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New on-demand ride service ramps up in Crossroads area

Crossroads Connect vehicle drives to the side of RapidRide bus with masked passenger looking through rolled down window.

City of Bellevue and King County Metro partner on Crossroads Connect, linking people to bus routes

Editor’s note: As of Nov. 2, 2020, we have expanded the service hours and service area! Crossroads Connect is now available from noon to 9:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Riders can now get picked up/dropped off anywhere in the expanded service area and connect to any of the RapidRide B Line stations within it, not just stations located at Crossroads Shopping Center. 

City of Bellevue and King County Metro have launched an on-demand service called Crossroads Connect. It serves people in Bellevue’s diverse Crossroads and Lake Hills neighborhoods, linking homes, jobs, schools and shopping to Metro bus routes that serve the broader Eastside.

Crossroads Connect provides shared ride connections to frequent transit service and is intended to improve mobility for people who live and work in the service area, which has  comparatively lower rates of car ownership and lower household incomes. To promote physical distancing, service is currently limited to one rider or party per trip.

Here’s how the service works:

The service began operating on Oct. 1 and is expected to run through June 2021. More information is available at the Crossroads Connect web page.

Crossroads Connect is a partnership between the City of Bellevue and King County Metro. It’s funded by a $394,000 grant from the Washington State Department of Transportation and Bellevue’s 2016, voter-approved Neighborhood Safety, Connectivity and Congestion Levy.

The service is operated by King County’s contractor, Hopelink; the on-demand app and software is provided by Spare Labs Inc.

Quotes:

“Crossroads Connect helps fill a transportation need in a part of our community that’s been especially hard hit in recent months,” said Bellevue Transportation Director Andrew Singelakis. “I’m grateful for our collaboration with King County Metro in finding a creative solution to transit issues in the Crossroads neighborhood.”

“City of Bellevue provides an outstanding example of how local jurisdictions can identify a transit need and secure funding, then partner with Metro to come up with a creative solution and implement it,” said Christina O’Claire, Metro’s director of mobility. “Metro has limited resources to fund new pilot projects, so we’re excited about this grant opportunity with Crossroads Connect – it will help people now, while allowing us to learn how the model might work for future mobility solutions across the county.”

This post originally appeared on City of Bellevue’s City News page.

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