Jun 17, 2026
The Your

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Atlanta’s New Rapid A-Line Bus Route

As a transit lover, I was excited to try out MARTA’s new Rapid A-Line bus route, which features a few distinctions that distinguish it from normal bus service: exclusive lanes, traffic signal priority, and enhanced bus stop design features.

My First Ride

I recently had the chance to ride the Rapid A-Line bus on a sunny Sunday afternoon in Atlanta. I was visiting some of my favorite stores on Mitchell Street, including Village Books bookstore and CRATES record store. As I exited onto Mitchell Street, I spotted one of the new MARTA Rapid A-Line buses stopped at the red light at the corner of Mitchell & Forsyth Streets.

I made an impulsive sprint across both directions of traffic to get to the new elevated bus stop before the light turned green. The smiling bus driver waved me on, gave me some quick instructions about the new service, and took off towards Atlanta City Hall. The Rapid A-Line Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route is the newest, most visible reminder of MARTA’s new service changes—the purple bus colors and bright red ‘BUS ONLY’ traffic lanes are hard to miss—in addition to new train designs and fare gates at the rail stations.

As I settled into my seat, I inhaled that new bus smell and looked up and around and out, taking in the views from my window seat. I reminisced on visiting some of these familiar parts of the city—Peoplestown, Summerhill, and Hank Aaron Drive—in my youth that tend to feel more foreign as times change. I grew up near Hartsfield-Jackson Airport and would come to this area a couple times a year for Braves games.

Center Parc Stadium still evokes memories of (Ted) Turner Field, even as it’s easy to soak in the ambitious new energy in the area since Georgia State University acquired the property in 2016. Those efforts, combined with more recent commercial developments that appear to be spurred along by the 2026 FIFA World Cup, create a new facade of residential and retail activity along the Rapid A-Line route that balances the blocks of government buildings that anchor South Downtown.

What’s Next for the Rapid A-Line?

If you’re a longterm bus rider, you might still be adjusting to this new bus service as part of MARTA’s NextGen Bus Network, a recently implemented overhaul which features revamped and eliminated routes plus the introduction of MARTA Reach, its on-demand, curb-to-curb service. If you’re a nearby resident who doesn’t normally rely on public transit, BRT might be viewed as an asset as you’re navigating anticipated increased traffic and significantly reduced street parking options downtown.

As I walked back to my car, I pondered what it will take for residents of Atlanta—a city and region that constantly grapples with the best way to move people around—to actually adopt this latest transit idea as a viable staple in an everyday context, both in this introductory phase and should it expand in the future: More routes? Suburban stops? More rider services? An influencer campaign? A population shift? Whatever the catalyst might be, the BRT journey from novelty to necessity starts now with how well the new service fulfills the public’s needs and expectations—during this World Cup magnifying moment to start, but more importantly in the critical months and years ahead for those who remain after.


Original reporting: SaportaReport — read the source article.

OBBM Network Editorial Staff

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Editorial team behind OBBM Network — independent, hyper-local journalism syndicated through HyperLocalLoop and OBBM Network TV.

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