, Israel. The bus lanes allow the buses to avoid
congested roads. The first bus lane is often erroneously attributed to
Chicago, where in 1939
Sheridan Road was installed with
reversible lanes north of Foster Avenue. The setup consisted of three-lanes towards the peak direction (south in the morning; north in the evening), and one
contraflow lane. None of the lanes exclusively carried buses, but were designed to facilitate bus operations. In 1948, the
East Side Trolley Tunnel in
Providence, Rhode Island was converted to bus-only use and became the first dedicated busway in the United States, continuing to operate to this day. In 1956
Nashville became the first city to implement on-street bus lanes. Later that year, Chicago implemented a bus lane in the center of Washington Street, a five lane one-way street downtown. The first bus lanes in Europe were established before October 1962 when, at the creation of the UK's first contraflow bus lane, London Transport "welcomed the special bus lane idea, which is in wide use on the Continent and America". An article in August 1963 identified Hamburg, Milan and Rome as having them, with Milan having 2 miles 750 yards. Most of the lanes were with-flow, but some of the lanes in Milan and all those in Rome were contraflow. in 1963 the
tram system in
Hamburg was closed and the former dedicated tram tracks were converted for bus travel. Other large German cities soon followed, and the implementation of bus lanes was officially sanctioned in the German highway code in 1970. Many experts from other countries (
Japan among the first) studied the German example and implemented similar solutions. On 15 January 1964 the first bus lane in France was designated along the
quai du Louvre in
Paris and the first
contraflow lane was established on the old
pont de l’Alma on 15 June 1966. The first contraflow bus lane in the UK was created in 1962 in London: a 50m-long section of Berkeley Street was made bus-only northbound while unrestricted southbound. A bus gate was created in 1964 as part of a one-way scheme between Vauxhall Bridge and Victoria, London. They applied from 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Monday - Friday. In October 1971
Runcorn opened the world's first
bus rapid transitway. Upon opening, the busway featured specialized stations,
signal priority,
grade separation, and was expanded to by 1980. By 1972 there were over of with-flow bus lanes in 100 cities within
OECD member countries, and the network grew substantially in the following decades. The
El Monte Busway between El Monte and Downtown
Los Angeles was the first dedicated busway in the US, constructed in 1974. ==Design==