Knoxville Area Transit
Founded | 1967 |
---|---|
Headquarters | 301 Church Avenue |
Locale | Knoxville, Tennessee |
Service type | transit bus, paratransit |
Alliance | Knoxville Community Actions Committee (CAC) |
Routes | 23 |
Stops | 1100+ |
Destinations | around 200-250 |
Hubs | 2 |
Stations | 1 |
Lounge | 66 |
Fleet | Approx. 100 |
Daily ridership | 8,500 (weekdays, Q2 2024)[1] |
Annual ridership | 2,332,800 (2023)[2] |
Fuel type | Gasoline, Diesel, Hybrid-Electric, Electric |
Director | Aquayla Maxwell |
Website | katbus |
Knoxville Area Transit (KAT) is the operator of public transportation in Knoxville, Tennessee. Twenty-five routes operate. Service on KAT routes operate weekdays and Saturdays with routes 11, 12, 20, 22, 23, 31, 33, 34 and 41 and 42 offering Sunday service. All routes, except for routes 13,16, 19, 44 and 90 start at the Knoxville Station in Downtown. The Knoxville Trolley is a free shuttle service which provides service to the university and the downtown area.[3] KAT formerly operated the transit service for the University of Tennessee, known as The T.[4] In 2023, the system had a ridership of 2,332,800, or about 8,500 per weekday as of the second quarter of 2024.
History
[edit]Public transportation in Knoxville dates back to 1876 when the first street cars of the Knoxville Street Railway Company were pulled by horses and mules along tracks on Gay Street. Since then, the transit system has undergone considerable changes, beginning in 1890 with the conversion from animal-drawn to electric-powered streetcars. In 1910, the system serviced 11 million passengers each year on 42 miles of track, introducing buses to serve the streetcar system's feeder routes in 1929. By the late 1940s, the system had mainly switched from electric streetcars to all buses, with electric streetcars making their last run in 1947. Later, in 1958, a bus service to the University of Tennessee was added to the system. The bus service continued to get upgrades, with air-conditioned GMC buses added to the Knoxville transit fleet in 1972.
In the 1980s and 1990s, the Knoxville transit system went through some internal changes, first moving into a new facility on Magnolia Avenue in 1989 and then changing its name from "K-Trans" to "Knoxville Area Transit (KAT)" in 1995. From the 90s onward, the KAT system continued to upgrade, with a focus on environmental responsibility, beginning its Clean Fuels Program with the introduction of propane-powered vehicles in 2003. The next year, the KAT system was named North American Transit System of the Year by the American Public Transportation Association. In 2010, the transit system again changed facilities, moving its center of operations to the John J. Duncan Jr. Knoxville Station. In 2014, KAT introduced three hybrid vehicles into its regular fleet.[5]
Routes
[edit]Regular Knoxville area routes
[edit]RTE #[6] | ROUTE NAME | INNER TERMINAL | OUTER TERMINAL | EXTRA | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | DOWNTOWN CONNECTOR | ||||
10 | SEQUOYAH HILLS | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY S | |||
11 | KINGSTON PIKE/SUTHERLAND | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY O | WALMART | ||
12 | WESTERN | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY E | |||
16 | CEDAR BLUFF | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY C | |||
17 | SUTHERLAND/BEARDEN | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY O | FOREST PARK | ||
20 | CENTRAL STREET | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY G | NORTHWEST CROSSING | ||
22 | BROADWAY | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY N | JACKSBORO AND ESSARY | ||
23 | MILLERTOWN | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY L | CHARLIE HAUN AT WASHINGTON | -WEEKDAYS ONLY. | |
24 | INSKIP/BREDA | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY L | |||
31 | MAGNOLIA | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY F | BURNS AT ASHEVILLE | ||
32 | DANDRIDGE | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY I | GOLDEN AGE RETIREMENT VLGE | ||
34 | BURLINGTON | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY H | KIRKWOOD SUPERSTOP | ||
37 | MORINGSIDE-RIVERSIDE | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY D | |||
40 | SOUTH KNOXVILLE | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY R | KROGER SOUTH | ||
41 | CHAPMAN HWY | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY P | WALMART SOUTH | ||
42 | HOSPITAL | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY M | UT HOSPITAL | ||
44 | UNIVERSITY PARK APARTMENTS | UNIVERSITY PARK APTS | UT TRANSFER POINT | -WEEKDAYS ONLY. | |
45 | VESTAL | KNOXVILLE STATION BAY S | KROGER SOUTH |
Gameday Shuttles
[edit]KAT offers special shuttles for football games, which operate solely on specific dates. All lines terminate at Neyland Stadium. These lines are assigned the special "51" designator.[7]
Outer Terminus | |
---|---|
51D | Old City |
51E | Market Square / Krutch Park |
The LIFT
[edit]KAT offers Paratransit LIFT service for those persons who are unable to use regular fixed-route buses. The LIFT is by reservation only, and you must be certified by KAT to use the service.
Hours
[edit]KAT buses operate 6:15 a.m. until 11:15p.m.. Monday through Saturday. Sunday Service is from 8:15 a.m. until 8:15 p.m. KAT does not operate on the following holidays: New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
The Sunday schedule is in effect on Martin Luther King Day, Memorial Day, Labor Day, the day before Christmas and the day after Thanksgiving.
Beginning August 26,2024 KAT will change service again. The following routes will exist:
1,10,11,12,15,16,17,20,22,23,24,31,32,34,37,40,41,42,44,45. All routes except 10,23 and 44 operate 7 days a week.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Transit Ridership Report Second Quarter 2024" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. September 3, 2024. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
- ^ "Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 4, 2024. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
- ^ Knoxville Area Transit Trolley Lines
- ^ The T - the University of Tennessee's transportation system, operated KAT
- ^ Knoxville Area Transit. "Knoxville Area Transit: General Info Page 2". Retrieved 20 September 2016.
- ^ "Bus Routes". Knoxville Area Transit. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^ "Football Shuttle". Knoxville Area Transit. Retrieved 27 August 2018.