Los Angeles Times

Metro leaders OK a trial run of NoHo-Pasadena express bus route.

Metro approves bus service between North Hollywood and Pasadena. It’s set to begin March 5.

- By Chad Garland chad.garland@latimes.com Chad Garland is a staff writer for Times Community News.

The Los Angeles Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority has approved a 180day trial run of an express bus route between North Hollywood and Pasadena.

The NoHo to Pasadena Express will link the North Hollywood Red and Orange Line stations to the Memorial Park and Del Mar Gold Line stations in Pasadena, stopping along the way in Burbank and Glendale, where passengers will be able to transfer to the Burbank Bus or Glendale Bee Line, officials said.

The new service is set to begin on March 5, the same day the Gold Line extension to Azusa is set to open, said Glendale Mayor Ara Najarian, who is on the Metro board of directors and pushed for the service.

“We’ve been talking about this for a long time,” Najarian said during a Glendale City Council meeting last week. “This is going to be a reality.”

With service every 15 minutes during peak weekday hours and every 30 minutes off-peak and weekends, the limited-service route will depart from the North Hollywood bus plaza and shoot down Lankershim Boulevard, Najarian said, and travel generally on the 134 Freeway carpool lanes.

In Burbank, the route will follow Hollywood Way and Olive Avenue to Alameda Avenue and Buena Vista Street before returning to the freeway. The route also includes stops at Goode Avenue and Brand Boulevard (westbound) and Sanchez Drive and Brand (eastbound) in Glendale.

Travel time during peak hours is expected to be 55 minutes end-to-end from North Hollywood to the Del Mar Station in Pasadena.

There will not be dedicated bus lanes, he said. A Metro staff report indicates that freeway widening may eventually allow buses to run on the shoulders. A post on the Metro blog earlier this month said officials are looking at the possibilit­y of dedicated lanes in the future.

“As ridership increases ... the financial justificat­ion for a dedicated bus route like the Orange Line will become stronger, so we will hope that it gets a lot of riders,” Najarian said. “It seems a logical connection between the two great valleys of our region.”

He said the express-service pilot program could generate support for a light-rail line connecting the two valleys.

In North Hollywood, riders can hop on an Orange Line bus to Warner Center, Najarian said, or a Red Line train to Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. From there, they can connect to the Blue or Expo lines. The Gold Line also offers a connection to Union Station as well as Pasadena’s east side and East Los Angeles.

The trial run will be contracted out to a private operator and is expected to cost $1.2 million, according to a Metro staff report. The route is expected to draw 1,750 riders daily. If it does not achieve that level of ridership by the end of the 180-day pilot, the route may be adjusted or improved. It could also be discontinu­ed.

David Kriske, assistant community developmen­t director for Burbank, said it’s hoped the service will help show that ridership exists for the regional rail network’s missing link. It will also connect to the Burbank Bus NoHo-Airport route, which now offers all-day service on weekdays to and from Bob Hope Airport.

“We’ve participat­ed in several studies of this corridor over the last 10-plus years that have suggested ridership demand exists for a travel alternativ­e to the busy 134 Freeway,” Kriske said in an email this week. “It’s exciting to implement a program that addresses this need.”

 ?? Genaro Molina
Los Angeles Times ?? A METRO ORANGE LINE bus travels in Van Nuys. The NoHo to Pasadena Express will link the North Hollywood Red and Orange Line stations to the Memorial Park and Del Mar Gold Line stations in Pasadena.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A METRO ORANGE LINE bus travels in Van Nuys. The NoHo to Pasadena Express will link the North Hollywood Red and Orange Line stations to the Memorial Park and Del Mar Gold Line stations in Pasadena.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE 180-DAY trial run will be contracted out to a private operator and is expected to cost $1.2 million.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE 180-DAY trial run will be contracted out to a private operator and is expected to cost $1.2 million.

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