Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Transit

Where Are the Gaps in Your Transit System?

Where should your city aim to add transit service? The places where more buses and trains will be most useful are areas where lots of people live or work, but there's not enough service to meet the demand.

A new data tool from the Center for Neighborhood Technology helps pinpoint these locations in cities around the U.S. The "Gap Finder" -- an extension of CNT's All Transit database -- overlays demographic data and transit schedule information on maps that highlight where more people would ride transit if service levels were higher.

The transit gaps mapped by CNT are not to be confused with "transit deserts" -- areas with no transit at all. Areas with some transit service may still not have nearly enough to adequately serve the people who live or work there, while areas without any service may be so spread out that fixed-route transit won't do much good.

"The goal is to understand where transit need is being met" and where it's not, said Zak Accuardi of TransitCenter, which funded CNT's work.

These gaps in service are highlighted in red on CNT's map, and areas where transit service is aligned with current demand are in blue. Other areas are too suburban or rural for fixed-route transit services to work well.

Los Angeles
Los Angeles
false

Some transit gaps reflect the high concentration of people and jobs in relation to transit service levels. That's the case in Hoboken and Jersey City, the cities directly across the Hudson River from Lower Manhattan.

"These are neighborhoods that are super dense," said Accuardi. "It’s basically like brownstones. There’s also a lot of jobs in both Hoboken and Jersey City. The volume of transit service that folks there have access to is pretty good compared to the rest of the country. There’s a lot of bus routes operated largely by New Jersey Transit there. For most people in those areas, it’s still really not enough."

jersey city
false

CNT quantifies the share of each city's population living in neighborhoods without adequate transit service. About 42 percent of Miami residents live in areas that qualify as transit gaps, while in Houston the figure is 55 percent:

houston
false

The transit gap tool is intended to help local advocates and policy makers think through how they want to improve service. Red areas on the maps should stand out as candidates for increasing the frequency of train and bus service.

For a few reasons, though, the maps shouldn't be viewed as the last word in assessing transit needs, Accuardi says.

The transit data the maps are based on comes from posted schedules, not real time data. So routes where agencies run a lot of buses but service is slow or unreliable because of traffic congestion won't get flagged, for instance. Nor do the maps account for barriers to walkability like highways that may make dense areas appear more well-suited for transit than they really are.

"The tool helps to identify areas that are of interest," said Accuardi. If you want to know where adding bus or train service will help the most people, mapping the transit gaps is an excellent starting point.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Cough, Cough: Adams Administration Hands Largest Ever Idling Law Exemption to NJ Charter Bus Company

Academy Bus Lines requested the exemption — the largest in DEP's history — after receiving more than $500,000 in idling violations. But there is some good news.

December 19, 2025

Hochul Will Veto Controversial Bill Mandating Two Operators on Most Subway Trains

The veto from Hochul came over the concerns of organized labor who saw the legislation as a way to make subway travel safer.

December 19, 2025

Pedestrian Killed by Hit-and-Run Driver on Crowded Lower East Side Street

The driver kept going. EMTs took the badly injured woman to Bellevue Hospital, where she died.

December 19, 2025

NJ Legislature Poised to Pass Victim-Blaming E-Bike Restrictions

An e-bike registration bill is speeding through the New Jersey Legislature after several crashes in which drivers killed young cyclists.

December 19, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: Streets Master Plan Edition

Speaker Adrienne Adams explains why she didn't bother holding Mayor Adams accountable for following the law. Plus other news.

December 19, 2025

Streetsblog’s ‘Car-Free Carolers’ Bring the Joy, Mirth and Ho-Ho-Hope to this Holiday Season

Streetsblog's singers are back, belting out their parody classics to make a serious point: New York's roadways don't have to be dangerous places for kids and lungs, but can be joyous spaces for people to walk around, shop, eat or just ... hang out.

December 18, 2025
See all posts