Ride Gwinnett

Ride Gwinnett
Founded2000
Headquarters466 West Crogan St, Suite 410 Lawrenceville, GA 30046
Service areaGwinnett County
Service typeLocal bus, paratransit, and microtransit
Routes12
HubsGwinnett Place Transit Center
Indian Trail Park & Ride
I-985 Park & Ride
Sugarloaf Mills Park & Ride
StationsDoraville station
Indian Creek station
Fleet(43) MCI D4500, (38) Gillig Low Floor, Ford Transit Connect Vans
Daily ridershipAbout 5000 rides per day in 2016
Fuel typeDiesel
OperatorTransdev
Websitewww.ridegwinnett.com

Ride Gwinnett (formerly known as Gwinnett County Transit or GCT prior to 2023) is the bus public transit system in Gwinnett County, Georgia, United States, one of metro Atlanta's three most populous suburban counties. It was formed in 2000, with express buses starting in November 2001 and local buses in November 2002.

Routes connect to the most populated areas of the county, including Norcross and Lawrenceville. Xpress services are available to Atlanta, connecting with MARTA at the Doraville, Civic Center, and Five Points stations. Transfers are free between MARTA and Ride Gwinnett, with use of a Breeze Card or ticket.[1]

History

Along with Cobb, Gwinnett voted against joining MARTA in 1971 and thus was left out of the system.[2] In 1987, the Gwinnett County Commission began studying the construction of a privately-run commuter rail line to ease traffic.[3] However, in 1989, the plan was revised to utilize buses instead.[4] Bus service began on November 5, 2001.[5] The Gwinnett Place Community Improvement District and MARTA were seeking alternative, such as light rail to Gwinnett through the Gwinnett Place area.

In 2015, Gwinnett County Transit was investigated for overcharging some patrons of the GRTA Xpress bus routes who used Breeze Cards to pay. GRTA acknowledged the issue and advised patrons to purchase multiple Breeze Cards (one for each type of bus or rail fare) to pay transit fares and record transfers between the GRTA, CobbLinc, and MARTA transit systems.[6][7]

In September 2018, MARTA's board of directors and the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners gave conditional approval to an agreement which would see the county to contract with MARTA for the operations of the service. This included county designed and built projects, significantly expanding bus service in the county and clearing the way for a long-sought-after extension of MARTA's rail system into the county from its current terminus at Doraville station.[8] However, the county referendum for the contract with MARTA and one-cent sales tax to fund the projects failed on March 19, 2019.[9]

In July 2020, the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners called for another transit referendum, this time through the House Bill 930/ATL mechanism. Projects would have been designed, built and operated all by Gwinnett County. The referendum failed on the November ballot with a final vote total of 198,514 for yes and 199,527 voting no.[10]

In January 2023, Gwinnett County Transit officially changed its name to Ride Gwinnett.[11]

In September 2023, Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a new transit plan which focused heavily on microtransit zones, simpler local routes, and direct airport rides. This plan notably does not include any rail components or MARTA expansion into the county.[12] On June 4, 2024, the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners approved, 4-1, another transit referendum to be placed on the ballot for the November 5, 2024 General Election. It would impose a one percent sales tax for 30 years, funding up to 75 projects from the 2023 transit plan, and would shift all existing operational expenses off of property taxes onto the new sales tax.[13] The referendum failed to pass 47-53%.[14]

Operation

Ride Gwinnett allows payment via Breeze Cards, tickets & passes, the Breeze Mobile 2.0 app, cash/card with fareboxes equipped on all buses, and the Ride Gwinnett app for paratransit users.[1]

Routes

Ride Gwinnett has 9 local bus routes. Gwinnett Place Transit Center is a transfer point for local routes; 10A/10B, 25, 30, and 40.

Route Terminals Major streets traveled Service notes
10A Doraville

Doraville station

Lawrenceville

Sugarloaf Mills Park and Ride

Buford Highway, Satellite Boulevard
  • Trips alternate between running via Buford Highway/North Berkeley Lake Road (10B) or Beaver Ruin Road/Satellite Boulevard (10A)
10B
20 Norcross

Beaver Ruin Road & Price Place

New Peachtree Road, Button Gwinnett Drive, Brook Hollow Parkway, Graves Road, Singleton Road, Indian Trail-Lilburn Road
25 Stone Mountain

Rockbridge Road @ Stonebridge

Duluth

Gwinnett Transit Center

Five Forks Trickum Road, Killian Hill Road, Pleasant Hill Road
  • Weekdays only
30 Gwinnett Village

Live Oak Parkway & Thompson Parkway

Jimmy Carter Boulevard, Lawrenceville Highway, Burns Road, Shackleford Road
35 Doraville

Doraville station

Norcross

Peachtree Parkway @ The Forum

New Peachtree Road, Best Friend Road, Jimmy Carter Boulevard
40 Duluth

Gwinnett Transit Center

Lawrenceville

Sugarloaf Parkway & Five Forks Trickum Road

Old Norcross Road
45 Lawrenceville

Sugarloaf Mills Park and Ride

Lawrenceville

Gwinnett Medical Resource Center

Atkinson Road, Lakes Parkway, Collins Hill Road
50 Lawrenceville

Old Peachtree Road @ Publix

Satellite Boulevard, Buford Highway, North Brown Road
70 DeKalb County

Indian Creek station

Snellville

Wisteria Drive @ Main Street

Memorial Drive, US-78 Stone Mountain Freeway

Incidents

  • On June 11, 2024, a Gwinnett County Transit bus was hijacked in downtown Atlanta by 39-year-old Joseph Grier, leading to a fatal, high-speed chase. Grier shot and killed a passenger, before forcing the driver to drive toward DeKalb County with 17 people on board. The incident ended when police immobilized the bus in Stone Mountain.[15][16]

References

  1. ^ a b "Fare Policy and Prices". Gwinnett. Retrieved March 11, 2026.
  2. ^ Kruse, Kevin M. (14 August 2019). "How Segregation Caused Your Traffic Jam". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Laccetti, Susan (March 11, 1987). "Gwinnett to consider plan for commuter trains on railroad lines". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. NewsBank 0EB7C29974A629CA.
  4. ^ Williams, Dick (March 31, 1989). "Gwinnett Moves To The Buses". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. pp. A22. NewsBank 0EB7C3C7C5C2FBDF.
  5. ^ "County's transit system rolls today". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. November 5, 2001. pp. J1. NewsBank 0EF9941F4B09ECC5.
  6. ^ Russell, Dale (November 18, 2015). I-Team: Marta Breeze Card Overcharging (Video). Fox 5 Atlanta. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021 – via YouTube.
  7. ^ Russell, Dale (December 29, 2015). I-Team: More Commuters Overcharged Using MARTA Breeze Card (Video). Fox 5 Atlanta. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021 – via YouTube.
  8. ^ Estep, Tyler (September 6, 2018). "MARTA board approves historic Gwinnett contract". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  9. ^ Huddleston, Dave; Gehlbach, Steve (March 19, 2019). "Special Election: Gwinnett MARTA referendum fails". WSB-TV. Retrieved March 11, 2026.
  10. ^ Pendered, David (November 15, 2020). "Gwinnett County transit: Voters objected to heavy rail, rejected referendum". SaportaReport. Retrieved February 20, 2026.
  11. ^ "Gwinnett County transit system re-branded to 'Ride Gwinnett'". Fox 5 Atlanta. January 15, 2023.
  12. ^ Gwinnett County Government (September 19, 2023). "Gwinnett County official meeting minutes" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Transit Referendum". Gwinnett. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
  14. ^ Matt, Johnson (November 6, 2024). "Gwinnett voters reject $17 billion transit plan. What may have sunk the proposed overhaul". WSB-TV. Retrieved February 20, 2026.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ "Gwinnett County Transit Bus hijacking: Man killed on bus identified". Fox 5 Atlanta. June 11, 2024. Retrieved March 11, 2026.
  16. ^ Moore, Jessica; Jackson, Reeves (June 11, 2024). "Passenger killed after man hijacks Gwinnett transit bus in Atlanta, leads officers on chaotic chase: APD". 11 Alive. Retrieved March 11, 2026.