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List of Metrobus routes in Washington, D.C.

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(Redirected from Route A2 (WMATA))

WMATA New Flyer XN40 running on the 32 route in the "Local" scheme.
An Orion VII CNG in the "MetroExtra" scheme in Washington DC
Route S4 in Washington DC

This is a list of bus routes operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), branded as Metrobus in Washington, D.C. Many are the descendants of streetcar lines operated by the Capital Transit Company or its predecessors.

Numbering

[edit]

Most Metrobus routes in DC begin with a letter followed by a number but some routes can have double digit numbers.[1][2]

Odd-numbered routes are typically part-time variants of even-numbered routes. At one time, odd numbered routes were express routes, but that distinction has been abandoned. Most odd-numbered routes operates during rush hours and or limited stops with a few of them running into the off peak hours and weekends.

History

[edit]

Many current routes operate under former streetcar routes. The streetcars provided the main transportation in the Washington, D.C. area from the 1800s to the 1960s.[3] DC Transit would also operate on the former streetcar routes when the Streetcars ended service. In 1973, WMATA acquired DC Transit along with other bus companies to form its current Metrobus system.[4]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, service has been mostly reduced to Sunday service schedules during the weekdays with select routes suspended from March 18 until August 22, 2020. Routes 54, 70, 90, A6, A8, B2, H4, S4, V4, W4, and X2 were the only routes that ran during the weekends with the rest of the routes suspended.[5] On August 23, 2020, more routes came back during the weekdays and weekends returning Metrobus service to 75%.[6]

Routes

[edit]

Most DC Metrobus routes operate inside the Washington DC borders. However, some routes would venture into small parts of Montgomery County and Prince George's County to connect to various stations in the Hub-and-spoke system via the old Streetcar routing.

Route Terminals Streets traveled Service notes Divisions
31, 33
Wisconsin Avenue Line
Friendship Heights station
  • Wisconsin Avenue NW
  • 31: Weekday service only
  • 33: 24-hour service
  • Western
  • Montgomery (Route 33 late nights only)
32, 36
Pennsylvania Avenue Line
Potomac Park (Virginia Avenue & E Street NW)
  • Pennsylvania Avenue SE/NW
  • Branch Avenue SE (36)
  • Alabama Avenue SE (32)
  • Naylor Road SE
  • 32: 24-hour service
  • Andrews Federal Center
42, 43
Mount Pleasant Line
Mount Pleasant (Lamont & Mount Pleasant Streets NW) Kennedy Center
  • Columbia Road NW
  • Connecticut Avenue NW
  • 42 serves Dupont Circle station
  • 43 travels underneath Dupont Circle via the Connecticut Avenue underpass and skips the Dupont Circle station
  • Select 43 trips ends at Potomac Park
  • Western
  • Bladensburg
52, 54
14th Street Line
  • 14th Street NW/SW
  • 52: 24-hour service
  • Western
  • Bladensburg
59
14th Street Limited Line
Takoma station Federal Triangle (10th Street & Pennsylvania Avenue NW)
  • 14th Street NW
  • Weekday peak hour service only
  • Limited stops only
  • Bladensburg
60
Fort Totten–Petworth Line
Fort Totten station Georgia Avenue–Petworth station
  • Rock Creek Church Road NW
  • Upshur Street NW
  • Weekday service only
  • Bladensburg
62, 63
Takoma–Petworth Line
Takoma station
  • 5th Street NW
  • Kansas Avenue NW
  • New Hampshire Avenue NW (63)
  • 11th Street NW (63)
  • 63: Weekday peak hours only
  • Bladensburg
64
Fort Totten–Federal Triangle Line
Fort Totten station Federal Triangle (10th St & Constitution Ave NW)
  • New Hampshire Avenue NW
  • 11th Street NW
  • Bladensburg
70
Georgia Avenue–7th Street Line
Silver Spring station (Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center)
  • Georgia Avenue NW
  • 7th Street NW
  • 24-hour service
  • Montgomery
74
Convention Center–Southwest Waterfront Line
Walter E. Washington Convention Center (6th Street & Massachusetts Avenue NW) Buzzard Point (2nd & R Streets SW)
  • 7th Street NW/SW
  • Bladensburg
  • Shepherd Parkway
79
Georgia Avenue Limited Line
Silver Spring station (Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center) Archives station
  • Georgia Avenue NW
  • 7th Street NW
  • Limited Stops Only
  • Montgomery
  • Bladensburg
80
North Capitol Street Line
Fort Totten station
  • 12th Street NE
  • Michigan Avenue NE
  • North Capitol Street
  • H Street NW
  • 24-hour service
  • Bladensburg
90, 92
U Street–Garfield Line
  • Duke Ellington Bridge (90), 92 (during late nights only)
  • Frank D. Reeves Center (U & 14th Streets NW) (92)
  • 18th Street NW (90)
  • U Street NW
  • Florida Avenue NW/NE
  • 8th Street NE/SE
  • Good Hope Road SE (92)
  • 92: 24-hour service
  • Shepherd Parkway
96
East Capitol Street–Cardozo Line
Capitol Heights station Tenleytown-AU station
  • East Capitol Street
  • Massachusetts Avenue
  • New Jersey Avenue NW
  • U Street NW
  • Wisconsin Avenue NW
  • Andrews Federal Center
A2
Anacostia–Washington Highlands Line
Southern Avenue station Anacostia station
  • Martin Luther King Avenue SE
  • Mississippi Avenue SE
  • Atlantic Street SE
  • Shepherd Parkway
A4
Anacostia–Fort Drum Line
  • D.C. Village (North Parking Lot)
  • Fort Drum (Irvington & Joliet Streets SW)
Anacostia station
  • Martin Luther King Avenue SE/SW (A4)
  • Shepherd Parkway
A6, A7, A8
Anacostia–Livingston Line
  • Livingston (4501 3rd Street SE) (A6, A8)
  • Southern Avenue & South Capitol Street, SE (A7)
  • Martin Luther King Avenue SE
  • Wheeler Road SE (A6, A7)
  • South Capitol Street (A8)
  • A6, A8: 24-hour service
  • A7: Weekday peak hour service only (AM to Anacostia, PM to Southern Avenue & South Capitol Street, SE).
  • Shepherd Parkway
B2
Bladensburg Road–Anacostia Line
Mount Rainier Terminal (Rhode Island Ave & 34th Street) Anacostia station
  • Bladensburg Road NE
  • 14th Street NE (to Anacostia)
  • 15th Street NE (to Mount Rainier)
  • Minnesota Avenue SE
  • Martin Luther King Jr Avenue SE
  • 24-hour service
  • Some peak hour trips terminate at Bladensburg Road & V Street NE
  • Bladensburg
  • Shepherd Parkway
D2
Glover Park–Dupont Circle Line
Glover Park (41st St & Davis Pl NW) Dupont Circle station (20th & Q Sts NW Entrance)
  • Q Street NW
  • Western
D4
Ivy City–Franklin Square Line
Ivy City (Okie & 16th Streets NE) McPherson Square station (Franklin Square Entrance)
  • K Street NW/NE
  • Bladensburg
D6
Sibley Hospital–Stadium Armory Line
Sibley Hospital Stadium–Armory station (north entrance)
  • MacArthur Boulevard NW
  • Q Street NW
  • I Street NW (to Sibley Hospital)
  • K Street NW (to Stadium-Armory)
  • E Street NW
  • C Street NE (to Sibley Hospital)
  • D Street NE (to Stadium-Armory)
  • Bladensburg
  • Southern Avenue
  • Western
D8
Hospital Center Line
Washington Hospital Center Union Station
  • Franklin Street NE
  • Brentwood Road NE
  • Mount Olivet Road NE
  • K Street NE
  • Bladensburg
E2
Ivy City–Fort Totten Line
Fort Totten station Ivy City (Okie & 16th Streets NE)
  • South Dakota Avenue NE
  • 18th Street NE
  • Bladensburg
E4
Military Road–Crosstown Line
Friendship Heights station
  • McKinley Street NW
  • Military Road NW
  • Kennedy Street NW
  • Every other trip begins/terminates at Fort Totten station.
  • Western
G2
P Street–LeDroit Park Line
Georgetown University (37th & O Streets NW) Howard University (301 Bryant Street NW)
  • P Street NW
  • Western
G8
Rhode Island Avenue Line
Avondale (Eastern & Michigan Avenues NE) Farragut Square
  • Monroe Street NE
  • Rhode Island Avenue NW/NE
  • 9th Street NW (to Farragut Square)
  • 11th Street NW (to Avondale)
  • H Street NW
  • Some trips operate from Brookland–CUA station to Farragut Square during weekday AM peak hours and between Brookland-CUA station and Avondale during weekday PM peak hours.
  • Late night trips operate between Farragut Square and Brookland-CUA station only.
  • Bladensburg
H2, H4
Crosstown Line
Tenleytown–AU station Brookland–CUA station
  • Wisconsin Avenue
  • Porter Street NW (H4)
  • Van Ness Street NW (H2 to Brookland)
  • Veazey Street NW (H2 to Tenleytown)
  • Connecticut Avenue (H2)
  • Columbia Road NW (to Tenleytown)
  • Irving Street NW (to Brookland)
  • Michigan Avenue NW/NE
  • H4: 24-hour service
  • Bladensburg
H6
Brookland–Fort Lincoln Line
Fort Lincoln (Petersburg Apartments) Brookland–CUA station
  • Franklin Street NE
  • 14th Street NE
  • Bladensburg
H8, H9
Park Road–Brookland Line
Rhode Island Avenue–Brentwood station
  • Irving Street NW (H8 to Rhode Island Avenue)
  • Columbia Road NW (H8 to Mount Pleasant)
  • Rock Creek Church Road NW (H8)
  • 12th Street NE
  • H9 only operates when Carroll High School is open
  • Bladensburg
K2[7]
Takoma–Fort Totten Line
Takoma station Fort Totten station
  • North Capitol Street
  • Kansas Avenue NE
  • Eastern Avenue
  • Weekday peak hour service only
  • Bladensburg
L2
Connecticut Avenue Line
Chevy Chase Circle Farragut Square
  • Connecticut Avenue NW
  • Calvert Street NW
  • Columbia Road NW
  • Western
M4
Nebraska Avenue Line
  • Nebraska Avenue NW
  • Western Avenue
  • Weekday service only.
  • Western
M6
Fairfax Village Line
Fairfax Village (Alabama & Pennsylvania Avenues SE) Potomac Avenue station
  • Pennsylvania Avenue SE
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Southern Avenue SE
  • Shepherd Parkway
N2, N4, N6
Massachusetts Avenue Line
Friendship Heights station Farragut Square
  • Western Avenue (N4, N6)
  • Wisconsin Avenue (N2)
  • Massachusetts Avenue
  • New Mexico Avenue NW (N2, N6)
  • N2, N4: Weekday service only
  • N6: Late night and weekend service only replacing Routes N2 and N4
  • Western
P6
Anacostia–Eckington Line
Anacostia station Rhode Island Avenue – Brentwood station
  • M Street SE/SW
  • Pennsylvania Avenue NW
  • North Capitol Street
  • Shepherd Parkway
S2
16th Street Line
Silver Spring Station (Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center)
  • Colesville Road
  • Eastern Avenue NW
  • Alaska Avenue NW
  • 16th Street NW
  • 24-hour service
  • Montgomery
S9
16th Street Limited Line
Silver Spring Station (Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center) McPherson Square Station (Franklin Square Entrance)
  • 16th Street NW
  • Limited stops only
  • Bladensburg
  • Montgomery
U4
Sheriff Road–River Terrace Line
River Terrace and Sheriff Road Minnesota Avenue station
  • Sheriff Road NE
  • Minnesota Avenue NE
  • Benning Road NE
  • Order of terminals (north to south): River Terrace to Minnesota Avenue then Minnesota Avenue to Sheriff Road NE, then reverse.
  • Bladensburg
  • Southern Avenue
U5, U6
Marshall Heights Line
Minnesota Avenue station
  • Minnesota Avenue NE
  • Texas Avenue SE
  • Ridge Road SE
  • Bladensburg
  • Southern Avenue
U7
Deanwood–Minnesota Ave Line
Minnesota Avenue station Deanwood station
  • Minnesota Avenue NE
  • Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue NE
  • Kenilworth Avenue Service Road NE
  • Weekday & Saturday service is extended to Minnesota Avenue and Ridge Road SE.
  • Bladensburg
  • Southern Avenue
V2, V4
Capitol Heights–Minnesota Avenue Line
Capitol Heights station
  • Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue NE
  • Minnesota Avenue NE/SE
  • Martin Luther King Jr Avenue SE (V2)
  • M Street SE (V4)
  • V2: 24-hour service
  • Shepherd Parkway
  • Southern Avenue
V7, V8
Benning Heights—Alabama Avenue Line
Minnesota Avenue station
  • Benning Road NE/SE
  • Southern Ave SE (V7)
  • Alabama Ave SE (V7)
  • V7: Weekday peak hour service only
  • Bladensburg
  • Shepherd Parkway
  • Southern Avenue
W1
Shipley Terrace–Fort Drum Line
Southern Avenue station Fort Drum (Irvington & Joliet Streets SW)
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Martin Luther King Jr Avenue SW
  • Weekday service only.
  • Shepherd Parkway
W2, W3
United Medical Center–Anacostia Line
  • Washington Overlook (Malcolm X Ave & Oakwood St SE) (AM Terminal)
  • Mellon St & Martin Luther King Ave SE) (PM Terminal)
  • Anacostia station
  • Southern Avenue
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Morris Road SE
  • Martin Luther King Jr Avenue SE
  • W3: Monday-Saturday service between 9am-3pm only via Good Hope Marketplace (No Sunday service)
  • W2 skips the United Medical Center Roadway and end/begin at Southern Avenue station after 9pm daily, passengers wishing to visit the hospital must alight/board on Southern Ave.
  • Late night W2 service operates between Anacostia station and Naylor Road & Alabama Avenue only
  • Shepherd Parkway
W4
Deanwood–Alabama Avenue Line
Anacostia station Deanwood station
  • Division Avenue NE
  • Benning Road SE
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • 24-hour service
  • Shepherd Parkway
  • Southern Avenue
W5
Anacostia–Blue Plains Line
  • D.C. Village (North Parking Lot)
Anacostia station
  • South Capitol Street
  • Shepherd Parkway
W6, W8
Garfield–Anacostia Loop Line
Garfield (Stanton Road & Alabama Avenue SE) Anacostia station
  • Good Hope Road SE
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Stanton Road SE
  • W6: Clockwise loop
  • W8: Counterclockwise loop
  • Shepherd Parkway
X2
Benning Road–H Street Line
Minnesota Avenue station
  • Benning Road NE
  • H Street NE/NW
  • 24-hour service
  • Bladensburg
X8
Maryland Avenue Line
Carver Terrace (21st Place & Maryland Ave NE) Union Station
  • Maryland Avenue NE
  • Bladensburg
X9
Benning Road–H Street Limited Line
  • Nannie Helen Burroughs Avenue NE
  • Benning Road NE
  • H Street NE/NW
  • Weekday service only
  • Serves Capitol Heights station during rush hour only.
  • Midday service operates between Gallery Place & Minnesota Avenue station only.
  • Limited stops only
  • Southern Avenue

School Routes

[edit]

These routes connect schools to Washington Metro stations or other local points. They are primarily intended for students, but are open to anyone, and stop at all stops along their routes. These routes will only operate when District of Columbia Public Schools are open.

Route Terminals Streets traveled Service notes Divisions
A31, A32, A33
Minnesota Ave–Southeast Line
Anacostia High School
  • Minnesota Avenue (A31)
  • Martin Luther King Jr Ave (A33)
  • Naylor Road (A32)
  • Introduced in November 2005
  • Andrews Federal Center
  • Shepherd Parkway
D31, D32, D33, D34
16th Street–Tenleytown Line
  • D31 16th St. and Eastern Ave. N.W.
  • D32 Columbia Heights station
  • D34 14th St. and Colorado Ave. N.W.
  • D33 16th St. and Shepherd St. N.W.
Tenleytown–AU station
  • 16th Street (D31, D33)
  • Military Road (D31, D33, D34)
  • Nebraska Ave
  • Connecticut Ave (D32)
  • Wisconsin Ave (D32)
  • Via Deal Middle School
  • Bladensburg
  • Western
D51
Congress Heights–Georgetown Line
Congress Heights station Duke Ellington School of the Arts
  • Pennsylvania Avenue
  • Shepherd Parkway
H9
Park Road–Brookland Line
Archbishop Carroll High School Rhode Island Avenue–Brentwood station
  • 12th Street NE
  • Bladensburg
S35
Fort Dupont Shuttle Line
Branch Ave. and Randle Circle Fort Dupont
  • Southern Ave
  • Minnesota Ave
  • Shepherd Parkway
S41
Rhode Island Ave–Carver Terrace Line
Rhode Island Avenue–Brentwood station Carver Terrace
  • Rhode Island Ave
  • Montana Ave
  • Bladensburg Road
  • Via Phelps High School
  • Bladensburg
W45, W47
Mt. Pleasant–Tenleytown Line
  • W45 16th St. & Shepherd St. N.W
  • W47 14th St. & Colorado Ave. N.W
Tenleytown–AU station
  • Nebraska Ave
  • Wisconsin Ave (W47)
  • 14th Street
  • 16th Street (W45)
  • Bladensburg
  • Western
X3
Benning Road Line
Minnesota Avenue station Brentwood Parkway & Penn Street NE (KIPP DC College Prep)
  • Benning Road NE
  • Southern Avenue

Additional trips are added to the following routes during school hours: 62, 90, A2, A7, B2, H4, K2, M4, P6, U6, W1, W4, X2.

Routes History

[edit]

This table gives background knowledge of how routes were created and the overall changes it has gone through the years.

Route History
31, 33
  • 31 was created on June 29, 2008, to operate between the Foggy Bottom and Friendship Heights stations when 30 was discontinued. (see Pennsylvania Avenue Line)[8]
  • 33 was introduced on August 24, 2014, to replace the 32 and 36 between Friendship Heights and Archives & is a "reincarnated" route 30.[9]
  • 31 weekend service has been suspended since March 21, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
  • Late night 33 service was extended to L'Enfant Plaza station on May 29, 2022.[10]
  • 24-hour service for the 33 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
32, 36
  • 32 and 36 replaced almost all of 30, 34, and 35's routing between Naylor Road & Friendship Heights Metro stations on June 29, 2008. (See Pennsylvania Avenue Line)[8]
  • 34 originally operated between Naylor Road & Friendship stations until June 29, 2008, when it was discontinued being replaced by new Route M5. M5 renamed to route 34 when it was "reincarnated" and was extended to Archives station in December 2008.[12]
  • 32 and 36 have been truncated from Friendship Heights station to Foggy Bottom station as of August 24, 2014, and no longer operate via Wisconsin Ave NW being replaced by the 30N, 30S, 31 and 33.[9]
  • As of March 27, 2016, Weekday Route 34 service after 9:19 PM & all weekend service were discontinued. Alternative service is available on routes 30N and 36.[13]
  • 34 was suspended on March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
  • 24-hour service for the 32 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
42, 43
52, 54
  • 52 & 54 originally terminated at Navy Yard until the Navy Yard station opened in December, 1991.
    • When it opened, 52 was truncated to only operate up to L'Enfant Plaza station & Route 54 was truncated to only operate up to Federal Triangle. 54 was later extended to terminate at L'Enfant Plaza.
  • Route 53 was introduced on September 18, 1999, several years after the former route 50 was discontinued, operating at first to Bureau Of Engraving before being shortened to Federal Triangle and now to Franklin Square.
  • Route 54 discontinued service between L'Enfant Plaza and Federal Triangle on June 26, 2016.[14]
  • Route 53 was discontinued on December 17, 2017, and replaced by Route 54, which in turn, was truncated to Metro Center on the same date.[15]
  • Route 52 was rerouted to 12th Street & Maine Avenue SW via The Wharf on December 17, 2017.[15]
  • Also see 14th Street Line
  • 24-hour service for the 52 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
59
  • Began service on January 8, 2018.[15]
60
  • 60 originally operated between Fort McNair and 11th Street NW & Monroe Street NW (Petworth). However; around December, 1991, 60 was rerouted to operate between the Fort Totten station & Federal Triangle instead of operating between Buzzard Point and Petworth.
  • On September 18, 1999, both 60 & 64 were truncated even further to only operate between the Fort Totten & Georgia Avenue stations with the portion replaced by the 66.
  • Route 60 was split from the 64 remaining as the Fort-Totten Petworth Line on June 6, 2021.[16]
62, 63
  • 62 originally operated all the way between the Takoma station and Buzzard Point (Half & O Sts. SW)
  • In December, 1991, 62 was truncated to only operate between the Takoma station & Federal Triangle.
  • On September 18, 1999, 68 took over the portion of 62's routing between the Georgia Avenue station and Federal Triangle that had been discontinued.
  • On December 28, 2008, route 68 was extended from Georgia Avenue to Takoma station via the 62's routing and renamed to a new route 63.[12]
    • 63 operates through the portion of the 62 that operated to Federal Triangle until Georgia Avenue–Petworth station opened on September 18, 1999.
  • 63 service along Sherman Avenue and 13th, H, and I streets NW was eliminated on September 5, 2021. Route now follows the 64 routing to Federal Triangle.[17]
64
  • 64 originally operated between Half Street SW & O Street SW (Buzzard Point) and 11th Street NW & Monroe Street NW (Petworth) alongside 60 until December, 1991 when it was rerouted to operate between the Fort Totten station & Federal Triangle to replace the K4.
  • On September 18, 1999, both 60 & 64 were truncated even further to only operate between the Fort Totten & Georgia Avenue stations with the portion replaced by the 66.
  • In 2008, 64's original routing between Fort Totten and Federal Triangle was restored and replaced the 66.[12]
  • 64 also runs on the old 11th Street Streetcar Line.
  • 64 was rerouted on 11th Street between Florida Avenue & S Street NW to Florida & Vermont Avenues NW to directly serve the U Street Station on June 24, 2018.[18]
  • Route 64 was split from the 60 and renamed as the Fort Totten–Federal Triangle Line on June 6, 2021.[16]
70
  • Since September 25, 2011, route 71 service was discontinued, while the 70 was shortened to Archives. For service to Southwest Waterfront, see route directly below this one (74).[19]
  • Late night service was extended to L'Enfant Plaza station on May 29, 2022.[10]
  • 24-hour service was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
74
  • Introduced on September 25, 2011, as a replacement of DC Circulator's discontinued Convention Center-Southwest Waterfront route, as well as the discontinued portion of the 70 and 71 lines between Archives and Buzzard Point.[20][19]
  • Service was extended back to Buzzard Point beginning on August 23, 2020.[6]
79
  • 79 is a "reincarnation" of the old 73 (Brightwood Express Line) that was discontinued on June 25, 2000, only with the exception that unlike 73, which operated between Georgia & Alaska Aves. NW and L'Enfant Plaza, 79 would operate between the Silver Spring Station and Archives
  • Began service originally as a rush hour/peak period only route on March 19, 2007[21]
  • Mid-Day non-rush hour/peak period service began on June 24, 2007
  • Saturday service began on March 24, 2013.[22]
  • Sunday service began on December 29, 2013.[23]
  • Cash-free route from June 24, 2018, until June 23, 2019. Passengers wishing to use cash would have to use Route 70.[24]
  • Southbound service was rerouted along 7th Street discontinuing service along 9th Street beginning on August 23, 2020.[6]
80
  • 80 operated on the North Capitol Street Streetcar Line, alongside 81 between Brookland & West Potomac Park
  • 80 & 81 later extended to Riggs Road NE, via 12th Street NE and South Dakota Avenue NE during the early 1970s although both routes were eventually truncated to the Fort Totten Metro Station on February 19, 1978, shortly after it opened
  • 81 operated alongside 80 until sometime around 1996/1997. 81 was then shifted over to operate as part of the College Park Line operating via 83's former routing between Rhode Island Avenue station & Cherry Hill via Greenbelt station, once 83 was rerouted to operate to serve the College Park - U of MD Station instead of the Greenbelt Station. Unlike Route 83, 81 would only operate on Sundays to avoid duplicating C2's already existing Metrobus Service between the University of Maryland and Greenbelt Station, Monday-Saturday, as well as much of 83's already existing Metrobus Service Monday-Saturday between the Rhode Island Avenue Station & Cherry Hill.
  • Every other weekday trip operates between Fort Totten and McPherson Square only as of March 30, 2014.[25]
  • All service to Kennedy Center was eliminated on September 5, 2021, being replaced by the 42 and 43. Service now terminates at McPherson Square.[17]
  • Early morning and late night service was extended to George Washington University Hospital on June 25, 2023.[26]
  • 24-hour service was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
90, 92
  • 90 replaced all portions of the 94 north of Anacostia station which became the 94's northern terminal after it opened in 1991
  • 93 originally operated as part of the Garfield-Owl Line alongside the former 91 route until January 13, 2001 when it was discontinued. 93 was shifted over to operate as part of the U Street-Garfield Line and extended from its original Stanton Road terminus, to operate to the newly opened Congress Heights station during late nights only.
  • 90, 92, and 93 operated all the way up to McLean Gardens from the mid-1990s until June 24, 2007, when all three routes were truncated to only operate up to Duke Ellington Bridge being replaced by Route 96, which was extended from its original terminus at Duke Ellington Bridge to the McLean Gardens on June 24, 2007.[27]
  • Beginning June 22, 2014, all northbound Route 92 service was truncated from Duke Ellington Bridge to U and 14th Streets, NW terminus and all Route 92 southbound service begins at U & 13th Streets, NW (U Street station, 13th Street NW entrance).[28]
  • Route 93 was discontinued March 27, 2016.[13]
  • 24-hour service for the 92 was introduced on December 17, 2023, which was extended back to Duke Ellington Bridge.[11]
  • Also see U Street Line, New Jersey Avenue Line and Florida Avenue Line
96
  • Formerly known as the New Jersey Avenue Line
  • 96 originally operated as part of the "U-Street - Garfield Line", between DC General Hospital and McLean Gardens alongside Routes 90, 92, 94, & 98 up until December 28, 1991, when only Routes 90 & 92 were retained as part of the line, while 94 was split into its own line known as the, "Stanton Road Line", alongside the 95 route (which was eventually discontinued on January 13, 2001) between Anacostia Station and Stanton Road, while 98 was discontinued, and 96 was split into its own line known as the, "New Jersey Avenue Line", and truncated to only operate up to Duke Ellington Bridge instead of McLean Gardens
  • 96 replaced the segment of the former routes 40 and 44 routing between Stadium Armory and Capitol Heights station in March, 1995
  • 96 was once again extended from Duke Ellington Bridge back to its original terminus at McLean Gardens on June 24, 2007, to replace the segment of 90, 92, & 93's routing between the Duke Ellington Bridge & McLean Gardens[27]
  • 96 was then later on extended from McLean Gardens to Tenleytown-AU station September 30, 2012.[29]
  • 97 was suspended since March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
A2
  • Formerly known as the Anacostia Line (along with A4, A6, A7, A8) until 1991
  • Routes A42, A46, & A48 created as brand new Metrobus Routes on December 28, 1991, to provide the same level of service that Routes A2, A4 A6, A7, & A8 formerly did to Archives in Downtown Washington D.C., only with the exception that they would only operate late night service when the P6 Metrobus Service was unavailable. Routes A42, A46 and A48 was discontinued on June 26, 2016, and replaced by new late night/early morning P6 trips between Anacostia Station & Archives, as well as extended service on the A2, A6, and A8 Metrobus Routes.
  • Route A2 skips the United Medical Center Roadway during late nights, passengers wishing to visit hospital must alight/board on Southern Ave.
  • Route A2 was split into the Anacostia–Washington Highlands Line on June 6, 2021.[16]
A4
  • A4 and A5 operated to Archives station (as part of the Anacostia Line) until Anacostia station opened in 1991
  • The route north of Anacostia is now served by route P6
  • The A5 covered the A4 route but excluded Fort Drum. It was discontinued on March 24, 2013, replaced by the W5 which runs on South Capitol Street (SB) and DC-295 (NB).[22]
  • Route W5 was separated from the line on June 6, 2021.[16]
  • Service to the US Coast Guard Headquarters was discontinued on December 17, 2023.[11]
A6, A7, A8
  • Destination signs on A7 evening rush hour buses reads "Livingston via Wheeler Road", but it does not serve 4501 3rd Street, SE. It serves Southern Avenue & South Capitol Street, SE instead.
  • Formerly known as the Anacostia Line (along with A2, A4, A5) until 1991
  • A7 originally operated between L'Enfant Plaza station and Bolling Air Force Base as the South Washington Line[30] until Anacostia opened in 1991.
  • A42, A46 and A48 replaced the old portions of the A2, A4, A6 and A8 north of Anacostia station to Archives as of December 28, 1991, when Anacostia opened and Routes A2, A4, A6, and A8 Metrobus Routes were truncated to only operate up to the Anacostia Station
  • Routes A42, A46 and A48 was discontinued on June 26, 2016, and replaced by routes A2, A6 and A8 respectively.[14]
  • Routes A6, A7 & A8 were split into the Anacostia-Livingston Line on June 6, 2021.[16]
  • 24-hour service for the A6 and A8 was introduced on December 17, 2023, which was also extended to L'Enfant Plaza station.[11]
B2
  • B2 was extended from Mount Rainier to Chillum (Eastern Ave & Rittenhouse Sts. NE), during the 1960s to replace the former DC Transit Route K6 "New Hampshire Avenue - Chillum Road Line" routing between Mount Rainier and Chillum, via 34th Street, Rainier Avenue, Upshur Street, 28th Place, Russell Avenue, Arundel Road, 25th Street, Queens Chapel Road, Carson Circle, La Salle Road, 19th Avenue, and Chillum Road. However; on February 19, 1978, the F2 "Chillum Road Line" Metrobus Route took over this particular segment of B2's routing between Mount Rainier and Chillum, once it began operating between Mount Rainier and the Takoma Station. Once this happened, B2 was then truncated back to its original terminus at Mount Rainier.
  • B2 kept much of its historical streetcar routing the same, only with the exception that it was rerouted to serve Stadium Armory and Potomac Avenue stations when they opened in 1977 and also extended from its previous terminus at 16 Street & W Street in Anacostia all the way up to the Anacostia station in the adjacent neighborhood of Barry Farms when Anacostia station opened in December, 1991.
  • B2 covered the portion of the former B4 & B5 routes to Barry Farms after the station opened.
  • 24-hour service was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
D2
  • D2 operated to Stadium-Armory station (as part of the Glover Park-Trinidad Line) until replaced by the D6 east of Dupont Circle in January,1999.
D4
  • D4 at first operated to Sibley Hospital (as part of the Glover Park-Trinidad Line) until replaced by D1
  • It then operated to Union Station (as the Ivy City-Union Station Line) until 2010, when it was extended to Franklin Square.
  • Beginning June 26, 2016, some extended peak D4 trips end (AM)/begin (PM) at Dupont Circle.[14]
  • D4 replaced the D3 on June 26, 2016.[14]
  • Service to Dupont Circle was eliminated on September 5, 2021, which wasded on March 16, 2020.[17]
D6
  • D6 originally operated between Glover Park and Washington Hospital Center (as part of the Glover Park-Trinidad Line) until March 1995 when the line was discontinued. D6 was later "reincarnated" to operate as part of the Sibley Hospital-Stadium Armory Line in January 1999 to replace the segment of D2's routing between Stadium-Armory and Dupont Circle that had been discontinued and the segment of D4's routing between Dupont Circle and Sibley Hospital that had been discontinued.
D8
  • D8 originally operated between Friendship Heights to Distaff Hall and then rerouted between Sibley Hospital & Washington Hospital Center, via Downtown Washington D.C. until March, 1995 when its routing was truncated to only operate between the Washington Hospital Center & Union Station.
  • Route D6 replaced the rest of D8's former routing between the Union Station & Sibley Hospital, via Downtown Washington D.C.
E2
  • E2 originally operated alongside the E3 & E4, between Ivy City & Friendship Heights station, via Fort Totten station, until June 21, 2015, when its routing was truncated to only operate between Ivy City and Fort Totten station.[31]
  • The rest of E2's routing between the Fort Totten & Friendship Heights was replaced by Route E4.[31]
E4
  • E3, which operated on weekends only, was eliminated June 21, 2015, replaced by E4.[31]
  • E4 operates daily as of June 21, 2015.[31]
G2
G8
  • G8 is a combination of the former G4 & G6 that operated to Lafayette Square (G4) & Avondale (G6) up until March 12, 1995.
  • G8 had a prior "incarnation" as the "Prince George's - Langley Park" Line, operating between Prince George's Hospital and Langley Park. However; G8 was discontinued on December 3, 1978, and replaced by the F8 Metrobus Route, which was extended from Prince George's Hospital to the Cheverly Station.
H2, H4
  • H2 & H4 originally operated all the way between Westmoreland Circle and Fort Lincoln up until September 18, 1999
  • Then, on September 18, 1999, H6 replaced H2 & H4's routing between the Brookland-CUA station and Fort Lincoln, while the N8 Metrobus Route replaced the segment of H2 & H4's former routing between the Tenleytown-AU Station and Westmoreland Circle.
  • As a result, H4 was truncated to operate between the Brookland-CUA & Tenleytown-AU Stations, while H2 was truncated to only operating between the Brookland-CUA & Van Ness-UDC Station
  • H3 was created as a brand new route on September 18, 1999, to operate alongside the H2 and H4 between the Brookland-CUA and Tenleytown-AU stations, replacing the segment of H2's routing west of the intersection of Porter Street NW & Connecticut Avenue NW that was discontinued, and H2 was truncated to operate up to the Van Ness-UDC station
  • H2 was later extended to the Tenleytown-AU station, replacing the N8 east of Tenleytown-AU station on December 19, 2010
  • H3 was suspended since March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
  • 24-hour service for the H4 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
H6
  • H6 originally operated between the Brookland-CUA station & Kennedy Center as part of the Brookland-Kennedy Center Line from February, 1978 until March, 1995.
  • H6 was eventually reincarnated on September 18, 1999, to operate as part of the 'Brookland-Fort Lincoln Linebetween Brookland-CUA station and Fort Lincoln, in order to replace the segment of H2 & H4's routing past Brookland-CUA station
H8, H9
  • H8 began serving the Georgia Avenue-Petworth & Columbia Heights stations once both Metro Stations opened in September, 1999
  • H9 only operates when Archbishop Carroll High School is open.
K2
L2
  • L1 serves Dupont Circle station.
  • L2 travels skips Dupont Circle via the Connecticut Avenue underpass
  • The L4 was eliminated on June 17, 2012.[33]
  • L1 was suspended since March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
  • L2 late-night service to Bethesda and Friendship Heights stations was eliminated on September 5, 2021, which has been suspended since March 2020.[17]
M4
  • Route M4 was extended to Western Avenue & Oregon Avenue on June 6, 2021, partially replacing the E6. The route was extended to the Knollwood Retirement Home on May 29, 2022, replacing the E6.[34]
M6
  • Formerly known as the W6 until the early/mid-1990s
N2, N4, N6
  • N3 was part of the Massachusetts Av-Federal Triangle Line (along with the former N1) until 1996, when N1 was eliminated & N3 merged with the N2, N4 & N6.
  • N4 used to terminate at Westmoreland Circle until the late 1990s.
  • Route N3 was discontinued on June 26, 2016.[14]
P6
  • P4, P5 & P6 were created to replace the A routes in 1991 when Anacostia station opened, with P5 additionally replacing the B6 between Metro Center & Rhode Island Avenue stations. P4 & P5 later merged with the P6 around March, 1995, giving it the current route.
  • Routes P1 and P2 were discontinued on June 17, 2012.[33]
  • Late night and early morning trips between Anacostia and Archives stations was added on June 26, 2016, to replace routes A42, A46 and A48 which were discontinued on the same date.[14]
  • Late night service was shorten to L'Enfant Plaza station on May 29, 2022.[10]
  • Late night service was discontinued on December 17, 2023, being replaced by Routes A6 and A8.[11]
S2
  • Trips along 14th Street was discontinued on June 25, 2017.[35]
  • All route S4 service was renamed into route S2 and S9 trips on August 23, 2020.[6]
  • Late night service was extended to L'Enfant Plaza station on May 29, 2022.[10]
  • 24-hour service was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
S9
  • S9 was introduced March 30, 2009, replacing the former S3 & S5 lines that were discontinued in the late 1990s.[36]
  • Weekday midday and Saturday service began on June 25, 2017.[35]
  • Sunday service was added on August 23, 2020, and was rerouted to remain on 16th Street replacing all route S4 service.[6]
U4
  • Formerly known as the M16 (Metro "Mini-Bus")
  • Originally operated between Sheriff Road to Lafayette Square
U5, U6
  • Runs on a portion of the old M16 (Metro "Mini-Bus")
  • U6 originally operated between Capitol View to Lafayette Square and 60th & East Capital to Lafayette Square
  • U5, U6 segment between Minnesota Ave Station & Mayfair was replaced by the U7 on June 24, 2018.[18]
U7
  • Introduced on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • U7 replaced the V7, V8 service between Deanwood and Minnesota Ave stations on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • U7 serves Mayfair & Parkside on June 24, 2018, replacing the former U5 & U6 routing.[18]
V2, V4
  • V2 replaced the U2 between Minnesota Ave & Anacostia stations on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • V4 replaced the V7 & V8 Between Minnesota Ave & Navy Yard stations on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • V2, V4 replaced the U8 between Minnesota Ave & Capitol Heights stations on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • New Sunday service was added to the V2 on June 6, 2021, but only operates after 10:30 PM.[16]
    • Full Sunday service would later be introduced on September 5, 2021.[17]
  • 24-hour service for the V2 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
V7, V8
  • U8 was renamed V8 on June 24, 2018.[18]
  • U8 was created to replace the former X2, X4 & X6 routes east of Minnesota Avenue station in March, 1995 (X2 to Capitol Heights station, X4 & X6 to Benning Heights) on the portion of the former routing between the Minnesota Avenue & Capitol Heights Metro Stations.
  • U8 was shortened to operate between Benning Heights and Minnesota Ave station and was renamed "Benning Heights Line" on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • Service between Capitol Heights and Minnesota Ave stations is now provided by routes V2 and V4 along the route previously served by route U8.
  • Routes V7 and V8 were originally named the Benning Heights–M Street Line
W1
  • W1 replaced routes M8 & M9 on March 30, 2014.[25]
W2, W3
  • Portions of the W2 & W3 operate on the old M18 & M20 "Mini-Bus" routes
W4
  • W4's original routing to Bolling Air Force Base was discontinued and the W4 was extended to Anacostia station on June 29, 2003, due to heightened security at the Bolling Air Force Base Gates.
  • W4 has not operated between Capital Plaza and Deanwood Station since March 24, 2013, when a portion of that route was discontinued. As a result, the W4 was truncated and now operates between Deanwood Station and Anacostia Station.[22]
  • 24-hour service was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
W5
  • The A5 covered the A4 route but excluded Fort Drum. It was discontinued on March 24, 2013, replaced by the W5 which runs on South Capitol Street (SB) and DC-295 (NB).[22]
  • Route W5 was split from the A4 and renamed into the Anacostia–Blue Plains Line on June 6, 2021.[16]
  • Service to the US Coast Guard Headquarters was discontinued on December 17, 2023.[11]
W6, W8
  • Portions of the W6 & W8 operate on the old M18 & M20 (The "Metro-Mini" buses) routes
X2
  • X2 originally operated between Seat Pleasant and Lafayette Square
  • X2 was extended from Seat Pleasant to Capitol Heights Station on January 4,
  • X2 operated to Capitol Heights station until the March, 1995 when the route east of Minnesota Avenue station (along with the former X4 and X6 route south of the station) were replaced by the U8.
  • Early morning and late night service was extended to George Washington University Hospital on June 25, 2023.[26]
  • 24-hour service for the X2 was introduced on December 17, 2023.[11]
X8 Originally Operated between Carver Terrace & Lafayette Square, but was later truncated around February, 1978 to only operate between Carver Terrace and Union Station
X9
  • Formerly known as the, "East Capitol Street Express" Line, which Routes X2 & X4 used to operate as part of. This route was discontinued in the late 1980s and then "reincarnated" in December 2010.
  • As of the late 1980s, X2 has only terminated at the Minnesota Avenue Metro Station, while the X4 was discontinued.
  • Midday service was added on June 24, 2018, which is shortened to operate between Gallery Place and Minnesota Avenue station only.

Former Routes

[edit]

These routes have been served by Metrobus at one point but have since been discontinued due to either low ridership, duplication of another route, simplification to other routes, combined into another route, low funding, or transferred to another bus company as it would be cheaper to maintain cost and for another carrier to operate the line. However some routes would be reincarnated into new routes for Metrobus. Examples of reincarnations were the 34, V7, and V8.

Route Terminals Streets traveled History
30N, 30S[37]
Friendship Heights–Southeast Line
Friendship Heights station
  • Wisconsin Avenue NW
  • Pennsylvania Avenue NW/SE
  • Branch Avenue SE (30N)
  • Alabama Avenue SE (30S)
  • Originally Routes 32 (30S) and 36 (30N)
  • Discontinued on September 5, 2021; replaced by 31, 32, 33, and 36.[17]
30, 34, 35
Pennsylvania Avenue Line
Friendship Heights station
  • Wisconsin Avenue
  • Pennsylvania Avenue
  • Discontinued June 29, 2008; replaced by 31, 32, 36, and M5.[8]
  • The 34 was reincarnated as the Naylor Road Line as a replacement to the M5 on December 28, 2008.[12]
33 Friendship Heights station Southwest Mall
34
Pennsylvania Avenue Line
Archives station (10th St & Pennsylvania Avenue NW) Naylor Road station
  • Pennsylvania Avenue SE/NW
  • Naylor Road SE
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
37
Tenleytown–Federal Triangle Line
Tenleytown–AU station Archives station
  • Wisconsin Avenue
  • Pennsylvania Avenue
38 Rosslyn station Washington Union Station
37
Wisconsin Avenue Limited Line
Friendship Heights station
  • Wisconsin Avenue NW
  • Massachusetts Avenue NW
  • Pennsylvania Avenue NW
  • A prior "incarnation" of the 37 was once known as the Wisconsin Avenue Express Line, running from Tenleytown-AU station to Archives until the early 1990s when it was discontinued.
  • 37 was then later "reincarnated" on June 29, 2008, to operate as a limited stop Route on the former segment of 34 and former Metrobus Route 35's original routing between the Archives Navy Memorial & Friendship Heights station which was discontinued.[8]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
39
Friendship Heights–Van Ness–UDC Line[30]
Friendship Heights station Van Ness–UDC station
39[38]
Pennsylvania Avenue Limited Line
Naylor Road station Potomac Park (Virginia Avenue & E Street NW)
  • Pennsylvania Avenue SE/NW
  • 39 was introduced on June 29, 2008, to provide weekday peak hour only, limited stop service between the Naylor Road & Foggy Bottom stations, but was eventually extended to operate to Potomac Park.[8]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
40, 44
Mount Pleasant Line[39]
Mount Pleasant
  • Discontinued in March 1995 and replaced by routes D1, D3, and D6.
45
Mount Pleasant Line
Mount Pleasant Bureau of Engraving
  • Columbia Road NW
  • Connecticut Avenue NW
46
Mount Pleasant Line
Mount Pleasant Kennedy Center
  • Columbia Road NW
  • Connecticut Avenue NW
50
14th Street Line[39]
Bureau of Engraving Building Takoma station
53
14th Street Line
Takoma station McPherson Square station (Franklin Square Entrance)
  • Discontinued on December 17, 2017, and replaced by the Route 54.[15]
56 Summit Hills Apartments Bureau of Engraving Building
58 Takoma station Bureau of Engraving Building
61
65
Petworth-11th Street Line
Buzzard Point (Half & O Sts. SW) Fort Totten station
  • 11th Street West
66, 68
Petworth-11th Street Line
Georgia Avenue–Petworth station Federal Triangle station
  • 11th Street West (66)
  • Sherman Avenue
  • 13th Street West (68)
67
71
Georgia Avenue–7th Street Line
Silver Spring station Buzzard Point
  • Discontinued September 25, 2011. Replaced by Route 74, which also took over the southern portion of Route 70.[20][19]
72 Takoma station Southwest Mall
73
Brightwood-Petworth Line
Silver Spring station L'Enfant Plaza station
  • Discontinued on June 25, 2000.[40]
  • Reincarnated as the 79 in 2006.[21]
74 Soldiers Home Fort Lesley J. McNair
  • Reincarnated into the "Convention Center-Southwest Waterfront Line" in 2011
76 Rock Creek Cemetery
77
Georgia Avenue Express Line
Silver Spring station Waterside Mall
91
Garfield–Owl Line
McLean Gardens Alabama Avenue & Stanton Road
  • Florida Avenue
  • North Capitol Street
  • Good Hope Road
  • Alabama Avenue
  • Via Union Station and the US Capitol
  • Discontinued on January 13, 2001. Replaced by routes 90, 92, and 93.[41]
93
U Street–Garfield Line
Duke Ellington Bridge Congress Heights station
  • Stanton Road
  • Florida Avenue
  • 8th Street
  • Discontinued on March 27, 2016.[13]
94
Stanton Road Line
Stanton Road (19th & Savannah Streets SE) Anacostia station
  • Stanton Road SE
  • Discontinued on June 24, 2018, and replaced by DC Circulator Congress Heights – Union Station route.[18]
95
Stanton Road Line
Stanton Road (19th & Savannah Streets SE) Anacostia station
  • Stanton Road SE
  • Morris Road
  • Discontinued on January 13, 2001 and replaced by route 94.[41]
97
East Capitol Street–Cardozo Line
Capitol Heights station Union Station
  • East Capitol Street
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
98
D.C. Superior Court Annex Shuttle
Superior Court
  • Operated as a loop
98
Adams Morgan-U Street Link
Woodley Park station U Street station
  • Calvert Street
  • U Street North
  • Discontinued March 29, 2009. Replaced by DC Circulator Woodley Park/Adams Morgan-McPherson Square Metro route.[42]
99
Columbia Heights–Woodley Park Line
Columbia Heights station Woodley Park station
  • Calvert Street
  • Columbia Road
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001, and replaced by Routes H5 and H7[43]
A1
Anacostia–Congress Heights Line
Potomac Park Livingston (4501 3rd Street SE)
A3
Anacostia–Congress Heights Line
Anacostia station Shipley Terrace
  • Martin Luther King Avenue SE
  • Mississippi Avenue SE (A2)
  • Atlantic Street SE
  • Southern Avenue
  • Discontinued on January 13, 2001 and replaced by route A2.[41]
A5
Anacostia-Fort Drum Line
D.C. Village (North Parking Lot) Anacostia station
  • Martin Luther King Jr Ave
  • Discontinued on March 24, 2013, replaced by W5.[22]
A9[44]
Martin Luther King Jr Ave Limited Line
Livingston (4501 3rd Street SE) McPherson Square station (Franklin Square Entrance)
  • Martin Luther King Jr Ave SE
  • A9 is now a MetroExtra Bus service as of March 24, 2013.[22]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
A34
Anacostia High School/Kramer Junior High School Line[45]
A42, A46, A48
Anacostia-Congress Heights Line
Archives station (10th Street & Pennsylvania Avenue NW)
  • Martin Luther King Avenue SE
  • Mississippi Avenue SE,
  • Atlantic Street SE (A42)
  • Wheeler Road SE (A46)
  • South Capitol Street (A48)
  • Discontinued on June 26, 2016, replaced by A2, A6, A8 & P6.[14]
B4, B5
Barry Farm Line
Mount Rainier Terminal
B6 Metro Center Rhode Island Avenue
  • Replaced by the P5 Route on December 28, 1991 (which was discontinued in 1995) and replaced by the P6 Route
B7, B8 Carter Barron Amphitheatre
B9 Carter Barron Amphitheatre Federal Triangle
B8, B9[46]
Fort Lincoln Shuttle Line
Rhode Island Avenue station
  • Bladensburg Road (B9)
  • Franklin Street NE
  • Rhode Island Avenue NE
  • B8 originally operated between the Rhode Island Avenue station & Fort Lincoln, while B9 originally operated between only Fort Lincoln & Colmar Manor
  • B9 was later extended from Fort Lincoln, to operate up to the Rhode Island Avenue Station via B8's routing, in 1999
  • The B9 was extended to Wesley House Senior Citizen Residence on June 28, 2009.[47]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
B41
Backus Middle School Line
Backus Middle School Brentwood Village (Saratoga Avenue & Brentwood Road)
  • South Dakota Avenue
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001[43]
B51
Brookland and Bunker Hill (Elementary) School Line
  • Discontinued on August 21, 2016.
B52, B53
Brookland and Bunker Hill (Elementary) School Line
  • Michigan Park (12th Street & South Dakota Avenue NE) (AM)
  • Michigan Park (Buchanan Street & 12th Street NE) PM)
  • B52 Brookland Elementary School
  • B53 Bunker Hill Elementary School
  • 12th Street
C40
Capitol Hill Cluster Line
Peabody Elementary School (E Street & 12th Street SE) Watkins Elementary School
  • Pennsylvania Avenue SE
  • Discontinued on August 21, 2016.
D1[48]
Glover Park–Franklin Square Line
Glover Park (41st St & Davis Pl NW) McPherson Square station (Franklin Square Entrance)
  • Q Street NW
  • K Street NW
  • 13th Street NW
  • D1 was created as a brand new route in 1999 to replace the portion of D4's former routing between Union Station & Glover Park that had been discontinued when D4 was truncated to only operate between Ivy City and Union Station
  • D1 operated all the way between Ivy City & Glover Park until 2010 when its route was truncated to only operate between Federal Triangle & Glover Park.
  • D1 was shortened even further from Federal Triangle to only Franklin Square on June 26, 2016.[14]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
D1, D3, D9
Glover Park–Trinidad Line[49]
D3
Ivy City-Dupont Circle
Ivy City (16th Street & New York Avenue NE) Georgetown (35th St. & Reservoir Rd. NW)
  • K Street NW/NE
  • Discontinued on June 26, 2016.[14]
D5, D6
Loughboro–Chevy Chase Line[49]
D5
MacArthur Boulevard–Georgetown Line
Little Flower Church
Sangamore Road (Bethesda, MD)
Farragut Square
  • Sangamore Road
  • MacArthur Boulevard NW
  • M Street NW
  • Pennsylvania Avenue NW
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
D9
MacArthur Boulevard-Federal Triangle Line
Sangamore, Maryland Farragut Square
E3
Military Road–Crosstown Line
Friendship Heights station Ivy City (New York Ave & Fenwick St NE)
  • Military Road NW
  • Kennedy Street NW
  • Missouri Avenue NW
  • Riggs Road NE
  • South Dakota Avenue NE
  • 18th Street NE
  • Discontinued on June 21, 2015, replaced by E2 and E4.[31]
E5[50] Ivy City Alta Vista, Bethesda MD
  • Military Road
E6 Lafayette Square Lewisdale, Maryland
E6
Chevy Chase Line
Knollwood (Knollwood Retirement Home) Friendship Heights station
  • Western Avenue
  • McKinley Street NW
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021, and replaced by Route M4 on June 6, 2021.[6]
E7, E8
Chevy Chase Line
  • Knollwood (Knollwood Retirement Home) (E8)
  • Pinehurst (E7)
E8[50]
E32
Eastern High School Line
Eastern High School Benning Road station
  • Capitol Street
G4, G6 Lafayette Square Discontinued in March, 1995 and replaced by the G8 Route
G9
Rhode Island Avenue Limited Line
McPherson Square station (Franklin Square entrance) Mount Rainier Terminal (Rhode Island Ave & 34th Street)
  • Rhode Island Avenue NW/NE
  • G9 was introduced on March 20, 2017.[51]
  • G9 had a prior incarnation as the Queens Chapel Road Line along with the former G7 until February 6, 1978, when both routes were discontinued and replaced by the R2, R4, R6, and R7
  • G9 temporarily had daily service on July 21, 2018, to September 3, 2018, due to Rhode Island Avenue & Brookland-CUA being shut down.[52]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
H1
Brookland–Potomac Park Line
Brookland–CUA station West Potomac Park (17th & C Streets NW)
  • Michigan Avenue NW/NE
  • Columbia Road NW
  • Irving Street NW (to Brookland)
  • 23rd Street NW
  • H1 was created as a brand new route on September 18, 1999, to operate as a "reincarnation" of the former H6 "Brookland - Kennedy Center" Line that was discontinued around March 1995
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
H3
Crosstown Line
Tenleytown–AU station Brookland–CUA station
  • Wisconsin Avenue
  • Porter Street NW
  • Columbia Road NW (to Tenleytown)
  • Irving Street NW (to Brookland)
  • Michigan Avenue NW/NE
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
H5, H7
Mount Pleasant-Adams Morgan Line
Columbia Heights station Woodley Park station
  • Calvert Street
  • Porter Street
  • Connecticut Avenue
  • Columbia Road
  • Mount Pleasant Street
  • Operated as loops (H5 clockwise, H7 counter clockwise)
  • Discontinued on September 24, 2006.[53]
H31
Harris Elementary School Line
Harris Elementary School (53rd Street & D Street SE)
  • Benning Heights (Benning Road & Hanna Place (AM)
  • Benning Heights (H Street & Southern Avenue SE) (PM)
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001[43]
J43
Janney Elementary School Line
Friendship Heights (Military Road & 43rd Street NW) Janney Elementary School
  • 47th Street NW
  • Fessenden Street
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001[43]
K1
Takoma-Walter Reed Line
Walter Reed Army Medical Center Takoma station
  • Discontinued September 25, 2011, due to the BRAC plan for relocation of Walter Reed Army Medical Center facilities to Maryland and Virginia.[20][19]
K4[54] Metro Center station Fort Totten station
K8 Takoma station Fort Totten station
L1
Connecticut Avenue Line
Chevy Chase Circle West Potomac Park (17th & C Streets NW)
  • Connecticut Avenue NW
  • 23rd Street NW
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
L3, L5, L9[39]
Connecticut Avenue Line
Potomac Park
L4
Connecticut Avenue Line
Dupont Circle Chevy Chase Circle
  • Discontinued on June 17, 2012.[33]
L6 Wheaton station Federal Triangle
L30, L31, L32, L33, L34
Oyster/Lewis Elementary School Line
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001.[43]
M1[55]
Suitland Road Line
M1, M2
Capitol Hill-Fourth Street Line[49]
Washington Union Station
M2
Fairfax Village-Naylor Road Line
Fairfax Village (38th St & Alabama Av SE) Naylor Road station
  • Southern Avenue
  • Introduced on January 13, 2001.[41]
  • Discontinued on March 30, 2014.[25]
M3[50]
M5
Naylor Road Line
Naylor Road station Eastern Market station
  • Naylor Road
  • Renamed Route 34 on December 28, 2008.[12]
M8
Downtowner Line[49]
M8, M9
Congress Heights Shuttle
Washington Highlands Congress Heights station
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Wheeler Road SE
  • Introduced on January 13, 2001.[41]
  • Discontinued on March 30, 2014, replaced by W1.[25]
M12
Kennedy Center–Georgetown Line
Kennedy Center Georgetown
  • Discontinued on January 22, 1984.[30]
M14 L'Enfant Plaza station Half and O streets SE
  • Discontinued on January 22, 1984.[30]
M16
Mayfair–River Terrace Loop[30]
Minnesota Avenue station Mayfair
  • Replaced by route U5 and U6
M18, M20
Garfield Shuttle Line
Southeast Washington Naylor and Good Hope Road
  • Also known as Metro "Mini-Bus".
M20, M22
Southeast Community Hospital Shuttle
Naylor Road & Good Hope Road Greater Southeast Community Hospital
  • Naylor Road
  • Southern Avenue
  • Discontinued on January 13, 2001 and replaced by routes W2 and W3.[41]
M31
McKinley High School Line
Rhode Island Avenue–Brentwood station
  • Discontinued on June 25, 2017, and replaced by modified P6 trips.[35]
N1
Massachusetts Ave Line
Friendship Heights station Foggy Bottom–GWU station
  • Massachusetts Avenue
  • Discontinued in 1996.
N3
Massachusetts Avenue Line
Friendship Heights station Federal Triangle station
  • Discontinued on June 26, 2016, and replaced by route N4.[14]
N5, N9
Montgomery Suburban Express Line
Montgomery Mall
  • 12th Street
  • Constitution Avenue
  • Consolidated into route N7 on December 29, 1991[56]
N7
Montgomery Mall-Federal Triangle Express Line
Federal Triangle station Montgomery Mall
  • Discontinued on December 27, 2003.[57]
N8
Friendship Heights-Glen Echo Line
Friendship Heights station Glen Echo Park
  • Discontinued in the 1990s, replaced by Ride On Route 29
  • Reincarnated into the Van Ness-Wesley Heights Line in the late 1990s to early 2000s.
N8
Tenleytown–Glover Park Line
Glover Park (41st St & Davis Pl NW) Van Ness–UDC station
  • Discontinued September 25, 2011.[20][19]
  • Formerly known as the Van Ness-Wesley Heights Line which ran into Glover Park.
N11[58]
N22
Navy Yard Shuttle Line
Navy Yard–Ballpark station Washington Union Station
  • Discontinued March 29, 2009. Replaced by DC Circulator Union Station - Navy Yard Metro route.[42]
P1
Petworth-Potomac Park Line
Petworth West Potomac Park
  • Renamed route 61 in 1991
P2, P7
Petworth Line
Petworth
  • Renamed route 62 and 67 in 1991
P1, P2
Anacostia–Eckington Line
Anacostia station
  • Discontinued on June 17, 2012, replaced by P6.[33]
P4
Anacostia–Eckington Line
Federal Triangle Decatur & Illinois
P4, P5
11th Street Line
Anacostia station
  • Merged into the P6 around the late 1990s
P5, P7
Takoma–Petworth Line
Takoma station
  • Now Route 64
P61[59]
S1[60]
16th Street–Potomac Park Line
16th Street & Colorado Avenue NW West Potomac Park (Virginia Ave & E St NW)
  • 16th Street NW
  • 18th Street NW (to 16th & Colorado)
  • 19th Street NW (to Potomac Park)
  • Suspended as of March 18, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
S3, S5[39]
16th Street Line
Silver Spring station Federal Triangle (10th St & Constitution Ave NW)
  • 16th Street
  • Discontinued in the mid-1990s
  • Later reincarnated as Route S9
S4
16th Street Line
Silver Spring Station (Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center) Federal Triangle (10th St & Constitution Ave NW)
  • Colesville Road
  • 16th Street NW
  • Discontinued on August 23, 2020, and replaced by routes S2 and S9.[6]
S6 Summit Hills Apartments Federal Triangle
S7 Wheaton Plaza Federal Triangle
S8 Takoma station Silver Spring station
S51
St. Benedict the Moor School Line
St. Benedict the Moor School Capitol Heights station
  • Benning Road
  • East Capitol Street
  • Discontinued on September 2, 2001[43]
S71
St. Thomas More School Line[45]
T31
Taft Junior High School Line[45]
U2
Minnesota Avenue–Anacostia Line
Minnesota Avenue station Anacostia station
  • Minnesota Avenue NE/SE
  • Originally operated between Kenilworth to Lafayette Square
  • Discontinued on June 21, 2015, replaced by V2 & V4.[31]
U8
Benning Heights Line
Minnesota Avenue station Benning Heights (H & 46th Streets SE)
  • Benning Road NE/SE
  • Renamed V8 on June 24, 2018.[18]
V1
Benning Heights–M Street Line
  • Benning Heights (H Street & Benning Road SE) (PM end)
  • Hanna Place & Benning Road SE (AM start)
Bureau of Engraving
  • Minnesota Avenue SE
  • M Street SE/SW
  • 7th Street SW
  • V1 replaced the V7 between Bureau of Engraving & Navy Yard Station on June 21, 2015, which was introduced on the same day.[31]
  • V9 was renamed the V1 on June 21, 2015.[31]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
V1, V3
Douglass Bridge Line
L'Enfant Plaza station
V4, V6
South Washington Line
Minnesota Avenue station Bureau of Engraving
V5
Fairfax Village-L'Enfant Plaza Line
Fairfax Village (Alabama Ave & 38th St SE) L'Enfant Plaza station (D & 7th Streets SW)
  • Alabama Avenue SE
  • Good Hope Road SE
  • SW/SE Freeway
  • Discontinued on June 24, 2018.[18]
V6
Minnesota Ave-M St Line
Deanwood station Half & O Streets SW
  • Minnesota Avenue NE/SE
  • M Street SE/SW
  • Discontinued in 1996 and replaced by routes 70, V7, V8, and V9.
V7, V9
11th Street Bridge Line
L'Enfant Plaza station
  • V7: Southern Avenue & South Capitol Street, SE
  • V9: Stanton Road
V7, V8, V9
Minnesota Ave-M St Line
  • Minnesota Avenue NE/SE
  • M Street SE/SW
  • 7th Street SW/NW
W1
Fort Stanton–Washington Overlook Line
Naylor Gardens: Gainesville & Alabama (AM) Hartford & Alabama (PM) Washington Overlook
  • Morris Road
  • Martin Luther King Jr Avenue
  • Discontinued on January 13, 2001 and replaced by route W2.[41]
W3
Defense Intelligence Agency Shuttle Line
L'Enfant Plaza station Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters
W9
Defense Facilities Shuttle Line
Anacostia station Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters
  • Discontinued on September 24, 2006.[53]
W9
South Capital Street Limited Line
L'Enfant Plaza Station Douglas A. Munro Coast Guard Headquarters Building (Full time)
Livingston (4501 3rd Street SE) (AM Peak only)
  • Discontinued on June 24, 2018, replaced by the A4, A8 & W5.[18]
W46
Wilson High School Line
14th Street & Colorado Ave NW Wilson High School
  • 14th Street
  • Military Road
  • Nebraska Avenue
W54
Woodson High School[45]
Woodson High School Benning Heights (Alabama Avenue & F Street SE)
  • Benning Road
X1, X3
Benning Road Line
Minnesota Avenue station
  • Benning Road NE
  • H Street NE (X1)
  • Florida Avenue NE/NW (X3)
  • Constitution Avenue NW (X1)
  • U Street NW (X3)
  • X3 was discontinued for several years before it was brought back to service on June 25, 2000
  • X3 was extended from McLean Gardens to Tenleytown-AU station on September 30, 2012[29] but was truncated to Duke Ellington Bridge on June 26, 2016.[14]
  • Suspended as of March 16, 2020; later discontinued by September 5, 2021.[6]
    • Route X3's school trip remains active.
X4[61] Capitol Heights station Lafayette Square
  • Minnesota Avenue
  • Benning Road
  • H Street NE
  • Union Station
  • H Street NW
  • New York Avenue
  • Pennsylvania Avenue
  • Jackson Place
  • Discontinued on March 12, 1995
X5[61] Seat Pleasant via Jackson Place Lafayette Square
  • Benning Road
  • East Capitol Street
  • Southern Avenue
  • Eastern Avenue
  • Discontinued on November 22, 1980, once the Addison Road, Capitol Heights, and Benning Road stations opened.
X6
National Arboretum Line
National Arboretum Washington Union Station
  • Bladensburg Road
  • Maryland Avenue
  • Discontinued on June 24, 2007.[27]
X7[39]
Benning Road Line
Capitol Heights station
X9[39]
East Capitol Street Express Line
Capitol Heights station Federal Triangle

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rowlands, DW; Alpert, David (September 20, 2018). "8W? 30N? U7? How Metrobus numbers came to be". Greater Greater Washington. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  2. ^ Malouff, Dan. "Here's what that bus route number means". Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  3. ^ Tindall, Dr. William (1918). "Beginning of Street Railways in the National Capital". Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C. 21. Washington, D.C.: Columbia Historical Society: 24–118. Retrieved 2020-04-28. At Google Books.
  4. ^ "History". Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Metrobus COVID-19 Saturday-Sunday Service - 27 routes only | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa "August 2020 Metrobus Service Changes, August 23 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  7. ^ "K2 Takoma – Fort Totten Line" (PDF).
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on January 29, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  9. ^ a b "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on February 24, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d "Metrobus Service Changes Effective May 29, 2022 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Metrobus Changes Begin Sunday, December 17, 2023 with 24/7 DC Bus Service". Retrieved 17 December 2023.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  13. ^ a b c "Metrobus adds Sunday service to Greenbelt, extends Metroway as part of service changes effective March 27". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Metrobus Service Changes June 26, 2016". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  15. ^ a b c d "Metrobus Service Changes, December 17 - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g "Metrobus Service Changes, June 6 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "Improved frequency and changes to Metrobus service begin Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Metrobus Service Changes, June 24 - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  19. ^ a b c d e Thomson, Robert (23 September 2011). "Metrobus changes start Sunday". Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  20. ^ a b c d "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  21. ^ a b "New MetroExtra provides faster Metrobus service along Georgia Avenue" (Press release). Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. March 19, 2007. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  22. ^ a b c d e f "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  23. ^ "Metro News Release - WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  24. ^ "Route 79 MetroExtra goes cash-free".
  25. ^ a b c d "Metrobus Service Changes, Beginning March 30". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on March 16, 2014. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
  26. ^ a b "Metrobus Changes Begin Sunday, June 25, 2023 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  27. ^ a b c "Metrobus service changes in the District of Columbia begin June 24". Archived from the original on August 6, 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  28. ^ "Metrobus service changes effective June 22 to improve reliability". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  29. ^ a b "Metrobus service changes continue 'better bus' program". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  30. ^ a b c d e Leslie, Renee T. (12 January 1984). "Metro Sets Shuttle Bus Link For SE Residents". Washington Post. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Metrobus Service Changes Beginning June 21". June 21, 2015. Archived from the original on June 13, 2015. Retrieved June 27, 2020.
  32. ^ "Metrobus service route changes in the District of Columbia begin the week of March 2". Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  33. ^ a b c d "Metro invests in 'better bus' service in DC, Maryland, Virginia". Archived from the original on January 6, 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  34. ^ "Metrobus Service Changes Effective May 29, 2022 | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 13 June 2022.
  35. ^ a b c "Metrobus Service Changes, June 25". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  36. ^ "Metrobus service changes in the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia begin March 29". Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  37. ^ "30N, 30S Friendship Heights – Southeast Line" (PDF).
  38. ^ "39 Pennsylvania Avenue Limited Line" (PDF).
  39. ^ a b c d e f "New Subway Stops Bring Metrobus Service Changes". Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  40. ^ "Metrobus service changes effective June 25, 2000 District of Columbia". June 25, 2000. Archived from the original on October 13, 2000. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g "Metrobus service changes effective January 13, 2001 District of Columbia". February 10, 2001. Archived from the original on February 10, 2001. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
  42. ^ a b "Metrobus Routes 98, N22 being replaced by DC Circulator". www.wmata.com. Archived from the original on May 15, 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  43. ^ a b c d e f "Metrobus service changes to take effect September 2". August 28, 2001. Archived from the original on November 5, 2001. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  44. ^ "A9 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. Limited Line" (PDF).
  45. ^ a b c d "Metrobus Service Changes to Take Place August 31". August 31, 1997. Archived from the original on February 8, 1998. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  46. ^ "B8, 9 Fort Lincoln Shuttle Line" (PDF).
  47. ^ "Metrobus service, fare changes begin June 28". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  48. ^ "D1 – Glover Park – Franklin Square Line; D2 – Glover Park – Dupont Circle Line" (PDF).
  49. ^ a b c d "Hearings on Bus Route Changes Set". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  50. ^ a b c Lynton, Stephen J. (24 August 1984). "Metro Plans to Revise D.C., Montgomery Bus Routes for Red Line". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  51. ^ "March 19, 2017 Metrobus Service Adjustments | WMATA". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  52. ^ "G9 MetroExtra Increased Service for Red Line Shutdown, July 21-Sept 3". wmata.com. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  53. ^ a b "Metrobus service changes in the District of Columbia begin September 24". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  54. ^ Feaver, Douglas (21 September 1978). "Metrobus Routes Change as Subway Service Increases". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  55. ^ "Metro To Expand, Change Bus Service April 21". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  56. ^ Lynton, Stephen J. "HARD TIMES ARE CHANGING TIMES FOR COUNTY BUS SERVICE". The Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  57. ^ "Eight Metrobus routes discontinued in Maryland after December 26". www.wmata.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  58. ^ Lynton, Stephen. "Metro Plans to Revise D.C., Montgomery Bus Routes for Red Line". Washington Post. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  59. ^ "Metrobus service advisories". October 25, 2001. Archived from the original on October 25, 2001. Retrieved June 15, 2020.
  60. ^ "S1 16th Street – Potomac Park Line" (PDF).
  61. ^ a b Feaver, Douglas B. (1978-11-30). "Bus Routes Change Sunday to Link with Orange Line". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
  62. ^ Alpert, David. "WMATA plans new X9, Virginia and Greenbelt bus changes". Greater Greater Washington. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
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