Skip to main content

Marta trials on-demand transit 

Atlanta's six-month ride-share pilot service connects riders to bus and rail services
By Ben Spencer March 11, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Marta's service is available in West Atlanta, Belvedere, and Gillem Logistics Center and costs $2.50 (image credit: Georgia Institute of Technology)

The Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (Marta) has launched a six-month ride-share service that connects riders to its bus and rail services. 

Marta and the Georgia Institute of Technology received a $1 million grant last Autumn from the US National Science Foundation to launch the Marta Reach service.

The authority says Marta Reach will test how on-demand shuttles can be used to make it easier and faster for customers to get to their destinations and help minimise waiting and walking. 

Marta interim general manager Collie Greenwood says: “This pilot programme combines on-demand rideshare with public transit, providing personal transportation at a low cost, and will be a vital connection to the larger Marta system for those customers in areas underserved by transit. I’m eager to see how it’s used, it’s efficiency, and whether the program could be adopted and expanded to help complement our upcoming bus network redesign.” 

The service is available in West Atlanta, Belvedere, and Gillem Logistics Center and costs $2.50. It runs from 6:00 am until 7:00 pm. 

Kroger Fulfillment Center general manager David Matthews says: “There are about 2,500 employees within Gillem Logistics complex across 17 business that have employees that need reliable transportation. This on-demand service should have a positive impact on Kroger’s ability to attract and retain people wanting to work.”

Georgia Tech’s industrial and systems engineering team is providing the technology, including routing logic, and rider, operator and administrator system apps for the project. 

The app guides users to designated pick-up and drop-off stops near the beginning or end of each trip while also allowing them to request additional stop locations. Those who do not have a smartphone can book a ride by calling Marta's customer service team. All vehicles are wheelchair and stroller accessible. 
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens to build streetcars for Atlanta
    April 25, 2012
    Siemens Industry has been awarded a US$17.2 million contract from Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA), on behalf of the City of Atlanta and the Atlanta Downtown Improvement District, to provide Atlanta with four new streetcars. The first car is expected to be delivered in September 2012 with revenue service beginning in early 2013. These will be the first streetcars in Atlanta since 1949 and will mark Siemens entry into the streetcar market in the United States.
  • TransLink installs screens at UBC Exchange 
    December 30, 2021
    Screens at University of British Columbia feature text to speed audio for the visually impaired 
  • Building back better after Covid-19
    February 17, 2021
    The Canadian Urban Transit Association has looked carefully at what’s required to put public transportation on a firm footing post-Covid: here are a few of the group’s recommendations…
  • EasyMile shuttle goes fully driverless
    November 29, 2021
    Firm says control centre can supervise Toulouse vehicles remotely without on-board supervisor