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Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority

Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority
AATA theride.png
Slogan The Ride
Founded Chartered in 1969, operating as early as 1976
Headquarters 2700 S. Industrial Hwy.,
Ann Arbor, MI
Service area Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti
Service type bus service, paratransit, express bus
Destinations Briarwood Mall, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, Eastern Michigan University, Washtenaw Comm College, Huron High School, U of M Hospital, Downtown Ypsilanti, Downtown Ann Arbor.
Stations Blake Transit Center, 328 S. Fifth Avenue, Ann Arbor
Ypsilanti Transit Center, 220 Pearl Street, Ypsilanti
Daily ridership 24,900 (2014)
Fuel type B12
Operator Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority
Chief executive Matt Carpenter
Website http://www.theride.org/

The Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority (AAATA), which brands itself as "TheRide," is the public transit system serving the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, Michigan, area.

The authority mainly operates fixed-route bus service within its service area. It also operates the ARide paratransit system, University of Michigan-sponsored ExpressRide commuter buses to Canton and Chelsea, and ArtFairRide and FootballRide event shuttles. It oversees the iShareARide and VanRide carpooling services. TheRide operates transit centers in downtown Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, as well as a number of park and ride facilities in the Ann Arbor area. The AAATA is also the designated authority for the planned Ann Arbor-Howell commuter rail line.

The AAATA was the first transit authority in the United States to operate low-floor buses when, in early 1993, they took delivery of ten New Flyer D40LF buses. In terms of operation, only two Canadian authorities and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey operated such buses prior to the AAATA. The AAATA has 55 hybrid electric buses in its fleet of 92 and is the first public transit operator in the Midwest to state its intention to convert to all hybrid electric buses.

In August 2013, the AAATA Board voted to change the agency's name from the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) to the Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority. The name change reflects the addition of neighboring Ypsilanti to the agency board and the growing focus on regional services within Washtenaw County's urban core. In December 2013, the Ann Arbor City Council approved adding Ypsilanti Township as a charter member of the AAATA.

In November 2012, the AATA broke ground on the new Blake Transit Center, at a cost of $8.1 million. The new 2-story, 12,019-square-foot downtown transit hub replaced a one-story structure built at the site at 328 South Fifth Avenue in the 1980s. The new Blake Transit Center was officially opened for use on July 7, 2014.


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