Gwinnett residents are excited for enhanced transit services, improved local and regional connectivity, and accompanying infrastructure like sidewalks and passenger amenities that support the high-quality system.
The Transit Plan provides recommendations that will connect transit to more places, and it accounts for anticipated growth in areas like Rowen, Gwinnett Place Mall, OFS, Gas South District, and more.
Recommendations include:
Shared Ride
Shared ride, also referred to as microtransit, is a flexible, on-demand service where riders can use an app to request and pay for their ride. The service will:
- Operate 18 hours a day, seven days a week with a maximum wait time of 20 minutes
- Serve 100 percent of Gwinnett by 2033
- Be available in key destinations like the Mall of Georgia, Sugarloaf Mills, Stone Mountain, and more
The service is currently available in Snellville and Lawrenceville.
County Ride
County ride, also referred to as local fixed-route service, has consistently spaced bus stops and a set schedule. The service will:
- Operate 12 to 18 hours a day, seven days a week with 15- to 30-minute headways, the average time between scheduled trips on a route
- Allow riders to transfer to other routes and services
- Expand to add 18 routes between 2027 to 2043
- Be available between Stone Mountain and Loganville, Suwanee and the Gwinnett Place Transit Center, and Dacula
Quick Ride
Quick ride, also referred to as bus rapid transit lite, is a high-frequency service that will move more people quickly with bus priority improvements. The service will:
- Operate 12 to 18 hours a day, seven day a week with 15- to 20-minute headways
- Have eight routes implemented by 2036
- Include transit signal priority, queue jumps, and enhanced stops
- Provide connections between Peachtree Corners and OFS, Gwinnett Place Mall and Snellville, Sugar Hill and Gwinnett Place Mall, Lawrenceville and Centerville, and more
Rapid Ride
Rapid ride, also known as bus rapid transit, moves large numbers of people to their destinations quickly and with high frequency. Compared to the quick ride service, rapid ride has limited stops, bus-only lanes, transit signal priority, queue jumps, and off-board payment. The service will:
- Operate 18 hours a day, seven days a week with 10- to 15-minute headways
- Begin in 2036, traveling from the proposed Lawrenceville Transit Center to the Doraville MARTA Station
- Serve major activity centers along the route, including Northside Hospital Gwinnett, Sugarloaf Mills, Gwinnett Technical College, Gas South District, and OFS
- Use Hurricane Shoals Road, Duluth Highway, Sugarloaf Parkway, Satellite Boulevard, Jimmy Carter Boulevard, and Buford Highway
Airport Ride
Airport ride will provide two connections from Gwinnett to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. The service will:
- Operate 14 hours a day, seven days a week with 60-minute headways
- Begin operation in 2027 with two routes in Snellville and the I-985 Park and Ride
Transit Transfer Facilities
Transit transfer facilities will allow customers to connect to other routes and travel modes, including small, medium, and large transit transfer facilities.
Two large transit transfer facilities are currently underway at Gwinnett Place Mall and in Lawrenceville.