SPTrans Museum Of Public Transportation
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

(SPTrans) (English: São Paulo Transport), is the name adopted on March 8, 1995 by the municipal local government which aims to manage the public transport system with buses in
São Paulo São Paulo (, ; Portuguese for 'Saint Paul') is the most populous city in Brazil, and is the capital of the state of São Paulo, the most populous and wealthiest Brazilian state, located in the country's Southeast Region. Listed by the GaWC a ...
. Until 1995, it was known as ', which, when translated from Portuguese to English, it is the ''Municipal Public Transport Company''. All bus lines are operated by concessionaires under the supervision of SPTrans, providing business planning and management of public transport. The SPTrans issues work orders for each line of operation, including setting paths, hours of operation, and necessary fleet. The fare can be made in cash or by
contactless smart card A contactless smart card is a contactless credential whose dimensions are credit-card size. Its embedded integrated circuits can store (and sometimes process) data and communicate with a terminal via NFC. Commonplace uses include transit tickets ...
called
Bilhete Único Bilhete Único (''Unified Ticket'') is the name of the São Paulo transportation contactless smart card system for fare control. Using Philips Mifare technology, the ticketing system is managed by SPTrans (São Paulo Transporte S/A), the city ...
. The company also manages the bus lanes and bus terminals in the city.


Bus routes

Bus routes managed by SPTrans have four digits or three digits plus one letter according to the service type, and a two-digit extension number, which is ''10'' by default.


Regional and radial routes

Regional and radial bus routes within São Paulo are composed of four numerical digits in the range ''0'', ''1'', ''2'' ... ''9''. The first digit indicates the origin of the route according to the set area. The second digit is a ''0'' for a regional route or between ''1'' and ''6'' for a radial route, which indicates that the route separates from the main avenue of the region. The rightmost two digits serve as a serial number.


Inter-regional and diametrical routes

Inter-regional and diametrical bus routes within São Paulo are composed of three numerical digits and an alphabetic digit in the range ''A ... Z''. The first two digits have the same values as the regional and radial routes. The third digit indicates the region where the route ends. The fourth digit, a letter, indicates the route taken to the destination.


Two-digit extension number

Following the four digits is the two digits that serve as the extension number. * ''00'' to ''09'' — unallocated * ''10'' — The default extension number. * ''11'' — The number used to indicate a night service. * ''12'' to ''19'' — unallocated * ''21'' to ''29'' — Extension numbers within this group operate only on part of the baseline stretch, either from mid-to-end or start to mid-way, typically used at
rush hours A rush hour (American English, British English) or peak hour ( Australian English) is a part of the day during which traffic congestion on roads and crowding on public transport is at its highest. Normally, this happens twice every weekday: ...
. * ''30'' — unallocated * ''31'' to ''39'' — Extension numbers within this group indicate that this route's terminals typically correspond to the route that has the extension number of ''10'', but diverges mid-way. * ''40'' — unallocated * ''41'' to ''49'' — Extension numbers within this group travel part of the base path but forks after a certain point, having its starting or ending point different from the route that has the extension number of ''10''. * ''50'' — unallocated * ''51'' to ''59'' — Extension numbers within this group go beyond the route's start or end terminals that correspond to the route that has the extension number of ''10''. * ''60'' to ''99'' — unallocated


History

The current four-digit bus route numbering system SPTrans uses today, where the last digit is an alphanumerical digit, was established in 1976, but was not fully implemented due to citywide changes that were carried out according to the development, and the management change within the São Paulo's city hall. During
Marta Suplicy Marta Teresa Smith de Vasconcellos Suplicy (; born 18 March 1945) is a Brazilian politician and psychologist. She was Mayor of São Paulo from 2001 to 2004. She later served as the Brazilian Minister of Tourism between 14 March 2007, and 4 Jun ...
's administration, between 2001 and 2004, the city was again divided into nine operational bus areas citywide, only this time from ''1'' to ''9'' and there were some changes. For example, the Santana region, in the northern zone of São Paulo, which until then was area ''1'', is now classified as area ''2'', but most of the lines that pass through the Santana region are still numbered where the first digit is ''1''. In 2003, when the Pirituba terminal (which is in area ''1'') was created, new lines were implemented, where the first digit is an ''8'' or a ''9''. The last digit is an alphanumeric digit.


Division of companies by area

The current model of municipal public transport in São Paulo divides the city into nine different areas, and for eight of them (''1'' - Northwest, ''2'' - North, ''3'' - Northeast, ''4'' - East, ''5'' - Southeast, ''6'' - South, ''7'' - Southwest and ''8'' - West) lots were established for the distribution of companies and cooperatives that will provide transport services by buses, minibuses, vans and trolleybuses. Area 9 is in the
Central Zone of São Paulo The Central Zone (Portuguese: Zona Central de São Paulo) is an administrative zone of the city of São Paulo, Brazil. One of the largest commercial and business districts in South America, the region is administered by the subprefecture of Sé. ...
, which encompasses the entire expanded centre of São Paulo, which does not have specific lots, so there is no company that operates specifically within these limits. The lines that operate only within the limits of area ''9'' are the responsibility of companies in areas ''1'' to ''8'', normally, the one closest to the point considered as the beginning of the line (a rule that has several exceptions).


Contractors

* Area 1 - Northwest - : Santa Brígida, Gato Preto, Norte Buss, Spencer. * Area 2 - North - : Sambaíba, Norte Buss, Spencer. * Area 3 - Northeast - : Metrópole Paulista, Transunião, Upbus. * Area 4 - East - : Ambiental, AlliBus, Pêssego, Express. * Area 5 - Southeast - : Via Sudeste, Transunião, Move Buss. * Area 6 - South - : Viação Grajaú, Mobibrasil, Transwolff, A2. * Area 7 - Southwest - : Campo Belo, Metrópole Paulista, Gatusa, KBPX, Transwolff. * Area 8 - West - : Transppass, Gato Preto, Transcap, Alfa Rodobus. * Area 9 - Central - : ''(all bus companies)''


References


See also

* São Paulo Metro *
Companhia Paulista de Trens Metropolitanos , owner = São Paulo State Government , area served = Greater São Paulo, Brazil , transit_type = Commuter rail , lines = 5 , line_number = , st ...
- São Paulo's Metropolitan Train Company *
Empresa Metropolitana de Transportes Urbanos de São Paulo The Empresa Metropolitana de Transportes Urbanos de São Paulo, or EMTU, is a company owned by the Secretaria de Estado dos Transportes Metropolitanos (STM) ( en, State Secretariat for Metropolitan Transports). Created in 1977, it is responsible fo ...
* Trolleybuses in São Paulo {{Brazil-transport-stub