Skip to main content

Lima moves forward in urban transport reform

Lima’s city council has approved a regulation which prohibits minibuses, locally known as combis, in 16 of the Peruvian capital's most traffic-congested districts as part of an ongoing attempt to modernise its urban transport system. The new rules will take effect over the next year. The bill also included a measure to extend by three years the operating licenses for 399 bus routes, which the city is trying to streamline and incorporate into its integrated urban transport system, or SIT. The SIT is Lima’s a
March 4, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Lima’s city council has approved a regulation which prohibits minibuses, locally known as combis, in 16 of the Peruvian capital's most traffic-congested districts as part of an ongoing attempt to modernise its urban transport system. The new rules will take effect over the next year.

The bill also included a measure to extend by three years the operating licenses for 399 bus routes, which the city is trying to streamline and incorporate into its integrated urban transport system, or SIT.

The SIT is Lima’s attempt to reform public transport in the capital, a process initiated during the administration of the previous mayor in a bid to reduce congestion in the city's streets and reorganise its urban transport services.

The reforms intend to reduce the number of bus routes in the city, increase the number of higher capacity buses in circulation, and decommission older and small vehicles in operation, such as the combis.

Lima has also issued tenders for five new bus corridors along its most heavily transited routes, two of which are already in operation. The eventual goal is to integrate these bus routes with Lima's Metropolitano bus rapid transit (BRT) system and subway system, which is undergoing an expansion.

Related Content

  • Moscow summit urges transit change
    June 11, 2019
    International ITS experts flocked to Russia for a new conference on the challenges of urban transit. Eugene Gerden reports from Moscow The Leaders in Urban Transportation Summit is a new international conference organised by the Moscow Department of Transport and Road Infrastructure Development. Dedicated to the latest developments in the field of ITS in the city of Moscow, it took place in the Moskva-Citi Business Center in April – and the intention is to make it an annual event. Senior transport o
  • Insight into China's smart cities initiatives
    April 25, 2013
    Schneider Electric, which has been playing an active role in smart transportation systems in China since 1990, provides an insight into smart city initiatives in the country. Today, most cities across the world are facing unprecedented growth, which questions the viability of the current development model. They are immersed in a competition with each other, both domestically and internationally, in terms of investments, jobs and talents. Cities need to become more attractive and intelligent by becoming more
  • Driverless Russia: Look – no hands!
    March 26, 2020
    Russia is betting on the importance of driverless cars as the country’s transport system develops in the years to come.
  • Russia looks to ITS to curb congestion and reduce accidents
    May 7, 2015
    Major ITS installations are planned as the Russian capital Moscow grapples with extensive traffic problems. At the end of 2014, Russia’s first complex intelligent transport system (ITS) started easing traffic problems in and around the capital Moscow, following the implementation of the plans by the federal government and the city’s authorities.