Corridor history As the main north–south
arterial street through Spokane, North Division Street has long had a history of transit service along the corridor and has historically been home to one of the busiest bus routes in the Spokane Transit Authority system, carrying nearly one million passengers annually. However, despite the corridor's prominent role in transportation in Spokane, transit service along the corridor through the late-2010s was relatively basic, with sparse amenities, average frequencies, and smaller 40-foot buses. On July 21, 2010, the Spokane Transit Authority Board of Directors adopted a new comprehensive plan for public transportation in the Spokane region. The plan, called
Connect Spokane, included a section dubbed High Performance Transit (HPT), which was described as a network of corridors "providing all-day, two-way, reliable, and frequent service which offers competitive speeds to the private automobile and features improved amenities for passengers." Six HPT corridors were initially identified, with Division Street being one of them. The plan has been updated several times over the years, with a significant update to the High Performance Transit section in 2012 through 2013 as part of the agency's
STA Moving Forward planning process to drastically improve and expand in the region over the long term.
High performance transit development Work to begin developing the existing
#25 Division bus route into a high performance transit line began in April 2012, when Spokane Transit's Board of Directors approved a $1.2 million grant request to the
Federal Transit Administration to study ways the route could be improved to handle an increase efficiency and an increase in passengers. Early ideas included installing dedicated bus and business access lanes, traffic signal prioritization, off-board ticketing, and increasing bus frequency. The STA Board cited another desire for the study – recognizing the potential for
infill development and redevelopment of land to occur along the largely-commercial Division Street, which would gradually transform it into a denser, mixed-use corridor, thereby increasing the already-high transit demand along the corridor. Spokane Transit embarked on implementing projects identified in its
STA Moving Forward initiative, which included transit improvements to the Division Street corridor. Projects would upgrade the existing Division bus route into an HPT "Lite" line, incorporating some of the near and mid-term improvements identified in F1 corridor HPT implementation strategy. Upgrades to passenger amenities such as enhanced shelters and additional sidewalks began to be implemented. In the summer of 2017, STA took delivery of three new 60-foot articulated buses, expanding its existing fleet of articulated buses to be enable the possibility of running larger buses on its busiest routes such as Division. An additional seven articulated buses were delivered in 2018, allowing STA to run 60-foot buses on its Division route full-time.
Bus rapid transit implementation Because STA's 2016 ballot measure only included funding to bring the Division corridor up to an HPT "Lite" service status, the timeline and funding for full transformation of the route into a bus rapid transit line remained unknown. However, in December 2019, STA and the Spokane Regional Transportation Council began a $1 million study to evaluate how transportation and land-use along the North Division Street corridor could be transformed after the anticipated 2029 completion of the
North Spokane Corridor, which is expected decrease traffic levels along Division Street. The reduction in traffic would allow the opportunity to convert existing traffic lanes along the corridor into dedicated bus lanes, as well as allow for some portions of roadway to be reclaimed for
bike lanes. Through 2020 and 2021, a steering committee composed of officials from the
City of Spokane,
Spokane County,
Washington State Department of Transportation, also participated in the study. Members of the public, landowners, and stakeholders also were given opportunities to provide feedback in online open houses. Throughout the study, general support was found for a fixed guideway bus rapid transit line on dedicated side-running Business Access and Transit (BAT) lanes. Within the two-way mainline portion of Division Street, the adopted side-running option would convert the outer-most lane in each roadway direction into BAT lanes. In the Division-Ruby Couplet, the board adopted Side-Running Option C, which would maintain Division and Ruby in their current one-way street configurations, but add a parking lane to Division Street, and install a two-way cycle track along Ruby Street. BAT lanes would be installed in the right-most lane of Division and Ruby. Contingent upon funding, the line could begin construction as soon as 2025, with a 2027 launch date. As of May 2023, the
City Line project was projected to be under budget and in July, the STA board voted to allocate the unused local funds to the
Division Street BRT.
Project development In September 2023, the Federal Transportation Administration (FTA) approved the Division BRT for project development phase. ==Route==