Mercury Monterey

Mercury Monterey

50 65 MERCURY MONTEREY PARTS INTERCHANGE 62 63 64 65
50 65 MERCURY MONTEREY PARTS INTERCHANGE 62 63 64 65
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NOS 1970 Mercury Monterey Headlamp Switch Assembly
NOS 1970 Mercury Monterey Headlamp Switch Assembly
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1967 Ford Repair Shop Manual Galaxie LTD Mercury Monterey Montclair Park Lane 67
1967 Ford Repair Shop Manual Galaxie LTD Mercury Monterey Montclair Park Lane 67
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Mercury Ford Monterey Freestar Power Door Mirror RH Right Passenger Side
Mercury Ford Monterey Freestar Power Door Mirror RH Right Passenger Side
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2003 2007 MERCURY MONTEREY SABLE CENTER CAP
2003 2007 MERCURY MONTEREY SABLE CENTER CAP
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1965 MERCURY MONTCLAIR PARK LANE MONTEREY WIRING DIAGRA
1965 MERCURY MONTCLAIR PARK LANE MONTEREY WIRING DIAGRA
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New Ford Windstar Explorer Remote Case Shell Mercury Mountaineer Monterey Pink 3
New Ford Windstar Explorer Remote Case Shell Mercury Mountaineer Monterey Pink 3
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Mercury 54 56 56 Custom Monterey front disc brake
Mercury 54 56 56 Custom Monterey front disc brake
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Nos 1965 66 Mercury Parklane Monterey Interior Lamp Lens
Nos 1965 66 Mercury Parklane Monterey Interior Lamp Lens
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1968 Mercury Monterey Vs Pontiac Oldsmobile Brochure
1968 Mercury Monterey Vs Pontiac Oldsmobile Brochure
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1968 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR MARQUIS JACK INS DECAL
1968 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR MARQUIS JACK INS DECAL
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1968 1969 MERCURY MONTEREY MARQUIS MARAUDER TRUNK DECAL
1968 1969 MERCURY MONTEREY MARQUIS MARAUDER TRUNK DECAL
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2002 2007 Mercury MOUNTAINEER MONTEREY Wheel Hub Center Cap OEM
2002 2007 Mercury MOUNTAINEER MONTEREY Wheel Hub Center Cap OEM
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1967 Mercury Brochure COUGAR Cyclone Monterey Xlnt 48pp
1967 Mercury Brochure COUGAR Cyclone Monterey Xlnt 48pp
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Ford Focus GT Mercury Monterey Marauder Driving Fog Light LH Left or RH Right
Ford Focus GT Mercury Monterey Marauder Driving Fog Light LH Left or RH Right
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19521953 Mercury MontereyCustom part rest guide 5253
19521953 Mercury MontereyCustom part rest guide 5253
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FRONT BRAKE HOSES Mercury Monterey 1969 1970 1971 1972
FRONT BRAKE HOSES Mercury Monterey 1969 1970 1971 1972
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Mercury Ford Monterey Freestar Power Door Mirror Driver Side Left
Mercury Ford Monterey Freestar Power Door Mirror Driver Side Left
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1966 66 Ford Galaxie Mercury Monterey
1966 66 Ford Galaxie Mercury Monterey
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1966 MERCURY MONTCLAIR PARK LANE MONTEREY WIRING DIAGRA
1966 MERCURY MONTCLAIR PARK LANE MONTEREY WIRING DIAGRA
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2005 MERCURY MONTEREY SALES BROCHURE AND BOOK
2005 MERCURY MONTEREY SALES BROCHURE AND BOOK
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1970 Mercury Marquis Monterey Brochure 70
1970 Mercury Marquis Monterey Brochure 70
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1958 Mercury Brochure 58 Monterey Montclair
1958 Mercury Brochure 58 Monterey Montclair
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1968 Ford LTD Galaxie Mercury Shop Manual ORIGINAL Monterey Montclair Park Lane
1968 Ford LTD Galaxie Mercury Shop Manual ORIGINAL Monterey Montclair Park Lane
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1964 Mercury Comet Brochure Monterey Park Lane
1964 Mercury Comet Brochure Monterey Park Lane
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1954 Mercury Shop Manual Custom Monterey Montclair Repair Service Book
1954 Mercury Shop Manual Custom Monterey Montclair Repair Service Book
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1956 Mercury MONTEREY MONTCLAIR Custom in orig pkg 56
1956 Mercury MONTEREY MONTCLAIR Custom in orig pkg 56
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1963 Mercury Monterey F S Sales Brochure 63
1963 Mercury Monterey F S Sales Brochure 63
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BRAKE HOSE SET Mercury Monterey 1969 1970 Disc
BRAKE HOSE SET Mercury Monterey 1969 1970 Disc
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1961 1963 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR UPPER CLUTCH ROD
1961 1963 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR UPPER CLUTCH ROD
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1966 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR PARKLANE JACK INS DECAL
1966 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR PARKLANE JACK INS DECAL
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1969 1970 MERCURY MARQUIS MONTEREY CONVERT JACK DECAL
1969 1970 MERCURY MARQUIS MONTEREY CONVERT JACK DECAL
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Nos 1969 Mercury Monterey Marquis rear lamp door
Nos 1969 Mercury Monterey Marquis rear lamp door
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1967 MERCURY MONTEREY CONV PROMO POSTCARD
1967 MERCURY MONTEREY CONV PROMO POSTCARD
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wonderful modelcar MERCURY MONTEREY HT COUPE 1954 blue
wonderful modelcar MERCURY MONTEREY HT COUPE 1954 blue
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04 05 06 Mercury Monterey V6 42L NEW AC A C Compressor
04 05 06 Mercury Monterey V6 42L NEW AC A C Compressor
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New Header Panel Nose Mercury Monterey 2007 2006 2005 2004 Freestar 3F2Z8A284AA
New Header Panel Nose Mercury Monterey 2007 2006 2005 2004 Freestar 3F2Z8A284AA
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1962 MERCURY MONTEREY S FIFTY FIVE S55 SALES BROCHURE
1962 MERCURY MONTEREY S FIFTY FIVE S55 SALES BROCHURE
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4 Layer CAR COVER Free SH Mercury Monterey 2 dr 1963 1964
4 Layer CAR COVER Free SH Mercury Monterey 2 dr 1963 1964
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1949 51 Mercury Montclair Monterey Parklane Carpet
1949 51 Mercury Montclair Monterey Parklane Carpet
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NOS Ford Front Door Weatherstrip 04 06 Mercury Monterey
NOS Ford Front Door Weatherstrip 04 06 Mercury Monterey
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1957 Mercury Shop Manual Monterey Montclair Turnpike 57
1957 Mercury Shop Manual Monterey Montclair Turnpike 57
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62 articles on Mercury 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 Marauder Monterey S55 Park Lane
62 articles on Mercury 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 Marauder Monterey S55 Park Lane
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1973 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM MONTEREY OWNERS MANUAL
1973 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM MONTEREY OWNERS MANUAL
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Mercury OEM headphones remote for DVD systemMonterey
Mercury OEM headphones remote for DVD systemMonterey
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1961 Mercury Meteor Monterey Colony Park Commuter Station Wagon Brochure
1961 Mercury Meteor Monterey Colony Park Commuter Station Wagon Brochure
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1962 Mercury Comet Meteor Monterey AFL Brochure
1962 Mercury Comet Meteor Monterey AFL Brochure
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Mercury Monterey 1959 Mercury Monterey Rare 2 door Post Car
Mercury Monterey 1959 Mercury Monterey Rare 2 door Post Car
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1953 MERCURY MONTEREY CUSTOM DEALER SALES BROCHURE
1953 MERCURY MONTEREY CUSTOM DEALER SALES BROCHURE
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Mercury Custom Monterey 52 53 front disc brake
Mercury Custom Monterey 52 53 front disc brake
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1959 Mercury Monterey Montclair Mailer Brochure
1959 Mercury Monterey Montclair Mailer Brochure
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New Stabilus Lift Support Mercury Monterey 2006 2005 2004 Ford Freestyle Parts
New Stabilus Lift Support Mercury Monterey 2006 2005 2004 Ford Freestyle Parts
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Mercury Ford Monterey Pickup Truck V8 Mechanical Gas Fuel Pump AIRTEX 6523
Mercury Ford Monterey Pickup Truck V8 Mechanical Gas Fuel Pump AIRTEX 6523
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04 07 Mercury Montego Monterey Front Brake Pad Shoe New
04 07 Mercury Montego Monterey Front Brake Pad Shoe New
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1955 Mercury Montclair Monterey Custom Salesmans
1955 Mercury Montclair Monterey Custom Salesmans
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1963 Mercury Monterey Meteor Comet Salesmans Features
1963 Mercury Monterey Meteor Comet Salesmans Features
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1965 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey Comet Cyclone
1965 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey Comet Cyclone
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Mercury Monterey OEM CD radio 6F2T 18C869 DB NEW
Mercury Monterey OEM CD radio 6F2T 18C869 DB NEW
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04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlights Headlamps Left Right Pair Set
04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlights Headlamps Left Right Pair Set
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1965 Mercury Park Lane Monterey Sales Brochure Book
1965 Mercury Park Lane Monterey Sales Brochure Book
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04 07 06 05 FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY HEADLIGHT L
04 07 06 05 FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY HEADLIGHT L
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wonderful modelcar MERCURY MONTEREY HT COUPE 1954 red
wonderful modelcar MERCURY MONTEREY HT COUPE 1954 red
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FORD EXPLORER FOCUS MERCURY MONTEREY MAF MASS SENSOR 3L3A12B579BA XL3F12B579BA
FORD EXPLORER FOCUS MERCURY MONTEREY MAF MASS SENSOR 3L3A12B579BA XL3F12B579BA
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Nos 1970 Mercury Monterey front fender extension LH
Nos 1970 Mercury Monterey front fender extension LH
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Mercury Monterey 1963 Mercury Monterey S 55 Convertible
Mercury Monterey 1963 Mercury Monterey S 55 Convertible
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2007 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey OEM Service Manual SET WIRING DIAGRAMS
2007 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey OEM Service Manual SET WIRING DIAGRAMS
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1960 1961 Mercury Monterey Parklane convertible hoses
1960 1961 Mercury Monterey Parklane convertible hoses
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1957 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR GLOVE BOX LINER BLACK
1957 MERCURY MONTEREY MONTCLAIR GLOVE BOX LINER BLACK
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1970 mercury brochure marquis monterey marauder
1970 mercury brochure marquis monterey marauder
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NEW ACCUMULATOR DRIER FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY
NEW ACCUMULATOR DRIER FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY
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Engine Oil Pan Gasket 51 64 Edsel Ford Mercury Monterey 223 215
Engine Oil Pan Gasket 51 64 Edsel Ford Mercury Monterey 223 215
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04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlight Headlamp Driver Side Left LH
04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlight Headlamp Driver Side Left LH
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Vintage Instructions AMT 1961 Mercury Monterey Convertible
Vintage Instructions AMT 1961 Mercury Monterey Convertible
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1962 ORIGINAL MERCURY MONTEREY SERVICE SHOP REPAIR MANUAL SUPPLEMENT BOOK 62
1962 ORIGINAL MERCURY MONTEREY SERVICE SHOP REPAIR MANUAL SUPPLEMENT BOOK 62
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1958 Mercury Sales Brochure Park Lane Monterey Commuter
1958 Mercury Sales Brochure Park Lane Monterey Commuter
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1966 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey S55 Brochure
1966 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey S55 Brochure
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1965 1968 Mercury Monterey convertible top cylinder L
1965 1968 Mercury Monterey convertible top cylinder L
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New Keyless Remote Key Shell For Ford Mercury Freestar Monterey
New Keyless Remote Key Shell For Ford Mercury Freestar Monterey
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2005 MERCURY MONTEREY VAN SALES BROCHURE BOOK CATALOG
2005 MERCURY MONTEREY VAN SALES BROCHURE BOOK CATALOG
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1965 Mercury license plate tag 65 Comet Meteor Montclair Monterey Park Lane merc
1965 Mercury license plate tag 65 Comet Meteor Montclair Monterey Park Lane merc
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2004 2006 MERCURY MONTEREY RKE REMOTE XF2T 15K601 AA
2004 2006 MERCURY MONTEREY RKE REMOTE XF2T 15K601 AA
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Nos 1971 72 Mercury MontereyMeteor fender moulding
Nos 1971 72 Mercury MontereyMeteor fender moulding
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1969 Mercury MarquisMarauderMonterey Large Brochure Includes X 100Brougham
1969 Mercury MarquisMarauderMonterey Large Brochure Includes X 100Brougham
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1966 Mercury Shop Manual CD Monterey Montclair Parklane Comet Caliente Cyclone
1966 Mercury Shop Manual CD Monterey Montclair Parklane Comet Caliente Cyclone
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1954 Mercury Monterey Sedan Factory Postcard
1954 Mercury Monterey Sedan Factory Postcard
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1966 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey Comet Cyclone
1966 Mercury Park Lane Montclair Monterey Comet Cyclone
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61 62 MERCURY MONTEREY ELECTRICAL TROUBLE SHOOTING
61 62 MERCURY MONTEREY ELECTRICAL TROUBLE SHOOTING
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1962 Mercury Monterey S Fifty Five dealer brochure
1962 Mercury Monterey S Fifty Five dealer brochure
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99 07 Ford Mercury Monterey A C Cabin Air Filter Replacement TYC 800065P New
99 07 Ford Mercury Monterey A C Cabin Air Filter Replacement TYC 800065P New
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1967 Mercury Prestige Brochure COUGAR Cyclone Monterey
1967 Mercury Prestige Brochure COUGAR Cyclone Monterey
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1972 Mercury Dlx 24 p Brochure Cougar XR7 Monterey Montego Comet Xlnt 72
1972 Mercury Dlx 24 p Brochure Cougar XR7 Monterey Montego Comet Xlnt 72
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1969 Mercury Monterey Showroom Poster
1969 Mercury Monterey Showroom Poster
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MERCURY MONTEREY 4 DOOR CAR COVER 1950 1951 1952 1953
MERCURY MONTEREY 4 DOOR CAR COVER 1950 1951 1952 1953
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CAR COVER FOR MERCURY MONTEREY 4 DOOR 1954 1955 1956 1957 OEM WATERPROOF OUTDOOR
CAR COVER FOR MERCURY MONTEREY 4 DOOR 1954 1955 1956 1957 OEM WATERPROOF OUTDOOR
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1 43 NEO 44055 MERCURY MONTEREY HARD TOP COUPE 1954 RED
1 43 NEO 44055 MERCURY MONTEREY HARD TOP COUPE 1954 RED
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Mercury Mountaineer Monterey Wheel Center Cap 02 03 04 05 06 07 1L24 1A096 DF
Mercury Mountaineer Monterey Wheel Center Cap 02 03 04 05 06 07 1L24 1A096 DF
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Franklin Mint 1 43 1951 Mercury Monterey Coupe MINT Brochure
Franklin Mint 1 43 1951 Mercury Monterey Coupe MINT Brochure
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04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlight Headlamp Passenger Side Right RH
04 07 Ford Freestar Mercury Monterey Headlight Headlamp Passenger Side Right RH
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1952 Mercury Shop Repair Manual 52 Custom Monterey
1952 Mercury Shop Repair Manual 52 Custom Monterey
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NEW OEM SIDE MIRROR SWITCH FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY 3F2Z 17B676 AA
NEW OEM SIDE MIRROR SWITCH FORD FREESTAR MERCURY MONTEREY 3F2Z 17B676 AA
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Mercury Monterey

Bay Area Rapid Transit

History

Development and origins

Main article: History of the Bay Area Rapid Transit

Some of the Bay Area Rapid Transit System's current coverage area was once served by the electrified streetcar and suburban train system called the Key System. This early twentieth century system once had regular trans-bay traffic across the lower deck of the Bay Bridge. By the mid-1950s that entire system had been dismantled in favor of highway travel using automobiles and buses - given the explosive growth of expressway construction. A new rapid-transit system was proposed to take the place of the Key System during the late 1940s, and formal planning for it began in the 1950s. Some funding was secured for the BART system in 1959, and construction began a few years later. The first passenger rail service commenced on a few stretches of track in September 1972. The new BART system was hailed by some authorities as a major step forwards in subway technology.

However, questions arose concerning the safety of the BART system and the huge expenditures necessary for the construction of the BART network. Praise for the new transportation system was not unanimous at first.

Recent history

2006 statistics

Number of vehicles

670

Initial system cost

$1.6 billion

Equivalent cost in 2004 dollars (replacement cost)

$15 billion

Hourly passenger capacity

15,000

Maximum daily capacity

360,000

Average weekday ridership

322,965

Annual gross fare income

$233.65 million

Annual expenses

$581.81 million

Annual profits (losses)

($300 million)

Rail cost/passenger mile (excluding capital costs)

$.323

A recent study shows that along with some Bay Area freeways, some of BART's overhead structures could be extensively damaged and could potentially collapse in the event of a major earthquake, which is predicted as highly likely to happen in the Bay Area within the next 30 years. Extensive seismic retrofit will be necessary to address many of these deficiencies, although one in particular, the penetration of the Hayward Fault Zone by the Berkeley Hills Tunnel, will be left for correction after any disabling earthquake, with the consequences for in-transit trains, their operators, and their passengers left to chance.

In May 2004, BART became the first transit system in the nation to offer cellular telephone communication to passengers of all wireless carriers on its trains underground. This is in contrast to other systems in United States, which, while having some cellular telephone service, do not provide it for passengers of all the major cell phone carriers. Service was made available for customers of Verizon Wireless, Sprint/Nextel, AT&T Mobility, and T-Mobile in and between the four San Francisco Market Street stations from Civic Center to Embarcadero. In 2005, coverage was made available between Balboa Park and 16th St. Mission. By July 2008, the fifth cell phone network of the Bay Area, MetroPCS, was added. In December 2009, service was expanded to include the Transbay Tube, thus providing continuous cell phone coverage between West Oakland and Balboa Park. Service is planned to be added in downtown Oakland, Berkeley, and the Berkeley Hills Tunnel by the end of the third quarter 2010. Coverage is expected to be added to South San Francisco and San Bruno in 2011. The goal is to provide continuous cell phone and internet service throughout the entire BART system.

Starting on February 20, 2007 BART entered into an agreement to permit a beta test of WiFi Internet access for travelers on the BART system. It initially included the four San Francisco downtown stations; Embarcadero, Montgomery, Powell, and Civic Center. To date over 30,000 patrons have utilized the service. The testing and demonstration also includes above ground testing to trains at BART's Hayward Test Track. The testing and deployment has been extended into the underground interconnecting tubes between the four downtown stations and further. The successful demonstration and testing provided for a 10 year contract with WiFi Rail, Inc. for the services throughout the BART Right Of Way (ROW).

During the months of May 2008 and July 2008 the WiFi service was expanded to include the Transbay Tube and now awaits BART cars which have the necessary WiFi equipment to benefit from the network access.

Since the mid 1990s, BART has been trying to modernize its aging 30-year-old system. The aforementioned fleet rehabilitation is part of this modernization; presently, fire alarms, water-sprinkling systems, yellow tactile platform edge domes, and cemented-mat rubber tiles are being installed. The rough black tiles on the platform edge mark the location of the doorway of approaching trains, allowing passengers to wait at the appropriate locations for the train, instead of waiting until the train arrives to figure out where to board. All faregates and ticket vending machines have also been completely replaced.

In the spring of 2007, BART experimented with a system of placed advertisement panels in the Transbay Tube, and when riders looking at the windows saw what looked to be a moving commercial for what was Reebok's "Run Easy" campaign.

On April 10, 2007, BART General Manager Tom Margro, who has been BART chief for eleven years, announced his retirement.

In late May, 2007, BART stated its intention to improve non-peak (night and weekend) headways for each line to only 15 minutes. The current 20-minute headways at these times is viewed as a psychological barrier to ridership. June 2007, BART temporarily reversed its position stating that the shortened wait times would likely not happen due to a $900,000 state revenue budget shortfall. Nevertheless, BART eventually confirmed the implementation of the plan by January 1, 2008.

Furthermore, in June 2007, BART suddenly removed all references to implementation of the TransLink payment system from their website. BART spokesperson Marty Moran stated (via email) that TransLink now may be implemented as early as late 2007. Implementation of TransLink on BART was pushed back even further due to disputes regarding the processing of fares between MTC and BART. TransLink was planned to be rolled out simultaneously on BART, SF Muni, and Caltrain in Spring 2008,. TransLink access was rolled out in May of 2009 .

As BART celebrated the 50th anniversary of its creation by the state legislature, the organization's management announced their plans for the next 50 years. Their vision includes adding a four-bore transbay tube beneath San Francisco Bay that would run parallel and south of the existing tunnel and emerge at the Transbay Transit Terminal to provide connecting service to Caltrain and the proposed future California High Speed Rail system. The four-bore tunnel would provide two tunnels for BART and two tunnels for conventional/high-speed rail. BART's plan focus is on improving service and reliability in its core system (where density and ridership is highest), rather than extensions into far-flung suburbia. These plans include: a line that would continue from the Transbay Terminal through the South-of-Market, northwards on Van Ness and terminating in western San Francisco along the Geary corridor, the Presidio, or North Beach; a line along the Interstate Highway 680 corridor; and a fourth set of rail tracks through Oakland.

Numerous rail service changes were implemented beginning on January 1, 2008. Among the changes, the trains on the Pittsburg / Bay Point line extended their service to the San Francisco-Oakland airport (SFO airport) station (at all hours of operation), but they did not continue to the end of the line at Millbrae. (Only a very few late-night Pittsburg / Bay Point trains continued on to Millbrae after stopping at the SFO airport station). During weekdays (until 7:00 pm), the trains on the Richmond line continued on to the Millbrae station, but bypassed the SFO airport station; during weeknights and weekends, trains on the Dublin / Pleasanton line continued to Millbrae, but also bypassed the SFO airport station). All of this meant that there would no longer be a direct train connection between the SFO airport and Millbrae, inconveniencing "Caltrain" passengers who wished to travel to the SFO airport. The BART management discontinued this direct rail connection, citing low ridership between Millbrae and the SFO airport. However, they did implement timed transfers at the San Bruno station for passengers who were traveling from the SFO airport to Millbrae.

With continuing budget constraints, it was necessary for BART to cut back on service beyond Daly City. As of September 14, 2009, the following changes have taken place: The Pittsburg/Bay Point line will still terminate at SFO on weekdays until 7:00 pm. After 7:00 pm, and all day on weekends and holidays, service will extend to Millbrae. The Dublin / Pleasanton line will no longer serve the extension, instead terminating at Daly City Station.

In 2008, BART announced that it would install solar power systems on the roofs of its train yards and maintenance facilities in Richmond and Hayward in addition to car ports with rooftop solar panels at its Orinda station. The board lamented not being able to install them at all stations but it stated that Orinda was the only station with enough sun for them to make money from the project.

Current system

Background

A photo of the third rails used on the BART system. Note how the third rail changes location relative to the train upon entering the station and the crossover walkway crossing the trackway. Note the walkway on the left side of the trackway in the distance, which is the emergency walkway for the aerial trackway leading into the Daly City station again, the third rail positioned opposite of this walkway.

BART comprises 104 miles (167 km) of track and 43 stations. The system uses a controversial 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad rail gauge, as opposed to the 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge predominantly found in railroad systems in the United States. This is the only transit system in the United States using this gauge. The cars are wider than standard transit equipment, but as wide as standard gauge North American passenger cars. The down side is that all maintenance and support equipment must be custom built. Trains can achieve a centrally-controlled maximum speed of 80 mph (130 km/h) and provide a system-wide average speed of 33 mph (53 km/h) with twenty-second station stopping times (dwell times). Trains operate at a minimum length of three cars per California Public Utilities Commission guidelines to a maximum length of 10 cars, spanning the entire 700 feet (213 m) length of a platform. At its maximum length of 710 feet (216 m), BART has the longest train length of any metrorail system in the United States. The system also features car widths of 10.5 feet (3.2 m) (the same width as an Amtrak Metroliner), a maximum gradient of four percent, and a minimum curve radius of 394 feet (120 m) on the main lines .

Electric current is delivered to the trains over a third rail, the position of which alternates relative to the context of the train. Inside stations, the third rail is always on the side furthest away from the passenger platforms. This design feature eliminates the danger of a passenger either falling directly on the third rail, or stepping onto it to climb back to the platform should they fall off. On ground-level trackways, the third rail alternates from one side of the track to the other, providing breaks in the third rail to allow for emergency evacuations across trackways.

Underground tunnels, aerial structures and the Transbay Tube have evacuation walkways and passageways to allow for train evacuation without exposing passengers to easy, inadvertent contact with the third rail, which is located as far away from these walkways as possible. The voltage on the steel third rail is 1000 Volts DC, so there are notices throughout the system warning passengers of its danger. In addition, BART posts notices inside each train car warning of the third rail and the four paddle-like rail contact shoes protruding from the underside of each car by the rail wheel trucks. Other third-rail powered metro systems in the US utilize a lower voltage.

Many of the original system 1970s-era BART stations, especially the aerial stations, feature simple, Brutalist architecture.

Ridership levels

Ridership records have been set during large scale regional-in-scope events such as the San Francisco Gay Pride Parade. The records included a Sunday record of 224,500 that coincided with an Oakland A's baseball game and a weekday record of 405,400 set on September 8, 2008, when both the San Francisco Giants and Oakland Raiders had home games. The one week record for ridership was 2,317,800 between June 23 and June 29, 2008. This broke the previous all time high of 2,301,800 achieved during a closure of the Bay Bridge. BART set an absolute one-day record of 442,000 rides on Thursday, October 29, 2009, following the closure of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge due to the failure of a structural repair.

Problems with Segways on BART

After several high-profile incidents involving Segways, including an incident where a Segway was run over by a train after falling onto the tracks, BART banned them for 45 days until they could regroup and set up a plan to mediate the issue. The consensus reached was the institution of rules similar to bicycles where the Segways would be disallowed during commute hours, except for disabled persons and that the devices could not be on or ridden past the fare gates similar to the rules for all wheeled devices such as skateboards and scooters. Furthermore a permitting system has been established requiring registration for them to be used on the system.

Routes

All routes pass through the city of Oakland, and all but the Richmond Fremont route pass through the Transbay Tube into San Francisco and beyond to Daly City. Most segments of the BART system carry trains of more than one route.

Trains regularly operate on five routes. Unlike most other rapid transit and rail systems around the world, BART lines are generally not referred to by shorthand designations. Although the lines have been colored consistently on BART system maps for more than a decade, they are only occasionally referred to officially by color names, and only rarely referred to in this way by members of the public (e.g., the "Red Line").

Instead, the five BART lines are generally identified on maps and schedules by the names of their termini:

Fremont Daly City, following a former Western Pacific Railroad right-of-way from Fremont to Oakland, operates Mondays through Saturdays daytime to early evening.

Dublin/Pleasanton Daly City, following Interstate-580 via Castro Valley to San Leandro, where it meets the Fremont-Richmond line, continuing into San Francisco.

Pittsburg/Bay Point SFO/Millbrae, following SR 4, a former Sacramento Northern Railway right-of way, and SR 24 from Bay Point to Oakland, and extending beyond Daly City to San Francisco International Airport. On weeknights and weekends, this line turns around at the airport to continue on to Millbrae.

Richmond Daly City/Millbrae, following a former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway right-of-way from Richmond to Berkeley, and extending beyond Daly City to Millbrae on weekdays daytime to early evening. On Saturdays, this line operates to Daly City only.

Richmond Fremont, coinciding with the Richmond Millbrae line and the Fremont Daly City line between their termini and Oakland, and operates daily.

The line from San Francisco through Daly City to Millbrae follows a former Southern Pacific railroad right-of-way, which is also served by Caltrain beyond San Bruno.

Hours of operation

The BART system consists of five lines, but most of the network consists of more than one line on the same track. Trains on each line historically ran every fifteen minutes on weekdays and twenty minutes during the evenings, weekends and holidays; however, since a given station might be served by as many as four lines, it could have service as frequently as every three to four minutes. However the system is closed for four hours every night for maintenance, reopening at 4:00 AM each morning, except for Sundays.

As of January 1, 2008, service on every line is at 15-minute intervals except for Saturdays between 6:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m., when service is at 20-minute intervals. Also, as of January 1, 2008, BART service begins around 4:00 a.m. on weekdays, 6:00 a.m. on Saturdays, and 8:00 a.m. on Sundays. Service ends every day near midnight with station closings timed to the last train at station. Two of the five lines, the Millbraeichmond and SF/Daly Cityremont lines, do not have night (after 7 p.m.) or Sunday service, but all stations remain accessible by transfer from the other lines. All-Nighter Network service is available when BART is closed. All but six BART stations are served (as well as eight Caltrain stations). BART tickets are not accepted on these buses, and each of the four bus systems charge their own fare, which can be up to $3.50; a four-system ride can cost as much as $9.50 as of 2007.

Fares

Ticket vending machines at the Powell Street Station

Fares on BART are comparable to those of commuter rail systems and are higher than those of most metros, especially for long trips. The fare is based on a formula that takes into account both the length and speed of the trip. A surcharge is added for trips traveling through the Transbay Tube, to San Francisco International Airport, or through San Mateo County, which is not a BART member. Historically and up until only recently, passengers have used refillable paper-plastic-composite tickets, on which fares are stored via a magnetic strip, to enter and exit the system (a similar magnetic strip ticketing system is used on the Washington Metro in Washington, D.C). The exit faregate prints the remaining balance on the ticket each time the passenger exits the station. A paper ticket can be refilled at a ticket machine, the remaining balance on any ticket can be applied towards the purchase of a new one, or a card is simply captured by the exit gate when the balance reaches zero; multiple low value cards can be combined to create a larger value card, but only at specific ticket exchange locations which are located at some BART stations. BART relies on unused ticket values, particularly of patrons discarding low-value cards, as a source of revenue, approximated by some to be as high as $9.9 million.

A standard-fare BART ticket. Notice the initial purchased fare printed parallel to the magnetic strip, and the card's remaining balance printed on the left, updated upon each exit. Images of older tickets, a blue, new-style ticket, and other color tickets can be found here.

A stored-value smart card fare system, called the TransLink smart card, was rolled out in the fall of 2009. This program was launched to the public in fall 2006 with rollout on AC Transit, Dumbarton Express, and Golden Gate Transit lines. BART previously promoted the EZ Rider card, a pilot program using technology similar in design to the TransLink cards. Both are contactless smart cards, and contain stored value that can be used for fare payments. BART contracted with Cubic Transportation Systems to replace all the faregates with ones that have smart card readers inherently installed. The EZ Rider program is expected to last until September 2010.

The BART minimum fare of $1.75 is charged for trips under 6 miles (9.7 km), such as a trip between two adjacent Berkeley stations. The maximum one-way fare including all possible surcharges is $10.90, the 51 miles (82 km) journey between Pittsburg/Bay Point and San Francisco International Airport. The farthest possible trip, from Pittsburg/Bay Point to Millbrae, costs less because of the additional charge added to airport trips. Passengers without sufficient fare to complete their journey must use an AddFare machine to pay the remaining balance in order to exit the station. Because of the amount of the base fare, traveling between BART stations in downtown San Francisco on BART costs 25 cents less than it does to ride the city's own light rail system, the MUNI Metro, which is generally slower in covering the same distance. However, MUNI permits around two full hours of riding, including transfers to other MUNI vehicles, whereas BART charges $1.75 for a single journey. There are various quirks in the fare system due to a subsidy being provided to riders traveling between some outlying stations. For example, for a trip from Dublin/Pleasanton to Fremont, it is less expensive to exit the station at the transfer point, Bay Fair, and re-enter the station, instead of staying on the platform, because you would get charged two $1.75 base fares instead of a $4.35 fare from end to end.

BART uses a system of five different color-coded tickets for regular fare, special fare, and discount fare to select groups as follows:

Blue tickets General: the most common type, includes high-value discount tickets

Red tickets Disabled Persons and children aged 4 to 12: 62.5% discount, special ID required (children under the age of 4 ride free)

Green tickets Seniors age 65 or over: 62.5% discount, proof of age required for purchase

Orange tickets Student: special, restricted-use 50% discount ticket for students age 13-18 currently enrolled in high or middle school

BART Plus special high-value ticket with 'flash-pass' privileges with regional transit agencies, including MUNI's buses.

EZ Rider A new plastic smart card fare program that will eventually be replaced by the TransLink Phase II Program

EZ Rider Fare Card

Unlike most transit systems in the United States, BART does not have an unlimited ride pass available and riders must pay for each ride they take. The only discount provided to the public is a 6.25% discount when "high value tickets" are purchased with fare values of $48 and $64, for prices of $45 and $60 respectively. Amtrak's Capitol Corridor & San Joaquins trains sell $10 BART tickets on-board in the caf cars for only $8, resulting in a 20% discount. A 62.5% discount is provided to seniors, the disabled, and children age 5 to 12. Middle and high school students 13 to 18 may obtain a 50% discount if their school participates in the BART program; however, these tickets are intended to be used only between the students' home station and the school's station and for transportation to and from school events. However, these intended limitations are not enforced in any way and students are expected to behave on the honor system. The tickets are only usable on weekdays, a restriction that is enforced by the fare gates. BART Plus tickets enjoy a last-ride bonus where if the remaining value is greater than $.05, the ticket can be used one last time for a trip of any distance. Most special discounted tickets must be purchased at selected vendors and not at ticket machines. The Bart Plus tickets can be purchased at the ticket machines. In particular, the middle and high school tickets are usually sold at the schools themselves.

Family members of BART employees receive special BART passes and can ride free-of-charge upon showing their pass and photo identification to the BART station attendant. Employees of airlines that take BART to work at San Francisco International Airport receive a fare discount of 25%, but non-airline employees who do the same receive no discount.

Ticket gates with the orange triangular doors retracted for a Spare the Air Day

Fares are enforced by the station agent, who monitors activity at the fare gates adjacent to the window and at other fare gates through closed circuit television and faregate status screens located in the agent's booth. All stations are staffed with at least one agent at all times. Despite this, fare fraud occasionally occurs, usually as a result of people entering and exiting through the emergency exit gate, which are permitted for non-emergency use by passengers with bikes, in wheelchairs, and carrying luggage. It also occurs using elevators, which in some stations lead from the ticketed area to the unticketed area.

There is little fare coordination between BART and surrounding agencies. Some agencies accept the BART Plus pass, which at a fee of between $38 and $71 per month, permits pass holders to use BART and connecting buses. Most notably, AC Transit dropped out of the program due to the small amount of reimbursement they received from BART. Another fare coordination program permits adult monthly pass holders of the San Francisco Municipal Railway to ride BART trains within the city of San Francisco for free (with no credit applied to trips outside the city). The city of San Francisco pays BART $.87 for each trip taken under this arrangement. For riders who do not hold such passes, there is generally only a token discount ($.25 to $.50) provided to passengers transferring to and from trains to other transit modes. The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority does honor BART transfers for a local fare credit ($.50 to $1.75) towards the 120, 140, 180 and 181 trans-county express lines departing the Fremont BART station, but all riders are required to disembark in Santa Clara County. There is no credit applied when traveling towards the Fremont BART Station.

Proposals to simplify the fare structure abound. At one extreme, a flat fare that disregards distance has been proposed by BART director Joel Keller. The lesser extreme involves the implementation of a simplified structure that would create fare bands or zones. The implementation of either scheme would demote the use of distance-based fares and shift the fare-box recovery burden to the urban riders in San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley and away from the suburban riders of East Contra Costa, Southern Alameda, and San Mateo Counties, where density is lowest, and consequently, operational cost is highest.

Connecting services

AC Transit bus stop at Bay Fair Station

BART has direct connections to two regional rail services Caltrain, which provides service between San Francisco, San Jose, and Gilroy, at the Millbrae Station, and Amtrak's Capitol Corridor, which runs from Sacramento to San Jose, at the Richmond and Coliseum/Oakland Airport stations. A third Capitol Corridor connection at the Union City station is planned as part of a larger Dumbarton Rail Corridor Project to connect Union City, Fremont, and Newark to various peninsula destinations via the Dumbarton rail bridge. BART is the managing agency for the Capitol Corridor until 2010.

BART connects to San Francisco's local light rail system, the Muni Metro. The upper track level of BART's Market Street subway, originally designed for the lines to Marin County,[citation needed] was turned over to Muni and both agencies share the Embarcadero, Montgomery Street, Powell and Civic Center stations. Some Muni Metro lines connect with (or pass nearby) the BART system at the Balboa Park and Glen Park stations.

Other services connect to BART including the Emery Go Round (Emeryville), WestCAT (north-western Contra Costa County), Benicia Transit (Benicia), Union City Transit (Union City), and the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA, in Silicon Valley).

BART hosts carsharing locations at many stations, a program pioneered by City CarShare. Riders can transfer from BART and complete their journeys by car. BART has started to offer long-term airport parking through a third-party vendor at most East Bay stations. Travelers must make an on-line reservation in advance and pay the daily fee of $5 before they can leave their cars at the BART parking lot.

Casual carpools have formed at North Berkeley station and the area around El Cerrito Del Norte station. The lots are convenient since most carpoolers use public transit back to their final destination. However, because of how BART charges for parking, passengers cannot park at most BART lots without paying a fare.

Connecting services via bus

A number of bus transit services connect to BART, which, while managed by separate agencies, are integral to the successful functioning of the system. The primary providers include the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni), Alameda-Contra Costa Transit (AC Transit), San Mateo County Transit District (SamTrans), Central Contra Costa Transit Authority (County Connection), and the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District (Golden Gate Transit). Until 1997, BART ran its own "BART Express" connector buses, which ran to eastern Alameda County and far eastern and western areas of Contra Costa County; these routes were later devolved to sub-regional transit agencies such as Tri-Delta Transit and the Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority (WHEELS) or, in the case of Dublin/Pleasanton service, replaced by a full BART extension.

BART is connected to Oakland International Airport via AirBART shuttle buses, which bring travelers to and from the Coliseum/Oakland Airport BART station. These buses are operated by BART and accept exact-change BART fare cards in addition to exact change. BART also connects to the San Francisco International Airport, though in this case the train actually enters the airport directly and no shuttle is necessary, although connections are available to AirTrain for those not departing or arriving from the international terminal.

The bus service connecting the University of California, Berkeley to the Berkeley BART station was once called Humphrey Go-BART, a spoonerism of the famous actor and director Humphrey Bogart. It has since been replaced by a number of regular AC Transit bus routes and shuttle bus routes operated by the university.

Organization and management

Governance

The San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District is a special governmental agency created by the State of California consisting of Alameda County, Contra Costa County, and the City and County of San Francisco. San Mateo County, which hosts six BART stations, is not part of the BART District. It is governed by an elected Board of Directors with each of the nine directors representing a specific geographic area within the BART district. BART has its own police force.

While the district includes all of the cities and communities in its jurisdiction, some of these cities do not have stations on the BART system. This has caused tensions among property owners in cities like Livermore who pay BART taxes but must travel outside the city to receive BART service. In areas like Fremont, the majority of commuters do not commute in the direction that BART would take them (many Fremonters commute to San Jose, where there is currently no BART service). This would be alleviated with the completion of a BART-to-San Jose extension project.

However, some cities and towns are near enough to cities with BART stations that residents commute via a bus or car to the nearest BART station. Emeryville, for instance, has no BART service, but has a free shuttle service, the Emery-Go-Round, that takes passengers to the nearby MacArthur station in Oakland. Similarly, Albany does not have a BART station of its own. The city's residents can go to either North Berkeley (in Alameda County) or El Cerrito Plaza (in Contra Costa County) stations for services. For those wishing to drive their cars to the stations instead, many BART stations offer many kinds of parking options.

Budget

In 2005, BART required nearly $300 million in funds after fares. About 37% of the costs went to maintenance, 29% to actual transportation operations, 24% to general administration, 8% to police services, and 4% to construction and engineering. In 2005, 53% of the budget was derived from fares, 32% from taxes, and 15% from other sources, including advertising, station retail space leasing, and parking fees. BART's farebox recovery ratio of 53% is relatively high for a U.S. public transit agency operating over such long distances with high frequency (for comparison, see the article on farebox recovery).

General Manager

196? - 1975

Billy Stokes

1975 - 1978

Frank C. Herringer

1979 - 1988

Keith Bernard

1989 - 1994

Frank Wilson

1994 - 1996

Richard A. White

1996 - 2007

Tom Margro

2007 - Present

Dorothy Dugger

Chief Spokesperson

1972 - 2004

Mike Healy

2004 - present

Linton Johnson

Rolling stock

A refurbished A car interior with carpeted flooring.

Interior of a C1 car with an upgraded spray-on composite flooring.

The interior of a C2 car with carpeted flooring. A flip-up seat is visible on the left.

A Demonstration Car (modified C2 car) interior with blue vinyl flooring. This car has a designated Bike Space in the area normally reserved for passengers in wheelchairs; the front-facing seat on the left-hand side of the car has been removed to accommodate passengers with bicycles, in turn, the aisle-facing seat on the right-hand side near the operator's cab has been removed to accommodate passengers in wheelchairs. This car also has hand straps, unlike the other BART train cars.

BART operates four types of cars, built from three separate orders, totaling 669 cars.

To run a typical peak morning commute, BART requires 579 cars. Of those, 541 are scheduled to be in active service; the other 38 are used to build up four spare trains (essential for maintaining on-time service). At any one time, the remaining 90 cars are in for repair, maintenance, or some type of planned modification work.

The A cars and the B cars were built from 1968 to 1971 by Rohr Industries, an aerospace manufacturing company which had only recently made its foray into mass-transit equipment manufacturing, touting yet untested space-age design techniques. The A cars were designed as leading or trailing cars only, with a fiberglass operator's cab housing train control equipment and BART's two-way communication system. The A cars are distinguished by their aerodynamic leading edge extending 5 feet (1.52 m) longer than their B- and C-car siblings. A cars can comfortably seat 72 passengers, and under crush load, 150 passengers. B cars have no operator's cab and are used in the middle of trains to carry passengers only; B cars have the same passenger capacity as A cars. Currently, BART operates 59 A cars and 380 B cars. BART's livery has remained effectively unchanged throughout its history.

The C cars were built by Alstom between 1987 and 1989. The C cars have a similar fiberglass operator's cab and control and communications equipment as the A cars, but unlike A cars, do not have the aerodynamic nose design, thus allowing them to be used as middle cars as well. The dual purpose of the C cars allows faster train-size changes without having to move the train to a switching yard. C cars can comfortably seat 64 (4 seats were lost compared to the A/B cars by eliminating one row of seats to accommodate the operator cab and 4 additional seats were lost by eliminating one pair of seats next to the left-side forward door on each side to provide space for wheelchairs) and under crush load accommodate 150 passengers. The latest order, from Morrison-Knudsen (now Washington Group International), was for C2 cars, which are essentially the same as C cars, but feature an updated, third-generation interior with a blue/gray motif, in contrast to the previous blue and brown colors. The CCTV cameras on C2 cars are also triangular in shape when compared to the rectangular shape of the camera on a C1 car. C2 cars have flip-up seats near the left-side forward door to accommodate passengers in wheelchairs, and red lights on posts near the door to warn the hearing-impaired when the doors are about to close. C2 cars can comfortably seat 68 passengers (including the flip-up seats), and under crush load can carry 150 passengers. Since the purchase of C2s, the original C cars are also referred to as C1 cars. Currently, BART operates 150 C1 cars and 80 C2 cars.

In 1995, BART contracted with ADtranz (acquired by Bombardier Transportation in 2001) to refurbish and overhaul the 439 original Rohr A- and B-cars, updating the old vintage brown fabric seats to the less-toxic and easier-to-clean, light-blue polyurethane seats in use today and bringing the cars in general to the same level of interior amenities as the C2 fleet. The Rohr cars were also rebuilt with ADtranz 3-phase Alternating Current (AC) traction motors with IGBT inverters, model 1507C. The seven-year project was completed in 2002. All BART cars have upholstered seats and nearly all cars have carpeting except for some C1 and/or C2 cars. Because one of the original design goals was for all BART riders to be seated, the older cars have fewer provisions such as grab bars for standing passengers. Flip-up seats (found in C2 cars) were excluded from the refurbishment (reducing seating capacity from 72 to 68), in order to provide designated areas for luggage, wheelchairs and bicycles. Consequently, the original C (or C1) cars have the oldest interior design, as they have not been refurbished and were not purchased recently enough to have the "newer" convenience features; for example, they lack vertical grab bars in the middle of the car and do not have the in-post red lights to warn of closing doors. However, the carpeted flooring in most of the C1 cars was replaced with an experimental spray-on composite flooring after passengers complained that the cars were unclean.

The A, B, and C cars were all given 3-digit numbers originally, but when refurbished 1000 was added to the number of each individual A/B car (e.g. car 633 would become 1633). The C2 cars are numbered in the 2500 series; the C/C1 cars still have 3-digit numbers.

Prior to rebuilding, the Direct Current (DC) traction motors used on the 439 Rohr BART cars were built by Westinghouse, the same company that also built the automatic train control system for BART. The Westinghouse traction motors are model 1463 with chopper controls. The Westinghouse DC motors are still in use on the Alstom C (C1) and Morrison-Knudsen C2 cars. The motors that were pulled from the Rohr cars during rehabilitation were retained as spare motors for use on the C1 and C2 cars. Other undercar systems also built by Westinghouse on the 439 Rohr BART cars before rehabilitation were the auxiliary power box, the hydraulic pumps for the brakes, the air suspension, and the brake control systems (which were part of the propulsion logic cradle that was mounted in the chopper control semiconductor box). The HVAC system on the Rohr BART cars before rehabilitation were built by Thermo King, when it was a subsidiary of Westinghouse (Thermo King is now a subsidiary of Ingersoll-Rand). The current HVAC systems on the rehabbed Rohr-built Gen 1 cars were built by Westcode.

Comparison with other rail transit systems

Main article: Rapid Transit

BART, like other transit systems of the same era, endeavored to connect outlying suburbs with job centers in Oakland and San Francisco by building out lines that paralleled established commute routes of the region's freeway system. The majority of BART's service area, as measured by percentage of system length, consists of low-density suburbs. Unlike the New York City Subway or the London Underground, individual BART lines were not designed to provide frequent local service, as evidenced by the system's current maximum achievable headway of 13.33 minutes per line through the quadruple interlined section. Muni provides local light-rail and subway service within San Francisco city limits and runs with smaller headways than does BART. BART could in many ways be characterized as a "commuter subway," since it has many characteristics of a commuter rail system, including lengthy lines that extend to the far reaches of suburbia with significant distances between most adjacent stations. However, in the urban areas of San Francisco and downtown Oakland, multiple lines converge, and BART takes on the characteristics of an urban subway, including short headways and transfer opportunities to other lines.

BART could be considered to be more similar to a regional commuter rail service, such as the Berlin S-Bahn or the Paris RER. However, BART also possesses all the qualities and services of a metro system, including electrified third-rail propulsion, exclusive grade-separated right-of-way, frequent headways in its urban service areas, and pre-paid fare card access. Urban stations are as close as one-half mile (800 m) apart and have combined two and one-half to five-minute service intervals at peak times. These factors contribute to the consideration of BART as a hybrid metro-commuter system, functioning as a metrorail system in the central business districts of San Francisco, Oakland, and Berkeley, and as commuter rail in the region's suburban areas.

Future stock

A computer graphics rendering of what the new BART car will look like.

To speed up service, BART is preparing to introduce new, three-door cars. BART plans to start purchasing new cars in 2010, when it will have paid off other capital debt for track and car work, with the first 10 pilot cars arriving for testing in 2014. The order will consist of 200 base cars with two additional option orders of 250 cars each for a total of 700 cars to completely replace the original fleet. All 700 cars are to arrive by 2024. There are also two additional options, one for general fleet expansion, and the other for the San Jose extension, with 150 cars each. If all options are exercised, the total number of new BART cars will be 1000 cars.

Future expansion and extension

Main article: Bay Area Rapid Transit expansion

Expansion projects for the Bay Area Rapid Transit have existed ever since the opening of the project. These projects include the Warm Springs extension, the San Jose extension, the Oakland Airport Connector, eBART, 'tBART': I-580/Tri-Valley Corridor, 'wBART': I-80/West Contra Costa Corridor, and numerous infill stations along the route.

See also

San Francisco Bay Area portal

List of Bay Area Rapid Transit stations

List of rapid transit systems

List of United States rapid transit systems by ridership

List of California railroads

Notes

^ a b "Quarterly Weekday Average Exits" (PDF). San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District. http://www.bart.gov/docs/station_exits_quarterly.pdf. Retrieved 2008-11-05. 

^ a b "History of BART (1946-1972)". BART. http://www.bart.gov/about/history/history_1.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ See BART Composite Report, prepared by Parsons Brinkerhof Tutor Bechtel, 1962

^ "BART- Not a Moment Too Soon". Los Angeles Times. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/684558862.html?dids=684558862:684558862&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Sep+13,+1972&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=BART---Not+a+Moment+Too+Soon&pqatl=google. Retrieved 2009-08-22. 

^ "BART First in Operation: 2nd great subway boom under way in many cities". The Bulletin. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=3qgSAAAAIBAJ&sjid=g_cDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3354,4929895&dq=bart. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "Safe Automated BART Train Controls Doubted". Los Angeles Times. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/660715472.html?dids=660715472:660715472&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Nov+15,+1972&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=Safe+Automated+BART+Train+Controls+Doubted&pqatl=google. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART Manager Denies System Was Overcharged by Designers". Los Angeles Times. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/660721622.html?dids=660721622:660721622&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Nov+16,+1972&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=BART+Manager+Denies+System+Was+Overcharged+by+Designers&pqatl=google. Retrieved 2009-08-22. 

^ "BART Earthquake Safety Program". BART. http://www.bart.gov/about/projects/earthquakesafety.asp. Retrieved 2006-05-08. 

^ Michael Cabanatuan (November 19, 2005). "Underground, but not unconnected -- BART offers wireless service to riders". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/11/19/MNGF2FR6C11.DTL. Retrieved 2007-01-22. 

^ Underground cell phone coverage on BART expands, BART, July 21, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-18.

^ BART expands wireless access to Transbay Tube, BART, December 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-21.

^ WiFi Rail Inc. to provide wifi access on BART system. BART. February 2009. http://www.bart.gov/news/articles/2009/news20090202.aspx. Retrieved 2009-02-02. 

^ WiFi Rail Tube Access. KRON 4. June 2009. http://www.wifirail.net/clips/kron4.com_061809.mov. Retrieved 2009-06-18. 

^ "BART bond might make ballot in fall". Oakland Tribunal. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=OKTB&p_theme=oktb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0F99357E1F56EF7F&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ Gordon, Rachel (2007-04-11). "Head of BART plans to resign". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/04/11/BAGKMP6G331.DTL. Retrieved 2007-10-26. 

^ Cuff, Denis (2007-05-29). "BART board wants to lessen waits". Contra Costa Times. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BATN/message/35220. Retrieved 2007-10-26. 

^ "Good move by BART". Contra Costa Times. 2007-10-01. http://www.contracostatimes.com/opinion/ci_7051537. Retrieved 2007-10-26. 

^ Metz, Adam (2007-06-19). "BART's "customer response" to Blogger Emails doesn't answer ?'s". The Oakland Review. http://oaklandreview.vox.com/library/post/barts-customer-response-to-blogger-emails-doesnt-answer-s.html. Retrieved 2007-10-26. 

^ "MTC -- Services -- Translink". MTC Website. 2007-09-14. http://www.mtc.ca.gov/services/translink/. Retrieved 2008-01-16. 

^ "TransLink passes all BART tests, ready for summertime launch". BART website. 2009-05-08. http://www.bart.gov/news/articles/2009/news20090325.aspx. Retrieved 2010-01-31. 

^ Cabanatuan, Michael (2007-06-22). "BART'S New Vision: More, Bigger, Faster". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/06/22/MNGJQQJVSD1.DTL. Retrieved 2007-10-26. 

^ a b BART goes solar at Orinda station, by Dennis Cuff, Contra Costa Times, July 10, 2008, access date July 13, 2008

^ "BART System Facts". San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District. http://www.bart.gov/about/history/systemFacts.asp. Retrieved 2008-04-23. 

^ "BART Train length". Google Groups: ba.transportation. July 3, 2000. http://groups.google.com/group/ba.transportation/browse_frm/thread/2b50a587214ace23/5be1c19d04ad4b06. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ Paul Garbutt (1997). "Facts and Figures". World Metro Systems. Capital Transport. pp. 130131. ISBN 1854141910. 

^ "BART - Car types". BART. http://www.bart.gov/about/history/cars.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART: Passenger Panic Worsened Tunnel Fire". CBS. http://cbs5.com/local/BART.evacuation.fire.2.441245.html. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ a b Pride parade helps set BART ridership records, BART News, July 1, 2008 access date August 18, 2008

^ a b 09.09.2008 BART sets ridership record with Monday's sports events

^ 11.01.2009 BART customers continue to set ridership records

^ a b c Pilot program approved for Segway use on BART, BART News, August 15, 2008, accessed August 18, 2008

^ "BART to run on Sunday schedule Christmas Day". BART. December 21, 2006. http://www.bart.gov/news/press/news20061221a.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-22. 

^ "Why doesn't BART run 24 hours?". BART. http://www.bart.gov/guide/latenight.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART - Overview". BART. http://www.bart.gov/guide/index.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART Service Hours, Holiday Schedule". BART. http://www.bart.gov/guide/overview/hours.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "All Nighter Bus Service". 511 SF Bay Area Travel Guide. http://transit.511.org/providers/night.asp. Retrieved 2007-05-17. 

^ "BART Unveils Modern Fare Gates and New Ticket Vending Machines". Business Wire. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BART+Unveils+Modern+Fare+Gates+and+New+Ticket+Vending+Machines-a092914818. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART ticket refunds and exchanges". BART. http://www.bart.gov/tickets/sales/refunds.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-22. [

^ Jon Carroll (December 6, 2000). "Tiny Tickets Ha Ha Ha Ha". The San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2000/12/06/DD140623.DTL. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "TransLink on BART". TransLink. http://www.translink.org/TranslinkWeb/bart/index.do;jsessionid=xiN0e+gtNElOU777mW-I2Q**. Retrieved 2009-12-18. 

^ Andrew F. Hamm (January 6, 2006). "TransLink program again tries to unify Bay Area transit fares". Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal. http://www.bizjournals.com/eastbay/othercities/sanjose/stories/2006/01/09/story6.html. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "TransLink where can I use TransLink?". TransLink. http://www.translink.org/whereCanIuseTranslink.do. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "Press Release: Cubic Receives $7 Million Contract to Link BART To San Francisco Bay Area's Regional Smart Card Program". Cubic Transportation Systems, Inc. 2004-02-24. http://www.cubic.com/cts/PressReleases/Feb24-2004.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-16. 

^ "BART Translink Transition Plan". BART. 2009-08-12. http://apps.mtc.ca.gov/meeting_packet_documents/agenda_1342/BART_TL_Transition_Plan.pdf. Retrieved 2009-12-18. 

^ "QuickPlanner >> Results between Downtown Berkeley and North Berkeley". BART. http://bart.gov/stations/quickplanner/schedule.asp?origin=BRK&format=quick&destination=NBRK&trip_mode=undefined&time_mode=departs&depart_month=6&depart_date=12&return_page=/index.asp&depart_time=2:30+PM&new=yes&dhtml=true. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "QuickPlanner >> Results between Pittsburg/Bay Point and SFO". BART. http://bart.gov/stations/quickplanner/schedule.asp?origin=BAYPT&format=quick&destination=SFIA&trip_mode=undefined&time_mode=departs&depart_month=12&depart_date=5&return_page=/index.asp&depart_time=2:30+PM&new=yes&dhtml=true. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "BART Ticket Types". BART. http://bart.gov/tickets/types/types.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ (PDF) Capitol Corridor Ride Guide. The Capitol Corridor. http://www.capitolcorridor.org/included/docs/ccjpa/ride_guide.pdf. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "The Capitol Corridor: BART Connections". The Capitol Corridor. http://www.capitolcorridor.org/schedules/transit_connections/BART_connections.php. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ (PDF) Short range transit plan & capital improvement program (FY06 through FY15). BART. November 2005. http://www.bart.gov/docs/Draft_FY06_SRTP_CIP.pdf. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "Today free lecture: fare idea falls flat". Inside Bay Area. September 19, 2006. http://www.ibabuzz.com/transportation/2006/09/19/todays-free-lecture-fare-idea-falls-flat. Retrieved 2007-01-22. 

^ "Dumbarton Rail Corridor". San Mateo County Transit Authority. http://www.smcta.com/Dumbarton_Rail/information.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "BART again selected as managing agency for Capitol Corridor". BART. February 28, 2005. http://www.bart.gov/news/press/news20050228.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "Long-Term Parking for Travelers". BART. http://www.bart.gov/guide/parking/longterm.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "Bart Express Connecting Bus Service". ALL-Transit.com. http://www.all-transit.com/rosters/bart-r-2.htm. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ "BART Board Acts On Oakland Airport Connector". BART. http://www.bart.gov/news/articles/2009/news20090427.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "Myths, gods, and titanic disasters: How servers really get their names". IT World. http://www.itworld.com/offbeat/63716/myths-gods-and-titanic-disasters-how-servers-really-get-their-names?page=0,3. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART Police". BART. http://www.bart.gov/about/police/. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART's Livermore role reviewed". Contra Costa Times. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=CC&s_site=contracostatimes&p_multi=CC&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=1064A15771213A81&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART parking overview". BART. http://bart.gov/guide/parking/overview.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ (PDF) BART 2005 Annual Report. http://www.bart.gov/docs/AR2005.pdf.  (TXT) BART 2005 Annual Report. BART.gov. http://www.bart.gov/docs/AR2005.txt. Retrieved 2007-01-07. 

^ ""Why can't the trains be longer?" Some background to explain". BART. 2008-09-25. http://www.bart.gov/news/articles/2008/news20080924a.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "FY08 Short Range Transit Plan and Capital Improvement Program" (PDF). BART. September 2007. http://www.bart.gov/docs/FINAL_FY08_SRTP_CIP.pdf. Retrieved 2007-11-11. 

^ "BART Car ills". San Jose Mercury News. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SJ&s_site=mercurynews&p_multi=SJ&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB731C25CCAA9D1&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "BART Renovation Program Nearing Completion". Business Wire. http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-26087660_ITM. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ Westcode

^ W. S. Homburger. "The impact of a new rapid transit system on traffic on parallel highway facilities". 1029-0354, Volume 4, Issue 3 (Transportation Planning and Technology). http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/ftinterface?content=a773502237&rt=0&format=pdf. Retrieved 2009-08-24. 

^ "Glossary of Transit Terminology". American Public Transportation Association. http://www.apta.com/research/info/online/glossary.cfm. Retrieved 2008-02-27. 

^ "Passenger Rail Issues". East Bay Bicycle Coalition. http://www.ebbc.org/rail/sjx.html. Retrieved 2007-01-22. 

^ "Rapid transit". Merriam-Webster. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/rapid transit. Retrieved 2008-02-27. ; "Metro". International Association of Public Transport. http://www.uitp.org/Public-Transport/metro/index.cfm. Retrieved 2008-02-27. 

^ "BART plans on $3.4B for new cars". ABC News. http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=resources/traffic&id=6800819. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "Official BART information on new car purchase project". BART. http://bart.gov/about/projects/cars/index.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

^ "Green Beat: BART Cars To Receive Overdue Upgrade". CBS. http://cbs5.com/environment/bart.future.upgrade.2.774054.html. Retrieved 2009-08-21. 

^ "BART opens bids on project, moves a step closer to Silicon Valley". Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal. http://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2009/03/09/newscolumn1.html?b=1236571200^1789847. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 

References

BART: a study of problems of rail transit. California. Legislature. Assembly. Committee on Transportation. 1973. 

Richard Grefe (1976). A history of the key decisions in the development of Bay Area Rapid Transit. National Technical Information Service. 

E. Gareth Hoachlander (1976). Bay Area Rapid Transit: who pays and who benefits?. University of California. 

Further reading

Owen, Wilfred (1966). The metropolitan transportation problem. Anchor Books. 

Cervero, Robert (1998). The transit metropolis: a global inquiry. Island Press. ISBN 1559635916. 

University of California (1966). The San Francisco Bay area: its problems and future, Volume 2. University of California. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: BART

BART - official website

Engineering Geology of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) System, 1964-75

BART Map/Schedule Map/Schedule using Google Maps API

BART widget, a self-contained trip planner for Mac OS X Dashboard

BARTsmart Another BART Widget, featuring BART schedules and news

Map of BART and rail network in simplified diagrammatic, rather than geographically accurate

iSubwayMaps.com iPod, alternative predating official BART offering (map only)

Typographica BART Wayfinding October 8, 2005 article about typography of BART signage

Shuttles serving BART stations at 511.org

Pictures of BART on world.nycsubway.org

Network map (real-distance)

 

Links to related articles

v  d  e

Bay Area Rapid Transit

Current lines

     Richmondillbrae       Fremontaly City       Richmondremont       Pittsburg/Bay PointFO/Millbrae       Dublin/Pleasantonaly City  AirBART

Stations

Alameda County

Ashby  Bay Fair  Castro Valley  Downtown Berkeley  Dublin/Pleasanton  Fremont  Hayward  North Berkeley  San Leandro  South Hayward  Union City  Warm Springs  West Dublin/Pleasanton

Contra Costa County

Concord  El Cerrito del Norte  El Cerrito Plaza  Lafayette  North Concord/Martinez  Orinda  Pittsburg/Bay Point  Pleasant Hill  Richmond  Walnut Creek

Oakland

19th Street/Oakland  Fruitvale  Lake Merritt  MacArthur  Oakland City Center/12th Street  Coliseum/Oakland Airport  Rockridge  West Oakland

San Francisco

16th Street Mission  24th Street Mission  Balboa Park  Civic Center  Embarcadero  Glen Park  Montgomery Street  Powell Street

San Mateo County

Colma  Daly City  Millbrae  San Bruno  San Francisco International Airport  South San Francisco

System features

Transbay Tube Market Street Subway

Connecting buses

AC Transit Amtrak Thruway Bus Services Bear Benicia Breeze County Connection Dumbarton Express East Bay Paratransit Emery Go Round Fairfield/Suisun Golden Gate Greyhound MAX Delta Breeze Muni SamTrans SMART Solano Express Tri-Delta Union City VTA Vallejo WestCAT WHEELS

Connecting rail services

Amtrak Amtrak California Caltrain Capitol Corridor Muni Metro

Board of Directors

District 1 Gail Murray (President) District 2 Joel Keller District 3 Bob Franklin District 4 Carole Ward Allen District 5 Zoyd Luce District 6 Thomas Blalock District 7 Lynette Sweet District 8 James Fang District 9 Tom Radulovich

Miscellaneous

BART history BART expansion

Category

v  d  e

Public transit in the San Francisco Bay Area

Rail

SFO AirTrain  Altamont Commuter Express  BART  Berkeley Branch Railroad  California Zephyr  Caltrain SF-San Jos  Capitol Corridor Sacramento-San Jos  Coast Starlight Seattle-L.A.  East Bay Electric Lines  E&SR Richmond  Key System  Muni Metro Market Street Subway & Cable cars San Francisco  NVRR Napa  NCRy Sunol  NPC West Marin  Ocean Shore Railroad western peninsula coast  SF&NP Sonoma County  San Joaquins Oakland-Bakersfield  SMART Marin, Sonoma^  VTA light rail Silicon Valley

Ferry

Alameda Harbor Bay Ferry  Alameda/Oakland Ferry  Angel Island Tiburon Ferry  Baylink Ferry  Blue & Gold Fleet  Golden Gate Ferry  Richmond Ferry  Richmond-San Rafael Ferry Company  Hercules Ferry  South San Francisco Ferry

Bus

AC Transit Western Alameda/Contra Costa Counties  AirBART Oakland Airport/Oakland Coliseum  The Duck American Canyon  Benicia Breeze  Bear Transit UC Berkeley  Burlingame Shuttle  Calistoga Handy Van Calistoga  Cloverdale Transit  County Connection Central Contra Costa County  Dumbarton Express  Emery-Go-Round  Fairfield and Suisun Transit  Golden Gate Transit Marin/Sonoma Counties  Healdsburg Transit  Highway 17 Express  Lake Transit Lake County  Manteca Transit  Marin Transit Western Marin County  Mendocino Transit Authority  MAX Modesto  Monterey-Salinas Transit Monterey County  Muni San Francisco  Petaluma Transit  Rio Vista Delta Breeze  RT Sacramento County  SamTrans San Mateo County  San Benito Transit San Benito County  SMART San Joaquin County  Santa Cruz...
About the Author

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