Search Results
BART to run on Sunday schedule Christmas Day
Rush hour service slightly modified Christmas week BART trains will be running on a Sunday/Holiday timetable on Christmas Day, Monday, December 25. Service begins at approximately 8 a.m. Plan your trip with bart.gov's handy online QuickPlanner. BART SCHEDULE FOR TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26 THRU FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29
BART partners with LG Mobile on e-recycling
To help reduce e-waste and to make e-recycling easier for BART customers, LGE MobileComm U.S.A., (LG) is teaming up with BART to offer three simple ways for BART riders to recycle unused mobile phones. LG is outfitting six BART stations with recycling receptacles where customers can drop off any unused mobile
BART expands service for weekend sports events
BART will run longer trains to accommodate the thousands of sports fans attending baseball and football games this weekend. There’s the 3:00 p.m. Cal versus Colorado State match-up on Saturday, September 27. There’s also the SF Giants/LA Dodgers game and the Oakland Raiders/San Diego Chargers game, which both
BART looks at ideas to handle growing demand
Many customers have asked questions about recent media coverage of the BART demand management study. This study is looking at ideas for accommodating increased passenger demand, including the possibility of different fares for peak and non-peak hours. We have developed a Frequently Asked Questions document
East Contra Costa BART Extension FAQ
BART to Antioch FAQ What is eBART and BART to Antioch? eBART is the project to build a new rail system that continues transit service from BART's Pittsburg/Bay Point Station to Antioch. This rail system uses standard gauge (4’-8 ½”) track with state-of-the art Diesel Multiple Unit (DMU) Vehicles. Once opened
Take BART to the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl
Navy vs. Arizona State - Sat., Dec. 29 at 1 p.m. The Arizona State Sun Devils will face the Navy Midshipmen in the third Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl on Sat., Dec. 29 at 1 p.m. The Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl is the only bowl game dedicated to raising money and awareness about the issue of hunger in the United States
BART Connects: BART gave a civic architect “a sense of what was possible” for urban design
Howard Wong pictured at Powell Street Station.
Do you have a favorite BART memory or story to share? Email a short summary to BART Storyteller Michelle Robertson at [email protected], and she may follow up to schedule an interview.
Howard Wong was born and raised in San Francisco, and like many locals, he depended on public transportation to travel. He remembers well the “old, shaky streetcars and rickety buses” that ferried citizens around the region, and so too, he remembers that it “wasn’t always a pleasant experience.”
A few years after BART opened, he graduated with a master's degree in architecture and design from UC Berkeley. In the program, Wong and his classmates studied the new BART system – its design, its construction, its principles. “It was the biggest project around,” he said. “And it gave you a sense of what was possible.”
When BART first opened in 1972, Wong, who was living in Berkeley, used it mostly to travel around the East Bay. That is, until the Transbay Tube opened in 1974, and he took a joy ride from Berkeley into San Francisco.
“Going through the tunnel for the first time was quite an experience,” he said. “Your ears pop, and it feels like you’re rolling really fast. It gave you the sense of entering this new Space Age era of transportation.”
Wong’s experiences on BART left a lasting impact on him. He said the transit system helped shape his “democratic sensibilities on urban design."
“No matter your class, you had a sense that you were getting special treatment when you rode the trains,” he said.
“You really felt like you were a part of this democracy of benefits,” Wong continued. “You're sitting on a train with all the commuters who seemed much more affluent with their suits and ties and briefcases, but you’re right there on that train with them.”
Wong went on to work for a series of Bay Area architectural offices before he was hired as an architect for the City and County of San Francisco.
Wong still remembers his trips from North Beach to San Francisco State, where he earned his undergraduate degree, by way of the old surface M streetcar, a ride that took at least an hour each way. He said when the BART tunnels were built under Market, as well as the Muni Metro tunnels above them, “it was revolutionary.”
He also noticed that after BART opened, smaller bedroom communities quickly transformed into prosperous suburbs – a metamorphosis he attributes largely to the transit system, which enabled suburbanites to easily and affordably commute into San Francisco. He also noticed more businesses, especially higher-end department stores, set up shop along Market Street.
Now retired, Wong remains an avid BART rider. He often takes the train to explore cities outside his hometown as well as to regular haunts around Mission Street and the Berkeley campus. As of late, he’s taken BART to visit Fremont, Orinda, and Walnut Creek. Recently, he rode BART to Berryessa/North San Jose Station to check out the San Jose Flea Market, which he learned about from a BARTable article.
In his 51 years of riding BART, Wong said the public is essential in ensuring the system is around for generations to come. He encourages Bay Area residents to not “forget about transit.”
“You don’t have to take it all the time, but ride it every once and awhile,” he said. “It takes advocacy and support, as well as revenue to improve local transit and to keep it running. The public can help give it a boost, too.”
About the BART Connects Storytelling Series
The BART Connects storytelling series was launched in 2023 to showcase the real people who ride and rely on BART and illustrate the manifold ways the system affects their lives. You can follow the ongoing series at bart.gov/news.
The series grew out of BART's Role in the Region Study, which demonstrates BART’s importance to the Bay Area’s mobility, cultural diversity, environmental and economic sustainability. We conducted a call for stories to hear from our riders and understand what BART means to them. The call was publicized on our website, social media, email blasts, and flyering at stations. More than 300 riders responded, and a selection of respondents who opted-in were interviewed for the BART Connects series.
BART Connects: A Bay Area dad uses BART to spend time with his teenaged daughter
Ed and Elyse Cabrera pictured at Fruitvale Station.
Do you have a favorite BART memory or story to share? Email a short summary to BART Storyteller Michelle Robertson at [email protected], and she may follow up to schedule an interview.
Ed Cabrera spent most of his childhood in San Francisco’s Mission District. When he was two years old, his family immigrated from Guadalajara, Mexico, and they settled on the ground floor of a three-story flat at 18th and Dolores, just a few blocks up from the BART station at 16th.
The Cabreras took BART pretty much everywhere – to school, to appointments, to the library, and especially to visit family in the East Bay. The Cabreras were the last remaining members of their extended family still living in San Francisco, and if they wanted to see grandma and grandpa and the cousins, an eastbound BART ride was required.
Today, Cabrera lives in the Laurel District of Oakland, and now he travels in the reverse direction to hang out with his teenaged daughter, Elyse, when she’s staying with her mom in San Francisco. Cabrera said he regularly uses BART "to facilitate spending time with my daughter and acclimate her to city living.”
Elyse rode BART as a kid here and there – she loved the trains so much the Cabrera household was overrun with Thomas the Tank Engine toys – but she didn’t rely on it like her dad did in his San Francisco youth. Mostly, her parents shuttled her by car to school, social activities, and extracurriculars.
“That was more so because of her mother’s preference, and that was fine. It had its advantages,” Cabrera said. “But it also had a lot of disadvantages.” One being she didn’t spend much time exploring her surroundings outside of a vehicle, he said.
“You don’t want to have a kid who grew up in a city and doesn’t know it,” Cabrera continued. “And there’s no better way to get to know a neighborhood or community than walking, riding transit, and talking to people.”
As his daughter grew, Cabrera wanted her to feel comfortable navigating the city independently, so he made a point to “transition Elyse out of the family car” and get her on public transportation to explore the neighborhoods beyond the Portola District, where she grew up.
Soon, Elyse was taking BART and Muni to meet friends at Dolores Park, to hang around the Castro, and to play mini golf at the course in the Mission District.
“It exposed her to different types of people,” Cabrera said. “What better place than BART to get to know the people around you? It’s the great equalizer!”
Cabrera and Elyse now spend much of their time together exploring the Bay Area. He doesn’t own a car, so most often, they take transit. In addition to riding BART to San Francisco to walk around the Mission and the Embarcadero, they’ll get onboard to visit Lake Merritt or head to their climbing gym – Elyse recently got her dad into rock climbing – and sometimes they’ll take it to explore the area’s regional parks. The pair plans to visit the Oyster Bay Regional Shoreline near Coliseum Station when Elyse is home from school.
Cabrera’s next transit challenge is getting Elyse comfortable on a bike. She's now a sophomore in college, and her campus is well-suited to biking.
Beyond getting her around the Bay, BART has also changed Elyse’s life, her father said. She's currently studying aerospace engineering, and Cabrera credits her interest in the field to early experiences riding BART and looking out the windows of the SFO AirTrain, watching the motion of the planes on the tarmac.
About the BART Connects Storytelling Series
The BART Connects storytelling series was launched in 2023 to showcase the real people who ride and rely on BART and illustrate the manifold ways the system affects their lives. You can follow the ongoing series at bart.gov/news.
The series grew out of BART's Role in the Region Study, which demonstrates BART’s importance to the Bay Area’s mobility, cultural diversity, environmental and economic sustainability. We conducted a call for stories to hear from our riders and understand what BART means to them. The call was publicized on our website, social media, email blasts, and flyering at stations. More than 300 riders responded, and a selection of respondents who opted-in were interviewed for the BART Connects series.
BART to participate in the Great California ShakeOut 2017
BART will participate in the Great California ShakeOut earthquake drill tomorrow, Thursday October 19, to test our emergency response systems and to help raise public awareness of the importance of having a plan and being prepared. At 10:19 a.m., BART staff will trigger our early warning earthquake system to
BART Board to meet Thursday, Aug. 14
The BART Board of Directors will meet Thursday, Aug. 14, at 9 am at its usual location in the Board Room at Kaiser Center in Oakland. The meeting can can be viewed on a live webcast at bart.gov/board The agenda for the meeting includes a review of the Quarterly Performance Report, BART's "report card" on