Mercer Island community shuttle to be extended another two years

In partnership with the city of Mercer Island, King County Metro debuted the Mercer Island Community Shuttle Route 630 in June 2015 to give residents a new rush-hour option for getting to downtown Seattle after the loss of regular bus service.

Launched initially as a two-year pilot, the shuttle is exceeding ridership goals and will be extended for another two years, until March 2019.

The 630 Shuttle makes 10 trips per day during peak hours, from Southeast 46th Street/Island Crest Way and downtown Seattle via First Hill and includes a connection to the Mercer Island Park and Ride. It also includes flexible service for residents in the Shorewood area.

On May 16, Metro and Mercer Island celebrated the shuttle’s two-year anniversary and previewed upcoming service improvements, which include moving the first stop to a sheltered location and extending the flexible service area.

Daily ridership is surpassing initial goals, and currently is 140 boardings per day. The shuttle is equipped with 19 seats and a wheelchair lift and a two-slot bike rack. Riders also are able to plan their trip using Metro’s online Trip Planner and track location status real time. Customers pay standard Metro fares and can use their ORCA cards.

The 630 Shuttle was launched under Metro’s Alternative Services program, now known as Community Connections, which focuses on cost-efficient solutions in areas that don’t have the infrastructure, density or land use to support regular fixed-route bus service. Services can include routes with flexible service areas, real-time ridesharing between home neighborhoods and transit centers, reservation-based local trips and private carpool ridematching.