Buses in Shanghai

Shanghai Bus Route 71 in the Bund
Jiushi Group (top) and Pudong Bus (bottom), which operate mainly in Puxi and Pudong respectively, are the two largest bus operators in Shanghai.

Shanghai has around 2000 formal bus lines (including city center, trolleybuses and suburban lines), served by more than 10 bus companies. In the past, Bashi, Dazhong, Guanzhong and Qiangsheng were the four largest; around 2009 they merged to become Bashi Group Companies, including Bashi No.1-6 Bus Passenger Service Companies, Bashi Tram, Bashi Xinxin and Chongming Company, Baoshan Company and Jinshan Company. Each Suburban district also renewed with one company serving each district. Around 2015, Bashi No.1 Passenger Service and Bashi Tram merged to be Bashi No.1 Company, Bashi No.2 Passenger Service became Bashi No.2 Company, Bashi No.3, No.4 Passenger Service merged to be Bashi No.3 Company, Bashi No.6 Passenger Service became Bashi No.4 Company, and Bashi No.5 Passenger Service and Baoshan Company became Bashi No.5 Company.[citation needed]

Liveries of different bus companies differ. The most ordinary livery is often called "SH Livery", which was established in 2001. Bashi Group buses, Jinshan Bus Co. of Jinshan District, Minhang Bus Co. of Minhang District and other private bus companies use such kind of livery, while different in colors. Pudong Bus of Pudong New Area has its special livery established in 2009, which is blue and is often called "Haibao Livery". Songjiang Bus of Songjiang District has a livery of a combination of red and grey, which was established in 2007. Fengxian Bus of Fengxian District has a livery of green and white and another livery based on "SH Livery" but with the color of green and blue, which were established after Fengxian Bashi and Fengxian Bus (local owned).Qingpu Bus of Qingpu District started using new livery since the end of 2015, which contains the same color with Bashi "SH Livery" but has different patterns. Zongshen Dazhong of Qingpu District has a special livery of a combination of yellow and green on some of its bus routes.

Since 2006, Shanghai has been the leading Chinese system to implement electric and hybrid buses. During the 2010 Shanghai World Expo, the city piloted a program that includes 256 new energy buses with low to no emission. As of May 2015, the system has over 1,700 new energy buses, amounting to over 20% of the entire fleet.

During the mid-2000s, the city converted many traditional trolley routes to a standard diesel fleet because of route flexibility, speed, and eliminating the visual pollution of overhead wires. However, the obvious benefits of the trolley buses have brought back a renewed interest in keeping and developing the program. In 2013, Bashi Trolley Bus Company ordered 300 new trolleybuses to replace the aging fleet and grow the overall number of trolleys in Shanghai.

In February 2017, a number of ordinary bus lines running under the Yan'an Elevated Road was altered and transformed into the Yan'an Road Medium Capacity Bus Transit System, a trolleybus bus rapid transit line running in the reserved lanes in the center of Yan'an Road.[1] The line is served by a fleet of 40 Yutong ZK5180A articulated bus and 28 Yutong ZK5120C rigid dual-mode trolleybuses.[2][3] Buses achieved an average operating speed of 17.6 km/h (10.9 mph) on the line.[4] The line has an average weekday ridership of about 54,000 people, making itself the most used bus line in Shanghai.[5][6] Line 71 doesn't share any overhead wires with other trolleybus routes.

On 28 July 2021, the Shanghai road transport department raised the issue of 'optimising' the traditional trolleybus network, which will result in the removal of all infrastructure on routes 6, 8, 13, 22, 25 and 28 to balance between historical value and space taken by wires. Trolleybuses on these routes will be replaced by electric buses.[7]

Naming scheme

Most downtown buses use numbers to specify the lines, while suburban buses and a few downtown bus lines use Chinese characters. In the recent decade, there has been increased activity in network optimization and as a result, many bus lines have been cut, shorted, and combined. Many named bus lines have been converted to number lines with a flat fare. Some regular lines have been changed to rush-hour only, while still keeping their original line numbers.

Numerical lines

Route 20 (left) is an example of a trolleybus route, while route 25 (right) was also a trolleybus route, but has been converted to run on conventional buses.
  • Line numbers under 200 are conventional buses (Chinese: 常规公交线路). In these buses, majority of the lines under 30 (except those starting with 0), as well as 71 use or previously used trolleybuses, although some have been converted to use conventional buses. All trolleybuses are air-conditioned.
  • Line numbers between 200 and 299 are mostly lines dedicated for rush-hour only, with some exceptions where some lines are converted from peak-hour only to full day service.
  • Line numbers between 300 and 399 are night buses (Chinese: 夜宵公交线路).
  • Line numbers between 400 and 499 are buses that cross the Huangpu River. There are also many other bus lines that cross the Huangpu River.
  • Line numbers between 500 and 599 are special-line connecting buses (Chinese: 专线公交线路).Some of them are merged into one line(e.g. Bus line 562 & 62 merged into 62), and some lines are renamed using the numbers between 900 and 999 after its buses were replaced by air-conditioned buses during 1990s(e.g. Former Bus line 591 renamed into 936).
  • Line numbers between 600 and 699 are special-line buses in Pudong.
  • Line numbers between 700 and 799 are suburban conventional lines (Chinese: 通郊公交线路).[8] Most 700s buses have at least one terminal beyond Outer Ring Road (S20 Road).
  • Line numbers between 800 and 899 are special-line buses (Chinese: 专线公交线路). Most of them are mid-size buses, but now they are being replaced with air-conditioned large buses. These lines were previously run by private companies, but have since been overtaken by some big bus groups, The quality and reliability of these lines have been improved significantly.
  • Line numbers between 900 and 999 were air-conditioned special-line buses (Chinese: 空调专线公交线路), though as of 2020 the special designation has dropped since all bus routes in Shanghai have been air-conditioned.
  • Line numbers over 1000 are community conventional buses (Chinese: 社区短驳公交线路). These usually use medium-size buses to connect neighborhoods to bus or subway stations and have circular routes.

Non-numerical lines

  • Tunnel Lines (Chinese: 隧道公共汽车线路)

Tunnel Lines 1 to 9, except Tunnel Line 5, run across a tunnel under Huangpu River. While being the same as buses in the 400s, there are many other buses that cross the many tunnels under the Huangpu River while not named as a tunnel line.

  • Bridge Lines (Chinese: 大桥公共汽车线路)

Bridge Lines 1 to 6 run across bridges over the Huangpu River, including Lupu Bridge, Nanpu Bridge, and Yangpu Bridge. While being the same as buses in the 400s, there are many other buses that cross the many bridges over the Huangpu River while not named as a bridge line.

  • Airport Lines (Chinese: 机场公共汽车线路)

Airport Lines 1 to 7 connect Pudong International Airport to downtown Shanghai and Hongqiao International Airport, while Airport Special Line (Chinese: 机场专线) connects Hongqiao International Airport to the Jing'an Temple in downtown Shanghai.

  • Sub-urban and Rural Lines (Chinese: 郊区公共汽车线路)

There will be various additional naming schemes in the alphabet lines. Most lines are named as "XY Line", where X and Y indicate the two terminals of this line, e.g., "莘纪线" (Xin Ji Line) is a bus which runs between Xinzhuang and Jiwang.

Some other lines only indicate one terminal, e.g., "宝杨码头专线" (Baoyang Port Special Line) is a bus which runs between Baoyang Port and Shanghai Railway Station.

In the central portion of some suburbs, there are lines with the name format of "XX No. X" line.

  • Some of them are community conventional buses (Chinese: 社区短驳公交线路 whose names are started with the name of a town, sub-district, or, directly, district, e.g. Jiangchuan Route 1 (Chinese: 江川1路) in Minhang and Jiading Route 103 (former Anting Route 1) Chinese: 嘉定103路(安亭1路).
  • Some of them are special-line buses (Chinese: 专线公交线路) for special events, e.g. Expo Route 18 (Chinese: 世博18路),
  • Some of them are special-line buses (Chinese: 专线公交线路) for Terminal Stations, e.g. Hongqiao Hub Route 5 (Chinese: 虹桥枢纽5路), Temporary Special Route 1 and Route 4 for Chunyun (Chinese: 春运临时专线1路、4路, now named Route 01 and 04) for West Shanghai Railway Station.

Fare

All flat-rate fare and numbered lines and most distance-based fare lines accept the Shanghai public transport card as well as QR codes of Shanghai public transportation. The transfer discount policy for Shanghai public transport service is applicable.

  • Shanghai in principle follows the convention which prevails in most Chinese cities whereby 'standard' buses charge between 1 and 2 yuan. Some community bus lines are priced only 1 yuan.
  • Long-distance buses may charge according to distance on ride. The price of the max-distance vary between length of lines, usually between 5 yuan to 11 yuan. The fare of those buses in shortest distance is usually 1 yuan.
  • Some long-distance buses may charge standard fares according to its length. For example, the bus from Jiading's Nanmen to Yangpu's Wujiaochang charges 8 yuan.

According to local charging policy, passengers using Shanghai public transportation card or Shanghai public transportation QR code, after taking metro or buses, taking any bus line within 120 minutes enjoy one yuan off.

Since Sept 27, 2023, Shanghai's MaaS system introduced one-day pass, which can be purchased throw WeChat miniprograms 19.8 yuan, and passengers may take most bus lines (excluding buses on high-speed roads) without limit.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ 从虹桥到外滩穿过上海“心脏地带” 探秘17.5公里延安路中运量公交工程. www.shanghai.gov.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  2. ^ "Yutong 18m double energy powered trolleys put into operation in Shanghai-YUTONG". en.yutong.com. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  3. ^ 从虹桥到外滩穿过上海“心脏地带” 探秘17.5公里延安路中运量公交工程. www.shanghai.gov.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2017-09-16.
  4. ^ 中运量公交启动评估 年内添双开门公交同站换乘. sh.sina.com.cn. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  5. ^ 新71路日客流5.4万居全市公交线第一 中心城区研究再建新中运量. www.shanghai.gov.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  6. ^ 吴春伟. 车速快班次准点 沪中运量公交71路运营已达预期-运量 71路 客流 公交 运营公司-上海频道-东方网. sh.eastday.com. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  7. ^ "上海"辫子车"计划保留6条线路,包括中国首条无轨电车线路_浦江头条_澎湃新闻-The Paper". www.thepaper.cn. Retrieved 2021-08-22.
  8. ^ 《上海公用事业志》编纂委员会 (2000). 上海公用事业志. 上海: 上海社会科学院出版社. ISBN 7806186883.
  9. ^ "明天起!您可以24小时不限次乘坐公交、地铁、轮渡!上海MaaS系统上线"联程日票"" (in Chinese). 2023-09-27. Retrieved 2023-09-27.

External links

  • ShanghaiBus.Net - bus photos and information (Chinese only)
  • Shanghai Bus System Tutorial (for non-Chinese speakers)
  • Trolleybus city: Shanghai (China) Trolleymotion.
  • Shanghai database / photo gallery and Shanghai trolleybus list at Urban Electric Transit – in various languages, including English.

31°12′N 121°30′E / 31.200°N 121.500°E / 31.200; 121.500

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Buses_in_Shanghai&oldid=1184787104"