Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit

We're celebrating 10 years of Muni Forward! Pick up a limited-edition Muni Forward Passport at a Transit Month event or participating business while supplies last during the month of September 2024. Use the passport to explore ten of Muni Forward’s project corridors, including the Van Ness BRT.

Project Status
  1. Completed
Cost Estimate
$345.9 million (including utility replacement, repaving, replacement of the Muni overhead contact system, and other project scope that is not limited to transit enhancements)
Current Phase or Stage
Construction
Predicted Completion
April 2022
Bus Routes and Rail Lines
Streets
Van Ness Avenue, Lombard Street, Mission Street

VAN NESS BUS RAPID TRANSIT STOP LOCATIONSA map showing the Van Ness BRT corridor on Van Ness Avenue between North Point and Mission streets, with stops at Union, Vallejo, Jackson, Sacramento, Sutter, Geary-O'Farrell, Eddy, McAllister and Market streets.

The new Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit corridor features nine northbound and nine southbound boarding islands along the red, center-running transit lanes served by Muni's 49 Van Ness/Mission, 90 San Bruno Owl, and Golden Gate Transit buses.

VAN NESS BUS RAPID TRANSIT FEATURES

Bus Rapid Transit on Van Ness is a part of Muni's Rapid Network, prioritizing frequency and reliability for customers. The planned improvements are expected to cut travel times for Golden Gate Transit and Muni's 49 Van Ness/Mission and 90 San Bruno Owl buses by 32%. 

Some features of Bus Rapid Transit on Van Ness include:

  1. Dedicated transit lanes that are physically separated from the other traffic lanes, for use by Muni and Golden Gate Transit buses only.
  2. Enhanced traffic signals optimized for north-south travel with Transit Signal Priority, which gives buses the green light as they approach an intersection.
  3. Low-floor vehicles and all-door boarding, that make it quicker and easier for passengers to load and unload at each stop.
  4. Safety enhancements for people walking like sidewalk extensions, median refuges, high visibility crosswalks and audible countdown signals.
  5. Fully furnished boarding platforms that include shelters, seating and NextMuni prediction displays located at key transfer points.
Project Details, History or Features

FUNDING

Funding for the core Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit project came from a variety of sources including FTA Small Starts, San Francisco Prop K funds and development fees.

Projects associated with Van Ness BRT, including repaving Van Ness Avenue, new traffic signals, hardware and software, new transit vehicles and streetlight/pole replacement were funded by FTA Formula Funds, San Francisco Prop K funds and regional and statewide sources.

VAN NESS AVENUE HISTORY

Historic photo of Van Ness Avenue and Oak Street

When it was first surveyed in 1856, Van Ness was intended to be the City’s spine. Mansions of prominent families populated the northern end while the southern had dense working-class housing. Serving as a firebreak after the 1906 earthquake, Van Ness saved the western part of the city. By the 1920s, grand auto showrooms peppering the corridor made Van Ness the west coast’s largest Auto Row. Once the Golden Gate Bridge was built, it shifted toward regional auto travel. Since the '90s, transportation plans prepared by the San Francisco County Transportation Authority and Muni recognized the need to establish rapid transit service on Van Ness Avenue. In 2003, 75 percent of voters approved the sales tax to plan rapid transit service on Van Ness Avenue. In September 2013, the Board of Supervisors, acting as the San Francisco County Transportation Authority Commission, unanimously approved the Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit Project, the core of the Van Ness Improvement Project. Construction of the project began in October 2016.

Today, the Van Ness Avenue corridor serves as a vital connector of neighborhoods and a regional link for travel between Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo Counties. Van Ness Avenue is one of the busiest north-south corridors in the city, serving over 16,000 Muni customers daily on the 49 Mission/Van Ness and 90 San Bruno Owl bus routes as well as Golden Gate Transit customers. It is part of the California State Highway System and of US Route 101, a primary artery that connects Interstate Highways 280 and 80 with the Golden Gate Bridge. 

Caltrans Logo
San Francisco city seal
Muni logo
San Francisco County Transportation Authority logo
San Francisco Office of Economic and Workforce Development logo
San Francisco Water Power Sewer logo
San Francisco Public Works logo
Walsh Construction Logo