METRO Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

King County Metro Cuts Ribbon on New RapidRide Line

The new RapidRide G Line adds miles of red bus lanes, along with extensive upgrades and improvements to Madison St.

August 30, 2024
King County Metro Cuts Ribbon on New RapidRide Line

County Executive Dow Constantine and Metro GM Michelle Allison with a piece of the ribbon at the RapidRide G Line ribbon cutting celebration

Photo: KC Metro

3 min to read


King County Executive Dow Constantine joined city, county, federal, and community leaders to celebrate the completion of major construction on the RapidRide G Line project, King County Metro’s eighth RapidRide line.

The ribbon-cutting ceremony in Capitol Hill paves the way for the start of service.

Ad Loading...

Metro’s RapidRide G Line

The new RapidRide G Line adds miles of red bus lanes, along with extensive upgrades and improvements to Madison St.

The line will connect Downtown Seattle with First Hill, Capitol Hill, Central District, and Madison Valley, providing a vital link between these key areas and offering the highest quality bus service in the region.

The redesigned Madison St. will improve safety around schools, small businesses, libraries, and hospitals, and the project also included sidewalk repairs, new walk and bike signals, and rebuilt utilities.

“Seattle has many reasons to celebrate this robust new transit line and the wide array of safety, accessibility, and connectivity improvements through some of our most vibrant neighborhoods,” said Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell. “This upgrade and new six-minute service has been long anticipated for neighborhoods like the Central District, Capitol Hill, Downtown, and Madison Valley, and will bring real benefits.”

The Project

The $144.3 million RapidRide G Line project was funded through a combination of $80.5 million in federal grants, with additional contributions coming from Sound Transit ($35.8 million), the Levy to Move Seattle ($19.7 million), King County Metro ($3.5 million), WSDOT grants ($2.5 million), and other City of Seattle transportation sources ($2.3 million).

Ad Loading...

The federal grants included $59.9 million from the Federal Transit Administration’s (FTA) Small Starts program and $10.9 million from President Biden’s American Rescue Plan.

“The RapidRide network has become a critical economic and personal asset for millions of riders throughout the Puget Sound region,” said FTA Acting Administrator Veronica Vanterpool. “Adding this service to Madison Street will help connect families to each other, patients to healthcare, students to education, and get everyone where they need to go faster, safer, and more frequently. Thank you to everyone who made this investment a reality.”

The RapidRide G Line will offer frequent service with new 60-foot, five-door buses arriving every six minutes most of the day to ensure reliable and efficient travel.

Photo: SDOT

Highlight of the RapidRide G Line

The RapidRide G Line will offer frequent service with new 60-foot, five-door buses arriving every six minutes most of the day to ensure reliable and efficient travel.

Dedicated bus lanes and faster boarding with center-running bus stations will reduce commute times and enhance ridership, while new curb ramps, crosswalks, and sidewalks improve accessibility.

Additionally, the project also included significant infrastructure upgrades like replacing a 120-year-old water main to improve drainage and wastewater systems and upgrading street lighting and power distribution.

Ad Loading...

“The new RapidRide G Line will deliver frequent and reliable service across Madison Valley, Capitol Hill, the Central District, First Hill, and downtown Seattle,” said Metro GM Michelle Allison. “This collaborative, regional effort serving some of Seattle’s oldest neighborhoods will improve lives, help local businesses, and expand access to opportunity.”

Highlights of the project include:

  • 21 new RapidRide bus stops.

  • 2 upgraded bus stops.

  • 4 new center-running bus stations.

  • 8 miles of new or replaced sidewalks.

  • 1 lane-miles of concrete streets.

  • 3 lane-miles of new asphalt.

  • 4 miles of new dedicated bus lanes.

  • 5 new signals and 36 upgraded signals.

  • 108 newly planted trees.

More Bus

paratransit bus
SponsoredMarch 16, 2026

Measuring the True Cost of Paratransit Fleets

What truly drives the cost of a paratransit fleet? Beyond the purchase price, seven operational factors quietly determine maintenance frequency, downtime, and long-term service reliability. This whitepaper explores how these factors shape lifecycle cost and what agencies should evaluate when selecting paratransit vehicles.

Read More →
Cover photo for METROspectives with The Bus Coalition
Busby Alex RomanMarch 13, 2026

Inside The Bus Coalition’s Push for Stronger Federal Transit Investment

In this conversation, TBC’s Executive Director Ed Redfern, President Corey Aldridge, and Washington Representative Joel Rubin outline the coalition’s key policy priorities, the challenges facing transit agencies, and how industry stakeholders can work together to strengthen the voice of bus transit at the federal level.

Read More →
Cover photo for Biz Briefs dated March 6, 2026
Technologyby Staff and News ReportsMarch 6, 2026

Biz Briefs: Tolar Manufacturing Supports PSTA Spark Service and More

Stay informed with these quick takes on the projects and companies driving progress across the transportation landscape.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Passengers boarding a PRT bus
Busby StaffMarch 2, 2026

Pittsburgh Unveils 'Bus Line Refresh' Plan

Originally introduced in 2023 as the Bus Line Redesign, the effort has evolved into a more targeted update that maintains familiar routes while improving reliability, frequency, evening and weekend service, and connections across Allegheny County.

Read More →
Stickers and a paper bus for S3 bus line
Busby StaffMarch 2, 2026

Seattle's Sound Transit Breaks Ground on S3 Bus Line

S3 will connect communities along SR 522 with fast, reliable, battery-electric bus service from Shoreline South Station to Bothell via Kenmore and Lake Forest Park. 

Read More →
PRT bus stop with articulated bus.
Busby StaffFebruary 20, 2026

Pittsburgh Regional Transit Announces All-Door Boarding on the University Line

All-door boarding will allow passengers to pay while entering the front, middle, or rear doors of the University Line’s 60-foot articulated buses.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Patrick Scully, president at Complete Coach Works.
Managementby StaffFebruary 18, 2026

Complete Coach Works Names Patrick Scully President

He succeeds the company founder, Dale Carson, who remains chairman of the board. 

Read More →
A MARTA articulated bus.
Busby StaffFebruary 13, 2026

Atlanta's MARTA Sets Date for 'A-Line' BRT Launch

The five-mile Rapid A-Line connects Downtown Atlanta to Capitol Gateway, Summerhill, Peoplestown, and the Beltline’s Southside Trail.

Read More →
A Picture of Ster Seating's Parent/Child transit seating product.
Technologyby StaffFebruary 10, 2026

Ster Seating, Maryland Transit Launch First Parent/Child Transit Seat in North America

The configuration uses Ster Seating's Gemini seat platform to create a family-friendly floor layout specifically engineered to accommodate parents traveling with young children.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Rendering of Sound Transit's Renton Transit Center
Busby StaffFebruary 5, 2026

Seattle’s Sound Transit Breaks Ground on New Transit Center

The Renton Transit Center project will relocate and rebuild the Renton Transit Center to better serve the regional Stride S1 line, local King County Metro services, and the future RapidRide I Line.

Read More →