BRT in Action: Tulsa, Okla.
After voters approved an extension of Vision Tulsa, a 0.6% tax package that will make the City of Tulsa’s transit vision possible, the second leg of BRT service will soon be underway.
Tulsa’s AERO BRT, planned and designed by HNTB and Tulsa-based Cyntergy, offers a number of advantages over Tulsa’s traditional bus system, including:
- Longer service hours, including service seven days/week (compared to the existing bus system’s six days/week).
- Faster frequency — 15 minutes compared to the traditional 45-minute wait.
The first BRT route, the AERO Peoria line, spans an 18-mile north-south stretch. The project team adapted to one of the location’s challenges, limited station space in some urban areas, by creating constrained stations that include real-time signage and some shelter.
Project stakeholders strategically selected Peoria Avenue as the location for the first BRT line. One in seven Tulsa residents live within a 10-minute walk of the corridor, and one-fifth of Tulsa’s jobs are within a 10-minute walk of Peoria Avenue, according to city studies. Additionally, the Peoria line is expected to help residents in the northern part of the line have easier access to more food and healthcare options.
In fact, BRT was considered such an important transit opportunity in Tulsa that the project was accelerated from its original 2021 timeline. Now, planning and preliminary design for a second route — the east-west AERO Route 66 segment — is underway, with additional expansion under consideration.
“The direction I see transportation going is shifting away from owning the asset model, to the rideshare model, and transit can sit in that,” said Ted Rieck, AICP, GM of Tulsa Transit. “BRT can do a lot of things, and if it showcases what transit can actually do, I think people will be surprised and want more of this kind of service.”











