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Manchester Transit Authority

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Manchester Transit Authority
Founded1973
Headquarters110 Elm St, Manchester, NH
LocaleManchester, New Hampshire
Service areaGreater Manchester, NH
Service typebus service, paratransit, express bus service
Routes13
DestinationsGreater Manchester, Concord & Nashua, NH
HubsVeterans Park
FleetGillig 29' Low-Floor
1990 International Wayne
1992-1995 International Navi-Star Thomas
All-American Blue Bird, IC
2000 International Navi-Star Thomas
Annual ridership484,474 (2016)[1]
Fuel typeDiesel, biodiesel
Chief executiveMichael Whitten
Websitemtabus.org

The Manchester Transit Authority, or MTA, is a public transportation provider in Manchester, New Hampshire, United States. It was founded in 1973 and operates 13 regular bus routes through the city, including a free downtown circulator, which was rebranded as the Green DASH (Downtown Area Shuttle) in 2011. In general, service is hourly, with more frequent service along corridors served by multiple routes, and especially on the Green DASH.

It is a hub and spoke system that meets downtown at Veterans Park (labeled as Center of NH on southbound departing lines) with one line departing from the nearby Canal Street Transportation Center.

Service is generally limited to the city of Manchester, with a few lines extending into the neighboring towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Hooksett and Londonderry, and two express lines running to Concord and Nashua. Since July 2013, the MTA has offered weekday service between Concord and Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, with most trips also stopping at the Center of NH hub in downtown Manchester, from 3:30 a.m. until 12:45 a.m.[2] The neighboring suburb of Bedford contributed funding to the MTA until 2010, and service coverage was significantly reduced within the town the following year. As of 2009, 97% of Manchester residents lived within one-quarter mile of an MTA bus line.[3]

Original MTA logo (1974-2017), still in use on some buses and signage

The MTA is the public successor to Manchester's private bus service, which reached a peak annual ridership of 15.1 million in 1948, and the Manchester Street Railway that existed until 1940. The MTA was created by the City in May 1973, following requests by the private Manchester Transit bus provider for public subsidies.[4] As of 2005, the MTA served an average of 1,905 riders each weekday, though ridership has grown since that time despite budget cutbacks by the city and subsequent service cutbacks.[5] Ridership in 2011 had increased 21% over 2004, growing from 382,979 to 462,109 total rides. Service peaked for the decade in 2009 with 531,961 rides before falling as a result of service cuts in 2010 and recovering slightly in 2011. The general trend during the period, however, has been a growth in ridership.[6] In recent years, the MTA has sought to expand its ridership with new routes, such as the Green DASH and Concord Express, that are aimed at riders who might otherwise choose to drive.

In addition to the 13 public transit routes, the MTA operates a StepSaver paratransit service and two free Shopper Shuttle routes that operate three days a week.

Routes

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Most MTA buses originate at Veterans Park in downtown Manchester. This is indicated on timetables and maps as Veterans Park, Downtown Radisson (a hotel in the park), or Center of NH (a convention center inside the hotel).

Routes are organized into four zones. Zone 1 routes are standard fare local routes (routes 1 through 12), Zone 2 routes are intercity routes and require a day or month pass to ride (routes 21 and 22), Zone 3 routes are special excursions, and Zone 4 routes are free to ride.

Route Starting point Terminus Operates Notes
1

Dartmouth/VA Hospital

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Dartmouth Hitchcock Manchester Monday-Saturday Runs along Bridge Street between Elm Street and Interstate 93
2

Hanover St/E. Industrial Park

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson E. Industrial Park (Massabesic Circle even hours) Weekdays Ends at E. Industrial Park odd hours; continues to Massabesic Circle even hours
2S

Hanover St/E. Industrial Park

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson East Side Plaza via Elliot Hospital Saturday
3

Brown Ave/Airport

Canal St Transportation Center Manchester-Boston Regional Airport Weekdays Serves Elliot at Rivers Edge by request only
4

Commerce Drive/Target

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson 8 Commerce Drive, Bedford Weekdays Also serves Target
5

SNHU/River Rd

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Southern New Hampshire University Monday–Saturday Evening service until 9:35pm
6

Bremer St/Mast Rd

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Shaw's Pinardville, via St. Anselm College Monday–Saturday Operates as a counter-clockwise loop through Manchester's West Side
7

Bedford Grove Plaza/Second Street

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Walmart Bedford Monday-Saturday Serves Bedford Hills Center by request only
8

South Willow St/Mall of NH

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Mall of NH Monday–Saturday
9

Elliot Hospital/E. Side Plaza

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson East Side Plaza Weekdays Five trips daily
10

Valley St/Mall of NH

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Mall of NH Monday-Saturday
11

Front St/Hacket Hill Rd

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Walmart Hooksett Monday-Saturday Evening service until 9:25pm
12

So. Beech St/Mall of NH

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Mall of NH Monday–Saturday
21

Concord Zipline

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson New Hampshire State House, Concord Monday-Saturday Formerly Concord Express. Requires a day pass or monthly pass
22

Nashua Zipline

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Nashua Mall Monday-Saturday Formerly Nashua Express. Requires a day pass or monthly pass
41

Green DASH

Veterans Park/Downtown Radisson Circulator through downtown Weekdays Service is free
42, 43, 44, 45

Shopper Shuttle

Once weekly Service is free

Circulators and Shopper Shuttles

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  • The Green DASH downtown circulator operates for free as a weekday, figure-eight loop through the Millyard and Downtown every ten minutes during peak hours and every twenty minutes during off-peak hours.

Originally, the buses were wrapped with historical images of Manchester. In an effort to boost ridership and publicize the service, the downtown circulator was rebranded as the Green DASH in 2011, and the buses were given a new, green color scheme that no longer obscures the windows and clearly marks them as a free loop bus.[7] The free service is funded through a combination of federal grants and parking revenue. This marks the second attempt by the MTA at offering free transit downtown, following a fourteen-block free-ride zone that began in 1974 but has since been discontinued.[8]

  • Route 1 operates as a Healthcare Shuttle connecting Elliot Hospital, Doctors Park on Tarrytown Road, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Clinic, Veterans Administration Hospital and the Manchester Mental Health, and is funded through a grant from the FTA.[9]
  • The MTA also operates several Shopper Shuttles[permanent dead link], which run only on select days of the week and are funded by private retailers, but which offer free service mostly targeted at senior citizens.

Millyard People Mover

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Several groups in Manchester are currently advocating for the creation of a streetcar/rail system for the Downtown and Millyard areas. The idea was first raised in the early 1990s and was resurrected in 2012 when Dean Kamen proposed it.[10] More concrete plans, proposing a public-private partnership with the New Hampshire Department of Transportation, were put together in 2018 by Kamen's company DEKA, proposing the name Millyard People Mover.[11][12] The MTA has not yet allocated money for planning or studies as of 2021.

References

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  1. ^ https://www.snhpc.org/sites/g/files/vyhlif5006/f/uploads/mta_short_range_transit_plan_fy18-22.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ "New England bus ridership goes up as economy suffers » SalemNews.com, Salem, MA". Archived from the original on 2013-06-16. Retrieved 2013-05-20.
  3. ^ http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1366&context=theses [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1366&context=theses [bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ "New England bus ridership goes up as economy suffers » SalemNews.com, Salem, MA". Archived from the original on 2013-06-16. Retrieved 2013-05-20.
  6. ^ http://www.snhpc.org/pdf/finalRTP102412.pdf[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "There in a flash, on Green Dash | New Hampshire". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
  8. ^ http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1366&context=theses [bare URL PDF]
  9. ^ "Federal Transit Administration - Urban Circulator/Bus and Bus Livability Project Descriptions". Archived from the original on 2011-08-03. Retrieved 2010-07-20.
  10. ^ "Train idea for downtown Manchester is coming down the track again | New Hampshire NEWS02". www.unionleader.com. Archived from the original on 20 January 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  11. ^ https://www.nh.gov/dot/programs/public-private-partnership/documents/millyard-application.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  12. ^ "People Mover' would bring light rail to Millyard and parking by Rt. 293 Exit | Manchester Ink Link". 13 June 2018.
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