Detroit Department of Transportation
The Detroit Department of Transportation is the public transportation operator of city bus service in Detroit, Michigan. In existence since 1922, it has headquarters in the Midtown section of Detroit and is a municipal department of the city government. DDOT partners with the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation.
Services
As the largest public transit agency in the state of Michigan, DDOT primarily serves the city of Detroit, with some additional and limited service to nearby cities of Dearborn, Hamtramck, Highland Park, Harper Woods, Livonia, Redford Township, River Rouge and Southfield. DDOT has a fare and ride agreement with the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation as it supplements the city with bus service linking the city to the rest of Metro Detroit and Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. Bus service generally operates between 5 a.m. and 12:30 a.m. Monday through Saturday, while Sunday service starts approximately 7 a.m. and ends between 8 and 9 p.m. Routes 1–10 and 16 have 24/7 service.Along with operating fixed-route bus service, DDOT also operates MetroLift, an on-demand paratransit service with 220 to 240 wheelchair accessible vehicles. DDOT contracts with three providers for this service: Checker Cab, Enjoi Transportation, and Lakeside Divisions.
History
The DDOT began its life as the Department of Street Railways in 1922 after the acquisition of the privately owned Detroit United Railway, which had controlled much of Detroit's mass transit operations since its incorporation in 1901. The DSR added bus service when it created the Motorbus Division in 1925. At the height of its operation in 1941, the DSR operated 20 streetcar lines with 910 streetcars. By 1952, only four streetcar lines remained: Woodward, Gratiot, Michigan and Jefferson. Streetcar services was discontinued in April 1956 with the decommissioning of the Woodward line. The DSR formally became the DDOT in 1974 under the Detroit City Charter.Between 2009 and 2012, the system's seven remaining limited and express bus routes were discontinued. Starting January 1, 2012, management of DDOT was contracted out to Parsons Brinckerhoff, an engineering and management firm. The firm subsequently subcontracted the management of the system to Envisurage, LLC a consultancy run by the former CEO of the Rochester-Genesee Regional Transportation Authority. On March 3, 2012, 24-hour service was discontinued, and other weekday and weekend routes and services were pared down, or eliminated entirely, in an attempt to produce savings for the department. In August 2013, management of DDOT was contracted out to MV Transportation under the direction of Paul Toliver until September 2014. Dan Dirks was appointed director of the department by mayor Mike Duggan on January 9, 2014 for the duration of MV Transportation's contract. MV Transportation's contract was extended for another two years on August 12, 2014. On January 23, 2016, DDOT reintroduced 24-hour service on three principal routes along with other smaller service changes. On September 1, 2018, the ten most popular routes, which were renumbered Routes 1-10, received 24/7 service among other changes. Also, old routes 7, 9, and 10 were given higher route numbers to avoid conflict.
Detroit Downtown Trolley
The Detroit Downtown Trolley was a heritage trolley built in 1976 as a U.S. Bicentennial project. The trolley ran over a one-mile L-shaped route from Grand Circus Park to near the Renaissance Center, via Washington Boulevard and Jefferson Avenue, using narrow-gauge trams acquired from municipal rail services outside the U.S. Most of the Detroit cars that saw service from 1976 to 2003 had been acquired from Lisbon, Portugal. Many Detroiters old enough to remember streetcar service from before 1956 were delighted with the nod to nostalgia that the service represented, but lack of business activity in downtown Detroit meant that ridership of the Downtown Trolley never became more than a novelty and declined to only about 3000 per year in the late 1990s; service was suspended in June 2003.Fares
Standard Fares
All routes, plus the QLine. The Detroit People Mover will accept passes.All fares below are suspended and are free up to further notice, since mid-March 2020 out of respect of the COVID-19 outbreak.
Pass Fees
Passes can be purchased at DDOT headquarters, the Rosa Parks Transit Center as well as businesses and stores around the city. DDOT updated and simplified their fare structure eliminating transfer costs and working with the suburban transit system to have some unified fare options. 24-Hour passes can be bought onboard any bus.^To receive discounted fares, seniors and disabled passengers must present either DDOT Special Fares ID CARD or State ID with Visual impairment designation.
^^Medicare cardholders pay same rates as children 6-17, seniors at least 65 & disabled.
Routes
Former Routes
- 1 Downtown Get Around Green Loop
- 2 Downtown Get Around Red Loop
- 3 Baker-West Vernor
- 3 Medical Center Shuttle
- 3 Cultural Attractions Trolley
- 4 Belle Isle
- 4 Zoo Shuttle
- 5 Broadstreet
- 5 Ford Meadows Shuttle
- 6 Buchanan
- 7 Cadillac/Harper
- 8 Caniff
- 9 Chalmers
- 10 Chene
- 14 Crosstown
- 20 Grand Belt
- 21 Grand River
- 22 Greenfield
- 24 Holbrook
- 25 Jefferson
- 26 John R. North
- 26 Greenfield Spinner
- 28 Lafayette-Green
- 33 Meyers-Northlawn
- 33 John R. Limited
- 34 Gratiot
- 35 Mount Elliott
- 35 Meyers
- 36 Oakland
- 37 Michigan
- 42 Schoenherr-Redmond
- 44 Second Boulevard
- 45 Seven Mile
- 48 Van Dyke/Lafayette
- 49 East Vernor
- 50 Warren East
- 51 West Jefferson
- 52 Woodrow Wilson
- 53 Woodward
- 53 Woodward-John R. merged with Route 495 John R.
- 66 Downtown Lunch Time Express
- 70 Cadillac-Harper Express
- 70 Crosstown Express
- 71 Grand River Express
- 71 Crosstown Express
- 72 Dexter Express
- 73 Fenkell Express
- 73 Woodward Express
- 74 Grand River Express
- 74 Gratiot Express
- 75 Gratiot Express
- 76 Hayes Limited
- 77 Hamilton Express
- 78 Imperial Limited
- 79 Jefferson Express
- 80 Joy Road Express
- 80 Hayes Flex
- 81 Oakland Express
- 82 Plymouth Express
- 83 Rouge Express
- 84 Schoolcraft Express
- 85 West McNichols Express
- 86 Van Dyke Express
- 87 Vernor-Mack Express
- 88 Woodward Express
- 90 Baker-Oakland
- 93 Gratiot-Michigan
- 94 VA Park & Ride
- 95 Woodmere Shuttle
- 96 Joy-Vernor
- 97 Woodward-Jefferson
- 99 Lahser
- 101 Hubbell Spinner
- 125 Fort Street-Detroit
- 150 Taylor-Detroit
Fleet
Current Fleet
Year | Make | Model | Length | Capacity | Propulsion | Engine | Fleet Series | Quantity |
2003 | New Flyer | D40LF | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3900-3959 | 60 |
2004 | New Flyer | D40LF | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3975-3989 | 15 |
2005 | New Flyer | D40LF | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Cummins ISL-05 | 4100-4220 | 121 |
2010 | New Flyer | D40LF | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Cummins ISL-07 | 1001-1050 | 50 |
2011 | Gillig | Low Floor | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Cummins ISL-07 | 1201-1242 | 42 |
2012 | Gillig | Low Floor | 40 | 39 | Diesel Electric | Cummins ISB | 1243-1246 | 4 |
2014 | New Flyer | XD40 | 41 | 40 | Diesel | Cummins ISL9 | 1400-1430 | 31 |
2015 | New Flyer | XD40 | 41 | 40 | Diesel | Cummins ISL9 | 1500-1508 1519-1538 | 29 |
2015 | New Flyer | XDE40 | 41 | 40 | Diesel Electric | Cummins ISB | 1509-1518 | 10 |
2015 | New Flyer | XD60 | 60.8 | 60 | Diesel | Cummins ISL9 | 1539-1548 | 10 |
Retired Fleet
Year | Make | Model | Length | Capacity | Propulsion | Engine | Fleet Series | Quantity | Retired |
1975 | GM Coach | New Look | 40 | 36 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-71 | 3001 | 1 | 1986 |
1975 | GM Coach | New Look | 30 | 33 | Diesel | GMC D-478 Toro-Flow II | 3002-3006 | 5 | 1986 |
1975 | GM Coach | New Look | 40 | 48 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-71 | 1001-1148 | 148 | 1996 |
1975 | AM General Corp. | Metropolitan Series | 40 | 49 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-71 | 1201-1251 | 51 | 1986 |
1978 | GM Coach | RTS-II | 40 | 47 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-71N | 1300-1369 | 70 | 1993 |
1978 | GM Coach | RTS-II | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-71N | 1370L-1410L | 41 | 1997 |
1979 | GM Coach | RTS-II | 40 | 46 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-71N | 1501L-1605L | 105 | 1999 |
1979 | GM Coach | RTS-II | 35 | 36 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-71N | 1701L-1717L | 17 | 1997 |
1980 | GM Coach | RTS-II | 40 | 41-46 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-71N | 1801L-1874L | 74 | 1999 |
1981 | Bus Industries of America Inc. | Orion II | 21.9 | 26 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Allison 8.2 Liter "Fuel Pincher" | 001-002 | 2 | 1997 |
1985 | GM Coach | New Look | 40 | 48 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-71 | 2521-2534 | 14 | 1986 |
1987 | GM of Canada | GMC Classic | 40 | 47-49 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-71N | 1900-1999 | 100 | 2002 |
1989 | Motor Coach Industries | MCI Classic | 40 | 51 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-92TA | 2000-2084 | 85 | 2003 |
1989 | Neoplan USA | AN460 | 60 | 65 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 6V-92TA | 8900-8913 | 14 | 2002 |
1992 | New Flyer | D40HF | 40 | 45 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel 8V-92 | 3000-3120 | 121 | 2005 |
1995 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3200-3232 | 33 | 2008 |
1996 | Goshen Coach | MB19FD | 30 | 19 | Diesel | Cummins 5.9L B-Series | 3300-3328 | 29 | 2001 |
1996 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3500-3599 | 100 | 2012 |
1997 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3250-3282 | 33 | 2012 |
1997 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3600-3617 | 18 | 2012 |
1997 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 39 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3290-3299 | 10 | 2010 |
1998 | Chance Bus Corp | CNG-28 | 28 | 27 | CNG | Cummins 5.9L B-Series | 4000-4003 | 4 | 2004 |
1998 | Chance Bus Corp | CNG-28 | 28 | 27 | CNG | Cummins 5.9L B-Series | 4004-4013 | 10 | 2004 |
2000 | Chance Bus Corp | CNG-28 | 28 | 27 | CNG | Cummins 5.9L B-Series | 4014-4024 | 11 | 2004 |
2001 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3700-3799 | 100 | 2015 |
2001 | Nova Bus | RTS 06 | 40 | 43 | Diesel | Detroit Diesel Series 50 | 3800-3859 | 60 | 2015 |