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Students: What does your school do to promote sustainable transportation?

post #1 of 25
Thread Starter 
Hey all, I'm doing some volunteer work and I've been asked to put together a list of schools and what they do to promote Earth-friendly transportation.

For example, my alma mater had a mandatory U-Pass, which was included in our student tuition fees and gave every student unlimited access to public transit. I've also read about a few campuses (U of Colorado at Boulder, for example) that have really neat initiatives around encouraging cycling.

If your school does something cool that encourages students and staff to bus, train, cycle, carpool, or walk to school, can you tell me what it is, the name of the school, and if you have time, provide a URL?

Thanks!
post #2 of 25
School: Iowa State University, Iowa, USA
Program: Free unlimited bus service via Cyride, 12 hybrid buses coming this year
post #3 of 25
my school has a pretty substantial green initiative program which does include transportation. Everything should be on this site... UB Green
post #4 of 25
U of Colo Boulder allowed for unlimited rides on the bus system in and around the Boulder/Denver metro. Worked out really nicely for me as a student out there. I went 3-4 months on one tank of gas in a regular sedan. The bus pass was included in our semester dues.

In addition, the Town of Boulder had tons of interconnected bike paths and bike routes that allowed for the use of bikes to virtually everywhere.
post #5 of 25
Mandatory 20 minutes walk up a hill and 10-15 minutes to look for parking along with a good transportation system is pretty much like promoting taking the subway.
post #6 of 25
At Seattle University, we can check out buss passes for free, whenever.
post #7 of 25
At the University of Minnesota Duluth, public transit(buses) are free with your student ID. Here is a link to a short note on the program. The DTA(public transit in Duluth) also is beginning to phase in some hybrid buses.
post #8 of 25
DePaul University has a mandatory U-Pass as well, and the CTA is pretty good.

I usually take the Metra (medium distance commuter rail) to downtown, walk to the El (city train), and then take that and walk the rest of the way.
post #9 of 25
Washington State University, like many mentioned here, includes a bus pass in the mandatory fees.

Other than that, I'm not too sure. I believe there are some carpooling programs, but the school is really the center of town and there are lots of housing options on or really close to campus.
post #10 of 25
Thread Starter 
Neat stuff, thanks folks and keep 'em coming. Here's an interesting article in the NY Times about a couple of schools that provide free bikes to freshmen if they sign a form saying they'll never drive a car on campus: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/20/ed...n/20bikes.html
post #11 of 25
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shark50521 View Post
At the University of Minnesota Duluth, public transit(buses) are free with your student ID. Here is a link to a short note on the program. The DTA(public transit in Duluth) also is beginning to phase in some hybrid buses.
I'd like to add that there is a ride board where students can post riders wanted or driver wanted, a car pool type situation. I used it a few times when I was a student at UMD.
post #12 of 25
At Mississippi State we have a shuttle service that takes us around campus. The shuttles also go out to the bars on the weekends. Also we have a couple of hundred free bikes to ride around campus with. That's about it really.
post #13 of 25
When I went to University of Iowa we had the Cambus routes that went all around campus, and the Iowa City buses too.
post #14 of 25
buses that don't make you leave half way through the day! those exist?
post #15 of 25
Just a 1000$ parking pass - makes it seem silly to drive.
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