The Metropolitan Area Express, or MAX, was a
bus rapid transit
Bus rapid transit (BRT), also called a busway or transitway, is a bus-based public transport system designed to have much more capacity, reliability and other quality features than a conventional bus system. Typically, a BRT system includes ...
(BRT) line owned by the
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
The Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada (RTC) is a government agency and the transit authority and the transportation-planning agency for Southern Nevada. It was founded by the Nevada Legislature in 1965.
RTC Transit
The Region ...
and operated by
MV. MAX began operations on June 30, 2004. The area served extended between the Downtown Transportation Center and North Las Vegas.
Following changes instituted on February 21, 2016, the Metropolitan Area Express (MAX) no longer operates, with additional services added to the route 113.
The route ran on a 12-minute frequency during the day, 20 minutes at night using only 10 vehicles purchased from
Irisbus
IVECO Bus (formerly Irisbus) is a bus manufacturer with headquarters in Turin. IVECO Bus is now only a brand division of IVECO which is a company incorporated under Dutch law and listed on Borsa Italiana.
History IVECO (1975 - 1999)
In 1975 ...
in France. These vehicles could hold a passenger load of 131 passengers. All fare payment were done off the vehicle at the stations. Special ticket vending machines were at every station where passengers had to pay fare before boarding as there was no fare box on board. Once on board, fare enforcement officers were at hand to check bus passes which are issued by the TVM upon payment.
The BRT service was chosen by the RTC over
light rail service due in part to costs of building and maintaining light rail. The RTC felt it was better to operate rubber tire transit rather than to have an expensive light rail system that would be too much to operate.
Safety record
All operators that drove MAX vehicles were required to have two years of preventable-free service. This means that a driver could not have had a preventable incident or accident for two years while driving for
RTC Transit
RTC Transit is the name of the bus system in the Las Vegas metropolitan area of Clark County, Nevada. It is a subsidiary of the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada. While it services most of Clark County with regularly schedu ...
, the fixed route system also owned by the RTC and operated by
MV. Then, operators were taken through training once again to be "MAX Certified".
Expansion/ACE BRT
After 4 years of service, MAX moved forward with expansion. In August 2007, the RTC hosted a groundbreaking ceremony for the new ACE BRT system, which was supposed to replace the MAX BRT system, using a new type of vehicles (MAX used Iribus Civis, ACE would use
Wright StreetCar
The Wright StreetCar is an articulated bus developed by Wrightbus and Volvo for FirstGroup. It was built on the Volvo B7LA chassis, featuring a separate driver compartment at the front, resembling to some extent similar designs in Europe.
It f ...
RTV) and new station designs. The first ACE line was name
ACE Downtown Connectorand would travel from the World Market Center, Downtown Las Vegas, Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas Strip, before finally terminating at McCarran Airport. Construction was completed sometime mid-2009 with operations starting in fall 2009.
During construction for this route, construction was scheduled to begin o
ACE Boulder Highwaywhich would travel from Downtown Las Vegas, down Boulder Highway into Downtown Henderson. The RTC was looking at even further expanding, with planned ACE route studies on North 5th Street
Sahara AvenueTropicana AvenueFlamingo Road an
Maryland Parkway
In March 2008, the pavement was completed on Grand Central Parkway, northbound from Bonneville to F Street, with the colored cement bus lane in the middle of the road. Construction then proceeded on Grand Central south of Bonneville. Also by March 2008, a few of the new ACE buses were already built.
In February 2009, construction was completed on Grand Central Parkway, with the exception of the station themselves. Construction was still ongoing along Casino Center Boulevard and 3rd St. The route was set to use a dedicated lane from Grand Central to Imperial/3rd St. From that point, it was to operate in mixed flow travel, with special stations built along the route, terminating at the South Strip Transfer Terminal.
References
External links
Official page for ACE Rapid Transit
{{USBRT
Transportation in the Las Vegas Valley
Bus rapid transit in Nevada
2004 establishments in Nevada
2016 disestablishments in Nevada