Skip to main content

Rapid transit bus route for Mexico

The first step towards a long-awaited reform of Tijuana’s antiquated and inefficient public transportation system is scheduled to begin early in 2013, with the construction of a 10.5 mile rapid-transit bus route linking the San Ysidro border to the eastern El Florido area of the city. The city is currently served by a disorganised network of buses and taxis. The US$123 million project, known as Ruta Troncal Número 1, is expected to serve more than 120,000 residents a day. Mexico’s federal development bank,
January 2, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The first step towards a long-awaited reform of Tijuana’s antiquated and inefficient public transportation system is scheduled to begin early in 2013, with the construction of a 10.5 mile rapid-transit bus route linking the San Ysidro border to the eastern El Florido area of the city. The city is currently served by a disorganised network of buses and taxis.

The US$123 million project, known as Ruta Troncal Número 1, is expected to serve more than 120,000 residents a day.  Mexico’s federal development bank, Banobras, is contributing about 30 per cent of the cost and the city of Tijuana paying an equal amount, with the remainder financed by the private sector.

Mayor Carlos Bustamante, who signed the agreement with Banobras in Mexico City, said passengers will save time and money with the new system. The cost of riding on the rapid-transit buses will be about half of the fare for existing routes, he claimed.

The new system “is a modern project, that will dignify the task of transport workers, and bring immediate benefits to Tijuana residents,” commented Bustamante, who has said that improving public transportation would be a priority of his administration.

The new route is being built alongside the Tijuana River channel. There will be no vehicle or pedestrian crossings along the bus route, so transportation “will be safer and faster,” said Roberto Díaz García, head of Tijuana’s municipal property trust. The city is planning fourteen pedestrian bridges and three vehicular bridges in connection with the new route.

One of two bus rapid transit routes planned by the city’s municipal government, work on the first is scheduled to begin in February, and to be completed at the beginning of 2014.

Related Content

  • £10.6m boost for Glasgow sustainable travel
    July 8, 2025
    Initiatives to encourage more walking and cycling will receive funding
  • Vision Zero is working says New York mayor, announces more funding
    January 22, 2016
    According to Mayor Bill de Blasio, 2015 was officially the safest year on New York City streets since record-keeping began in 1910, thanks to the city’s Vision Zero program.He said the 231 traffic fatalities in 2015 are 66 lower than the 297 fatalities that occurred in 2013, the year before Vision Zero began. Pedestrian deaths, a historic low of 134 in 2015, fell 27 per cent during that period. The previous lows were 2011 with 249 traffic fatalities and 2014 with 139 pedestrian fatalities.
  • PPP helps speed Chicago’s transit fare upgrade
    December 15, 2014
    David Crawford on a fast-tracked payment upgrade. This July saw the completion of the final stage of the implementation of Chicago’s new Ventra open fare payment system on the services of two of the region’s three transit providers, the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) and regional bus operator Pace. Ventra has been introduced to accept any contactless general purpose payment card, including personal debit and credit cards.
  • GMV to modernise Rabat’s bus transit system
    July 17, 2019
    GMV is to provide fare collection, fleet management and passenger information systems for 350 buses operating in Morocco’s capital Rabat. The technology business group is carrying out the project in support of an agreement between Spanish transport operator Alsa and local firm Citybus Transport to manage Rabat’s urban transport system. GMV says its advanced fleet management system will allow the whole service to be managed and monitored based on vehicle positioning information. The fleet’s movements will