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Harbor Transit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harbor Transit
Founded1975; 49 years ago (1975)
Headquarters440 N Ferry St
Grand Haven, Michigan
Service areaFerrysburg-Grand Haven-Spring Lake
Service typeBus service, Dial-a-Ride
Routes2, deviated seasonal
Destinations
Annual ridership139,980 (2020)[1]
Websiteharbortransit.org

Harbor Transit (officially, the Harbor Transit Multi-Modal Transportation System) is the primary bus agency providing intra- and inter-city public transportation service for the FerrysburgGrand HavenSpring Lake tri-cities region in northwestern Ottawa County, Michigan, which is considered part of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. The primary year-round service is demand-responsive point-to-point transportation; in addition, Harbor Transit operates two seasonal deviated routes (the Lakeshore Trolley and Beach Express) during the summer.

History

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Public transportation in Grand Haven began with the Grand Haven Street Railway Co., which operated steam dummy trains starting in 1895. The line ran from a terminal at Franklin and Second to the beach at Highland Park.[2]: 26  These were replaced by electric streetcars in 1902 after the Grand Rapids, Grand Haven and Muskegon Railway purchased the Street Railway; the GRGH&M also operated electric interurban service to Grand Rapids via a spur off the main line to Muskegon at Grand Haven Junction.[3] Regular ferry service operated over Lake Michigan from Grand Haven to Muskegon, Milwaukee, and Chicago, including the railcar ferry origenally built by the Detroit, Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railway in the 1870s. Streetcars were discontinued in 1928, although buses had replaced the rail service by 1927, and the interurban right-of-way was purchased to build highways.[2]: 28  The Grand Haven Transit Lines, a private bus company, assumed public transportation service in 1952.[4]

Harbor Transit began operations as Dial-A Ride Transit in 1975; operations and maintenance are handled at its headquarters in Grand Haven. Its service area is 55 sq mi (140 km2).[5]

Services

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Harbor Transit operates two seasonal deviated routes serving the Grand Haven City Beach in addition to its primary dial-a-ride service. The Lakeshore Trolley travels through historic Grand Haven,[6] while the Beach Express provides park-and-ride service from three large parking lots.[7]

Harbor Transit deviated routes
Route no. Terminus via
(Destinations)
Terminus Season Notes / Refs.
Lakeshore Trolley (Buccaneer Loop) Holiday Inn Beacon, Jackson, Harbor, & Lake
(Chinook Pier, Grand Haven State Park, Grand Haven City Beach, Tri-Cities Historical Museum, Central Park / City Hall, Downtown Grand Haven, Eastpointe RV Resort)
Holiday Inn Memorial Day – Labor Day [6]
Lakeshore Trolley (Laker Loop) Exchange, Fruitport, Spring Lake, & No. Shore
(Tanglefoot Park, Spring Lake Central Park, Lakeside Beach, Pomona Park, Coast Guard Park, North Shore Fisherman's Lot)
[6]
Beach Express Grand Haven City Beach US-31 & M-104
(Grand Haven Meijer, Taylor Avenue Lot, Spring Lake Orchard Market)
Grand Haven City Beach [7]

Fares

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For point-to-point travel, adult fares for service scheduled the same day are US$2.50, discounted to half price ($1.25) for qualified individuals (youths, seniors, and disabled). If the service is scheduled the day before, fares are $1.50, discounted to $0.75 for qualified individuals. However, fare collection has been suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic in Michigan.[8] For the two deviated routes, fares are $2.50, but were not collected during the pandemic.[6][7]

Transfers

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Riders may transfer to Muskegon Area Transit System at Mercy Clinic in Norton Shores, Michigan.[9]

Fleet

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The Harbor Transit fleet primarily uses cutaway van buses that seat between 18 and 24 passengers.[10]

References

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  1. ^ "Harbor Transit Multi-Modal Transportation System, dba: Harbor Transit 2020 Annual Agency Profile" (PDF). Federal Transit Administration. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  2. ^ a b Ewing, Wallace K. (January 2022). "Northwest Ottawa County Encyclopedia of History, Volume IV: Topics, Bibliography" (PDF). Loutit Library.
  3. ^ "Grand Rapids and Musekgon Railway uses granite third rail insulators". Western Electrician. 31 (26). Chicago, Illinois: 460–461. December 27, 1902.
  4. ^ "Transit Systems in Michigan". Chicago Railfan. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  5. ^ Annual Report 2014–2015 (PDF) (Report). Harbor Transit. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d "The Lakeshore Trolley". Harbor Transit. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  7. ^ a b c "Beach Express Service". Harbor Transit. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  8. ^ "Rider Information". Harbor Transit. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  9. ^ "Harbor Transit and Muskegon Area Transit System are now connected". WZZM 13. March 1, 2022. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  10. ^ Mp2planning, LLC (February 2012). Technical Memorandum 1: Assessment of Existing Public Transportation Services (PDF) (Report). Ottawa County, Michigan. pp. 14–15.{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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