SEPTA Route 66
Route 66 is a trackless trolley route operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority in Northeast Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It connects the Market–Frankford Line at the Frankford Transportation Center to Wissinoming, Mayfair, Holmesburg, and Torresdale along Frankford Avenue, which is U.S. [Route 13 in Pennsylvania|US 13] and includes the historic, colonial Frankford Avenue Bridge. It is one of three surviving routes of the Philadelphia trolley bus system. From 1940 to 1968, the route was operated by the Philadelphia Transportation Company.
Route description
The route's northern/eastern terminus is at City Line Loop, located at Frankford Avenue and Knights Road in Morrell Park. However, some weekday trips are truncated to Gregg Loop, located at Gregg Street and Frankford Avenue. Some weekday rush hour trips begin/end at Frankford and Cottman Avenue in the city's Mayfair neighborhood. The service includes express trips in rush hour, and additional sets of overhead wires to allow express trolley buses to pass 'local' trolley buses have been in place for many years.History
Originally a streetcar line, Route 66 was converted to trolley buses in 1955. The last day of streetcar operation was July 30, 1955, and then diesel buses were temporarily used for six weeks, while work to modify the overhead wires for trolley buses took place. Trolley bus service began operating on the part of the route between Bridge Street Terminal and Gregg Street on September 11, 1955, and on October 2, 1955, the new trolley bus service was extended to City Line Loop, which has been the outer end of the line ever since.In June 1961, PTC introduced express service on Route 66, initially in the northbound/outbound direction only, but with southbound express service added in September 1962. To facilitate this change, the company installed a reversible bus lane and additional sets of overhead trolley bus wires in the center of Frankford Avenue on a part of the route, to allow express trolley buses to pass vehicles serving all stops. One section had three sets of overhead wires and another had four sets, and express trips operated only in the peak direction. In 1981, the route section between Frankford Terminal and St. Vincent Street was modified from three sets of wires to four, and an additional part of the route, farther out, was equipped with express wires, between Ryan Street and Rhawn Street. By 1998, use of the outer section of express wires had been reduced to just one trip per day, and in 2007when SEPTA was renewing the overhead wires in preparation for a resumption of trolley bus service on Route 66 after a suspension of more than five yearsthat set of express wires was removed, because there were no longer any Route 66 trips scheduled to operate as expresses on that section, beyond Ryan Street. The section of Frankford Avenue east of Cottman Avenue retained four sets of wires, the two inner sets used by express trolley buses.
Diesel buses were substituted beginning June 2002 because of reconstruction of Frankford Depot and the adjacent Market–Frankford "El" line viaduct and station, but trackless service was restored in April 2008.
All of the vehicles currently in use are Americans with [Disabilities Act of 1990|ADA]-compliant and equipped with bicycle racks. "Night Owl" service is also available, and rush hour service includes both local and express trips.