![cover image](https://wikiwandv2-19431.kxcdn.com/_next/image?url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e8/Montage_of_TTC_2.jpg/640px-Montage_of_TTC_2.jpg&w=640&q=50)
Toronto Transit Commission
public transport agency / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) runs the public transport system that has buses, streetcars, subways, and rapid transit lines in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Started in 1954, the TTC has grown to three subway lines and an elevated rapid transit line with a total of 75 stations, as well as 149 surface routes (buses and streetcars). Of these 149 routes 148 make 243 connections with a subway or rapid transit station during weekday rush hours.
Toronto Transit Commission | |
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![]() ![]() From top-left, clockwise: A Flexity Outlook streetcar, a CLRV streetcar, an S-series rapid transit train, an Orion bus, wall tile signage at Eglinton station featuring the Toronto Subway typeface, a Wheel-Trans bus, and a Toronto Rocket subway train | |
Info | |
Owner | City of Toronto |
Locale | Toronto, Mississauga, Vaughan, Markham |
Transit type | Bus, subway, streetcar |
Number of lines | 149+ bus routes 4 subway lines 10 streetcar routes |
Number of stations | 75 in use 39 under construction |
Daily ridership | 1.69 million weekday passengers[1] |
Chief executive | Rick Leary[2] |
Headquarters | William McBrien Building 1900 Yonge Street Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Operation | |
Began operation | 1921 |
Number of vehicles | 1,869 buses, 752 rapid transit cars, 250 streetcars, 214 Wheel-Trans buses[3] |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 10 7ā8 in (1,495 mm) Toronto gauge |
The TTC operates the third most used urban public transport system in North America (after the New York City Transit Authority and the Mexico City Metro).[4]
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/Ttc_wheel_trans_in_Scarborough_at_the_YMCA.jpg/320px-Ttc_wheel_trans_in_Scarborough_at_the_YMCA.jpg)
The TTC also runs a door-to-door (they pick people up at home, the shops or work, and take them anywhere they wish to go) system for people with physical disabilities known as Wheel-Trans; about 5,500 trips are made by this service daily. This service costs the same as any other trip on the TTC even though it is door-to-door. The TTC had 11,235 people working for it in 2007.[5]