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Using BART

Welcome to BART!Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) connects the San Francisco Peninsula with communities in the East Bay and South Bay. BART service curren
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Getting to the Station, Find a Station / Get DirectionsLook Up A StationWalk or Ride a BikeMake a Transit ConnectionPark Your Car at BARTElectric Personal AssistiveMobility D
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Operating Hours, BART operates during the following hours:Weekdays (5:00 am - 12:00 am) Saturday (6:00 am - 12:00 am)Sunday (8:00 am - 12:00 am)Why doesn't BART run 24
Fares and Clipper Cards, Fare CalculatorFares OverviewWhere to BuyClipper is now the only fare product available to purchase fares systemwide. There is a $3 acquisition fee to
Safety and Security, BART is continually upgrading safety and security measures to help keep our riders and employees out of harm's way. Please follow these important safe
Accessible Services, BART has a number of features to make it easier for seniors and persons with disabilities to use the system.Learn more about discount tickets, elevato
Title VI, BART is committed to complying with the requirements of Title VI in all of its federally funded programs and activities. Any person who believes they
Social Resources, BART is developing a strategic plan- a coordinated and comprehensive approach that maintains a safe and clean environment for riders—while connecting
Safe & Clean Plan, BART is rolling up its sleeves to make sure riders feel safe, to keep our trains cleaner than ever, and to provide the best service yet – from departu

BART’s Impact

How do you measure BART's impact?Local businesses and residents benefit when they’re located near a transit station. With the BART’s Impact series, we
View a larger version of the interactive map by clicking here. Millbrae Station is a crucial gateway to the Peninsula and the point of convergence for
View a larger version of the interactive map by clicking here. Our first stop on this storytelling journey: Pleasant Hill/Contra Costa Centre Station.

Be the BART Rider of the Game

Congratulations to the BART Riders of the Game for the 2014 Oakland A's season! They each received: Two tickets to a selected Oakland baseball game A $50 BART ticket A ride around the field in the BARTmobile right before the game starts Acknowledgement on Diamond Vision during the game Past Winners Chris C

Submitting Invoices to BART

BART is in the process of implementing new financial accounting software which will change the way we receive and process Vendor invoices. A memo was sent to our Vendors explaining new invoice submission procedures which will go into effect February 28, 2011. Download the Vendor Memo (.pdf) Effective February

Take BART to Disneyland!

Behind the Magic-50 Years of Disneyland now at the Oakland Museum of California Take BART to Lake Merritt Station and you're just a block away from the Oakland Museum of California and the wonderful world of Behind the Magic-50 Years of Disneyland! Go behind the scenes to see how Walt Disney and his

BART Connects: BART is a local teen photographer's muse

Owen Flaherty at Glen Park Station

Owen Flaherty pictured at Glen Park Station.

Do you have a favorite BART memory or story to share? Email a short summary to BART Storyteller Michelle Robertson at [email protected], and she may follow up to schedule an interview. 

Most people see BART as a means to an end, a space you pass through to get where you need to go. Owen Flaherty sees BART as a portal to creativity.  

Flaherty, a local high school student, is an avid photographer. A few years ago, when he was in eighth grade, he got his first camera – a Panasonic Lumix. Initially, he didn’t have the time or motivation to get out in the world and start photographing. But in the summer after eighth grade, he found himself suddenly drawn to the art form. He credits BART for giving him a jolt of creative inspiration. In a sense, BART was his first muse -- the Beatrice to his Dante.  

Flaherty doesn’t remember the first time he set out to photograph the BART system – he's undertaken so many BART photo safaris now, they’ve started to blend together. But he does remember that initial moment when BART first “spoke” to him, like the daemon whispering in Dickinson’s ear.  

“BART was exactly what I needed to get started with my photography,” he said. “The people, the movement, the lighting, the station design...BART has everything you need to create a great photograph.”  

In the first two months of his photography journey, Flaherty estimated he took more than 2,000 photographs in the system, “and I’m a kid, of course, so I was only able to go out four days a week or so, after school and on weekends.”  

Both of Flaherty’s parents are creatives; his mom works at California College of the Arts and his dad is a graphic designer. Before photography, he had trouble finding his medium. Things like painting and drawing were inaccessible to him due to certain personal restraints, but when he discovered photography on a trip with a family friend, the art form unleashed something in him.  

“When he was photographing, I could see the expressions on his face, the thoughts in his head,” Flaherty said of the family friend, a professional photographer. "On that trip, I discovered a medium to express myself.”  

Owen Flaherty's photos of BART.
Owen Flaherty's photos of BART.
Owen Flaherty's photos of BART.
Owen Flaherty's photos of BART.
Owen Flaherty's photos of BART.

Above: A selection of Flaherty's BART photos. You can view more photos on his website

Before high school, Flaherty rarely took BART alone. He grew up in the Bay Area, but he used BART mostly for trips to San Francisco – to see the Nutcracker or go to the symphony, for example. Now he takes it pretty much every day, whether it’s going to school or hanging out with friends or, most frequently, to discover a new spot for taking photos. 

“There’s a transition point in your life when you’re a kid and you don’t have a car, but you’re old enough to do your own thing,” Flaherty said. “BART opened things up to me. It’s provided me the opportunity to access the entire Bay Area. It gave me freedom without having to pester my parents for a ride.” 

Flaherty estimates he’s visited 90 percent of BART stations and has traveled every line from end to end, except the Blue Line (though he’s ridden most of it).  

Often, Flaherty takes BART for “joyrides.” He doesn’t have a specific destination, but he hops aboard looking for zaps of inspiration and insight. “It’s the architecture, the people watching, all the nooks and crannies in the stations” that open  his mind and unleash his imagination, he said.

A lot of the time, Flaherty finds himself disembarking at Glen Park (his favorite station), Montgomery Street, or 24th Street Mission stations. He uses BART as a subject for his photographs, but also “to access undiscovered locations and different communities of people around the Bay Area.”   

“BART is what makes the Bay Area the Bay Area,” Flaherty said. “People know BART. Because of BART, when I’m traveling outside the state, I don’t say I’m from Albany, California, I say I’m from the Bay.”  

Flaherty is working toward obtaining his driver’s license now, but he says he will always prioritize traveling by BART.  

“I don’t want to be cooped up in a tin can on my own,” he said. “I want to be with other people, in a bigger tin can.”  

About the BART Connects Storytelling Series

The BART Connects storytelling series was launched in 2023 to showcase the real people who ride and rely on BART and illustrate the manifold ways the system affects their lives. You can follow the ongoing series at bart.gov/news. 

The series grew out of BART's Role in the Region Study, which demonstrates BART’s importance to the Bay Area’s mobility, cultural diversity, environmental and economic sustainability. We conducted a call for stories to hear from our riders and understand what BART means to them. The call was publicized on our website, social media, email blasts, and flyering at stations. More than 300 riders responded, and a selection of respondents who opted-in were interviewed for the BART Connects series. 

One Book, One BART: BART launches first book club for riders

Today, BART is proud to announce the launch of our first book club for riders, One Book, One BART. The official book selection is Hua Hsu’s “Stay True,” a bracing coming-of-age story set in 1990s Berkeley that recently won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Memoir. One of the undeniable benefits of taking BART is

BART lengthens trains during Try BART Week, Giants playoff games

Starting Monday and through the end of the week, BART will keep trains as long as possible to accommodate the thousands of additional riders the agency expects will be riding the system to cheer on the Giants during the playoffs or to win one of the $60,000 worth of valuable prizes during "Try BART Week."