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The Wolfline is an area bus service serving the students, staff, faculty, and general public on and around North Carolina State University's campus in Raleigh, North Carolina. As of Fall 2017, Wolfline is operated by Transdev,[1] after being operated by First Transit between 2007 and 2017,[2] under contract with NC State's Transportation department. The Wolfline was the first mass transit organization in the state to exclusively use 'clean' diesel engines.[3] Wolfline access is unrestricted to the public and is a zero-fare service.[4] The preceding contractor was Veolia Transport. The Wolfline began operating in August 1980 with one route.[5]

NCSU Wolfline
LocaleRaleigh, North Carolina
Service typebus service
Routes11
FleetNew Flyer Xcelsior XD40
OperatorTransdev
WebsiteNCSU Wolfline
Wolfline Bus, outfitted for Carolina Hurricanes Celebration
Wolfline Bus and "Mini-Me"

Currently, the Wolfline operates 11 routes[6] on and between Main, Centennial, and the Veterinary School campuses. These routes often coincide with those operated by GoRaleigh and GoTriangle, facilitating movement about Raleigh, Cary, and the entire Research Triangle by bus.

Of the 11 campus-area routes, 10 run on weekdays from 7:00am to 10:00pm or 1:00am, depending on the route. Three of the ten routes (30, 41, and 52) operate on weekends. One route, the RS Shuttle, is a special route only run on days after university breaks. Over the summer, regular service is roughly cut in half. During student breaks, the Wolfline runs limited service routes, focused on moving faculty and staff around. The Wolfline does not run on federal holidays.[7]

After the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Wolfline switched its routes significantly, changing its numbering to only include two digit route numbers, though many of the new routes resemble the pre-pandemic routes.

Routes

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  • Rt. 20 Spring Hill, which connects both Main and Centennial Campuses to a park and ride lot in Spring Hill.
  • Rt. 30 Main Campus East-West Connector, which connects Main Campus to Wolf Village and E.S. King Village.
  • Rt. 40 Main-Centennial Express, which connects Central Campus with the College of Engineering buildings on Centennial Campus.
  • Rt. 41 Main-Centennial Connector, which connects the Centennial, North, and Central campuses.
  • Rt. 42 Centennial Campus Circulator, which connects Centennial Campus with apartments on Varsity Drive, Gorman Street, and Avent Ferry Road.
  • Rt. 43 Village Link, which connects Wolf Village, E.S. King Village, Greek Village, and Centennial Campus.
  • Rt. 50 Avent Ferry, which serves main campus, Avent Ferry Road, and Greek Way.
  • Rt. 51 Varsity, which serves Main Campus, the McKimmon Center, the Varsity and West parking lots.
  • Rt. 52 Gorman Street, which serves Main Campus, Avent Ferry Road, Gorman Street, and Varsity Drive
  • Rt. 60 Carter Finley, which connects the D.H. Hill Library to the College of Veterinary Medicine at Centennial Biomedical Campus, Meredith College, Carter–Finley Stadium, and the Carter-Finley Park and Ride.
  • RS Lot Shuttle, which operates from 6 PM to just after midnight, connecting a student resident storage parking lot to residential areas of NC State Campus.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Transdev to operate, maintain N.C. State's campus shuttle service". Metro Magazine. 21 Nov 2016. Retrieved 19 Aug 2018. Transdev's operations are scheduled to begin in time for the fall 2017 semester to accommodate the acquisition period of the new fleet.
  2. ^ Campus Mobility Plan Final Report (PDF) (Report). July 2012. Retrieved 19 Aug 2018. Wolfline service is operated by a private contractor, First Transit. The contract was originally signed for the 2007-12 period; it was renewed for another five years for 2012-17.
  3. ^ http://media.www.technicianonline.com/media/storage/paper848/news/2007/07/19/News/clean.Fleet.Set.To.Roll.Out-2925269.shtml 'Clean' fleet set to roll out. Technician Online. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  4. ^ http://www2.acs.ncsu.edu/trans/transportation/wolfline/ NCSU Transportation - Wolfline Campus Bus Service. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
  5. ^ Historical State: History in Red and White. ""Wolfline buses go into service (8/20/1980)"". Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  6. ^ "Spring 2022 – Routes / Schedules – Transportation". Retrieved 2022-04-05.
  7. ^ NCSU Transportation. "Wolfline Information - Transportation". Retrieved 4 April 2022.