Straight AveGrand Rapids
Pew CampusDowntown Grand Rapids DASHTerminus for some evening trips
Monroe/LouisDowntown Grand Rapids 9, 11, 13, DASH Silver Line
DeVos PlaceDowntown Grand Rapids 9, 11, 13, DASH Silver Line
Medical MileMedical Mile 11, 13 Silver Line
Lafayette AveMedical Mile 13Serves GVSU Cook-DeVos Center for Health Sciences

History

The Rapid began operating bus service between Downtown Grand Rapids and Grand Valley State University in Allendale in 2000, funded by the university.[5] The Route 50 "Campus Connector" grew into a popular service, with ridership increasing from 179,000 trips per year in 2002 to 1.4 million in 2012. This rapid ridership growth occurred in tandem with the growth of the GVSU campuses in Downtown Grand Rapids.[6] The Rapid and GVSU increased peak-hour bus service to every six minutes, but still faced significant overcrowding on buses.

The Rapid released a long-range plan in 2010, which included a number of proposed improvements to its services by 2030. The plan included bus rapid transit corridors on Division Avenue and Lake Michigan Drive, and also proposed better frequency and hours of service for standard bus routes. Detailed planning for the project began in 2012, when the Federal Transit Administration awarded The Rapid a $600,000 grant to study options for enhanced transit service along Lake Michigan Drive.

The alternatives analysis for the Lake Michigan Drive project was completed in 2014, the same year as The Rapid's first bus rapid transit line opened. The Silver Line is a limited-stop service with enhanced bus stations along the route, transit signal priority, and bus-only lanes in select locations along the route. The Laker Line proposal was a similar service, serving enhanced stations, but running on city streets in mixed traffic with only short segments of bus-only lanes. The proposal included a fleet of 16 60feet articulated buses dedicated to the Laker Line, which provide additional capacity compared to The Rapid's standard 40feet buses.In February 2018, the Laker Line project was approved for $56.2 million in federal funding under the Federal Transit Administration's Small Starts program. The federal grant covered 80% of the capital cost of the Laker Line system, including the buses and the construction of the stations. The remaining 20% of the capital cost was paid for by the State of Michigan's Comprehensive Transit Fund.[7] Construction began in April 2019, and was estimated to be complete for the Fall 2020 semester at GVSU.[8] The first of the fleet of 16 compressed natural gas-powered buses was received in June 2019.[9] [10]

Service on the Laker Line began on August 24, 2020, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. At the line's launch, bus capacity was limited, and face masks were required. The final cost of the line, including buses, stations, and road work, was $72.8 million.[11]

Fares

The Laker Line is integrated with The Rapid's fare system, and charges standard bus fares. Ticket machines are located at all stations, and tickets must be purchased before boarding the bus. Grand Valley State University students and employees ride for free on the Laker Line and all other The Rapid bus routes, as part of a partnership between GVSU and The Rapid that began the Route 50 service in 2000, and continues to the present with the Laker Line.

External links

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wanek-Libman . Mischa . 2020-08-25 . The Rapid begins service on the Laker Line . 2024-11-04 . Mass Transit.
  2. Web site: Laker Line BRT, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Small Starts Project Development . 2024-11-04 . Federal Transit Administration .
  3. Web site: Laker Line: Maps & Stops . 2024-11-09 . The Rapid.
  4. Web site: 2020-08-24 . Laker Line service starts August 24 . 2024-11-04 . WZZM.
  5. News: Reister . Cami . 2005-01-26 . GVSU students bump up Rapid bus ridership - University pays buses to run three free routes . The Grand Rapids Press . B3 . NewsBank.
  6. Web site: Krietz . Andrew . 2013-11-22 . The Rapid's 'Laker Line' solicits feedback for bus rapid transit system between GVSU, Grand Rapids . 2024-11-10 . MLive.
  7. Web site: 2018-10-10 . U.S. DOT Provides More Than $63 Billion to Major Transportation Infrastructure Investments Across America in 2018 . 2024-11-10 . United States Department of Transportation .
  8. Construction Begins on the Laker Line, Scheduled to Open in August 2020 . April 1, 2019 . The Rapid . 2024-11-10.
  9. Web site: 2019-06-03 . Laker Line's new 60' buses unveiled in community celebration . 2024-11-04 . WZZM.
  10. Web site: Hicks . Justin P. . 2019-06-03 . 60-foot-long Laker Line bus unveiled to serve GVSU to Grand Rapids . 2024-11-04 . MLive.
  11. Web site: McVicar . Brian . 2020-08-24 . The Rapid launches $72.8M Laker Line between Grand Rapids, GVSU . 2024-11-04 . MLive.