Transportation Services, RTD's Boulder HOP bus routeand the university'sSustainable Transportation program have been working over the summer to create new Late Night Transitroutes that better serve students' needs.Late Night Transitservices begin again for the fall semester on Saturday, Aug. 25, with new routes that go further off Broadway and closer to where students want to go.
What you need to know
Late Night Transit runs Thursday, Fridayand Saturday evenings:
UMC/Pearl and Hill/Pearl routes
Provided by HOP buses when HOP service ends at 10 p.m.
The Hill/Williams Village route
Provided by Buff buses when Buff Bus service ends at midnight
Late Night Transit will still:
- Be free to all Buff OneCard holders
- Transition from HOP routes at 10 p.m. and transition from Buff Bus routes at midnight
- Run until 3 a.m. on all routes
- Buses can be flagged down between specified stops
Late Night Transit runs Thursday, Fridayand Saturday evenings during fall and spring semesters and is free to all Buff OneCard holders. All Late Night Transit buses have designated stops, can be flagged along their route, pick up every 10–15 minutesand end at 3 a.m.
The UMC/Pearl and Hill/Pearl routes are provided by HOP buses and begin when HOP service ends at 10 p.m. The Hill/Williams Village route is provided by Buff buses; it begins when Buff Bus service ends at midnight, weekends only.
Better service for students
After collecting data at the end of the spring semester from hundreds of students about their typical late night trip origins and destinations, CU Sustainable Transportation staff found they could improve the routes to better serve areas students frequent most. The three new routes will better serve The Hill and Pearl Street and do so with less time between buses.
“The new routes get our customers closer to the locations they want to be instead of dropping and picking them up along Broadway, which required a walk for most. With ridesharing services picking up and dropping off directly in front of a student's desired location, we needed to make sure we are competitive with that high level of convenience.
“Our new routes will be able to offer that level of convenience, enhanced safety, and not cost our students any additional fees,” says Brandon Smith, assistant director of sustainable transportation.
Late Night Transit is funded by student fees through the Environmental Center's Sustainable Transportation program.