Monday 13 May 2019

New York City MTA withdraws iconic RTS buses from service


Looking at London’s sister... that other global city called New York City in the United States of America; The New York City Transport authority MTA has withdrawn their iconic RTS buses after nearly 40 years in service.

I know this news is a bit overdue but I've only recently become aware of the event.


RTS Bus Retirement

Extracts from MTA Press Release

MTA New York City Transit retired the last remaining Rapid Transit Series (RTS) bus from service today, ending a near-40-year run of the blue and white buses that generations of New Yorkers have grown up riding on city streets. With today’s final trip on the M55 route in Midtown and Lower Manhattan, the RTS buses have been replaced by a modern, low-emissions fleet that includes new state-of-the-art hybrid and zero-emissions vehicles allowing NYC Transit to better serve customers.

“We’re passing the torch to the next generation of modern buses, including all-electric models, that are setting the standard for transit agencies around the country and allowing us to better serve our customers,” said Darryl C. Irick, MTA Bus Company President and NYC Transit’s Senior Vice President of Buses. “Both my father and I drove the ‘Big Blues & Whites’ during our careers at New York City Transit, so the retirement of the RTS fleet is a nostalgic moment for my family.”

“One of the cleanest bus fleets in the world is now getting cleaner with the retirement of this model as we push on with the latest technologies including zero-emission electric buses,” said NYC Transit President Andy Byford. “We’re working hard to improve bus service and win back customers, and a state-of-the-art fleet is key to that endeavor.”

NYC Transit’s fleet of nearly 4,900 RTS buses were built by GMC Truck and Coach Division, TMC and Nova Bus, and were ordered between 1981 and 1999. The first RTS bus was put into service in 1979 as a demo, and eventually the RTS buses served routes in every borough and operated out of nearly every NYC Transit and MTA Bus Company depot across the city. As recently as this year, RTS buses were serving a wide variety of neighborhoods across the boroughs. Several were sent to Atlanta for use during the Summer Olympics in 1996. NYC Transit became the first major public transit agency to have a 100 percent accessible bus fleet through its use of the RTS vehicles, all of which have wheelchair lifts.

NYC Transit began testing greener technology by using RTS buses to test alternative fuels such as Compressed Natural Gas and methanol in the 1990s. Building on those efforts, NYC Transit now has one of the cleanest fleets in the world, with nearly 1,700 hybrid-electric buses, 745 CNG buses, 10 all-electric buses and more than 3,000 clean diesel buses. These cleaner, lower-emission buses, which have replaced the RTS vehicles, adhere to the latest and most stringent EPA regulations. The entire NYC Transit bus fleet is wheelchair accessible.

NYC Transit is continuing to pursue an even greener bus fleet, with the recent purchase of the MTA’s first all-electric articulated buses. The MTA Board awarded a contract in January to New Flyer of America Inc. for 15 all-electric articulated buses, 16 in-depot chargers and one mobile charging unit. This new contract for the articulated buses, which are higher-capacity 60-foot-long buses used on Select Bus Service as well as on higher ridership routes, makes MTA New York City Transit one of the first public transit systems in the country, and the nation’s largest public bus network, to use zero-emissions technology on these larger, heavier vehicles that, in turn, require more power to operate.

The MTA has allocated funding for purchasing a total of 60 all-electric buses in its current capital program, with many more to come in the future. Transit officials are ultimately pursuing a zero-emissions fleet, pending the viability of electric propulsion and charging technologies being tested in depots and on city streets right now.

The MTA removes 17 million metric tons of carbon emissions from the air per year by providing public transit services as an alternative to personal vehicle use, and an all-electric bus fleet would further reduce the city’s carbon footprint. All-electric propulsion technology also results in quieter operations in addition to the benefits of zero tailpipe emissions, which make it ideal for operating vehicles in densely populated areas such as New York City. All-electric buses use an electric motor powered by a battery pack, and its propulsion system recaptures energy normally wasted in braking.

RTS Bus Retirement

NYC Transit is also implementing several initiatives to improve bus service and attract new customers. They include working with the New York City Department of Transportation and NYPD on initiatives to increase bus speeds such as by redesigning the entire bus route network borough by borough, redesigning street traffic infrastructure, adding bus lanes and traffic signal priority for buses, adding automatic camera enforcement of bus lane violations, and keeping bus lanes clear with stepped-up police enforcement including the use of tow trucks.

Under the latest electric bus contract, New Flyer will install the in-depot charging equipment beginning in July, followed by the delivery of the first new bus in September. Delivery of all the buses is scheduled for completion in January 2020, with an incentive for earlier delivery. Once delivered, these buses will be put in service on 14th Street, where NYC Transit has enhanced bus service to provide robust alternate crosstown service during the L Project.

Here's the video footage of the RTS Bus on its last day of service.



Interesting to see that in New York City they have chosen to use low emission and zero emission for their bus fleet.

Also, I am aware MTA was testing the Alexander Dennis Enviro500 SuperLo bus on express route X17J.



For the readers worldwide

In London, England, the classic AEC Routemaster is still in service, but only available on Route 15H which runs from Trafalgar Square to the Tower of London on Summer weekends and Bank Holidays only. You can view the timetable for the service here

There are 1,000 of the three-door, two-staircase New Routemaster buses. They operate on daytime routes 3, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 16, 21, 24, 27, 38, 48, 55, 59, 68, 73, 76, 87, 91, 137, 148, 149, 159, 168, 189, 211, 253, 254, 267, 390, 453, and East London Transit routes EL1, EL2 and EL3.

Six of the NRM ‘successor’ - the two-door, one-staircase SRM Volvo B5LH operate on route 189. Two of the Volvo B5LHC SRM operate on route 37.

You can track down the SRM’s on London Vehicle Finder

https://lvf.io/#LDN|Rtp%20vhr*

https://lvf.io/#LDN|Gal%20vhp*

There are 100 spin off 'successor' of the New Routemaster bus, the Alexander Dennis Enviro400H City operates on daytime routes 20, 26, 78, 133, 333 and 388.

37 of the zero emission Enviro400EV City are expected to appear on route 43 during May.

TfL has no plans to increase the fleet of the three-door and two-staircase New Routemaster bus, but it will be down to the private bus operators to purchase the spin off successor which is the SRM or the Enviro400 City upon new route contracts.

I invite you to follow me on Twitter by searching for @CLondoner92

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