
Announcing transitland-lib v1.0.0
We're pleased to announce the release of transitland-lib version 1.0.0. This software library, written in the
We're pleased to announce the release of transitland-lib version 1.0.0. This software library, written in the
Our engineering team has recently been refactoring some of the internals of the Transitland website. The main goal has been
Want to build your own display to show when a bus, train, or ferry next departs? Here's a fun Instructables how-to guide.
We'll be represented at the US Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., by Interline principal
Our recommendations to the US Federal Transit Administration regarding National Transit Database: Proposed Reporting Changes and Clarifications for Report Years 2025 and 2026.
We've refined Transitland's global map to emphasize where riders can access the most frequent transit service. Thanks to leaders at San Francisco's transit agency for informing this improvement.
We announced the multi-step deprecation of the Transitland v1 API in a blog post in 2019. The time has now come the Interline team to finally turn off the v1 Datastore API.
For the latest updates from Interline, you can now follow our blog using an RSS feed reader
We are adjusting access to Transitland's GTFS feed version archive to better balance concerns.
Since releasing the global transit map and v2 Vector Tiles API last year, we've added a variety of improvements in functionality and in rendering.
Interline is pleased to sign the newly drafted Mobility Data Interoperability Principles.
Here's one of our favorite new additions to Transitland v2: search across all of the operators, feed records, and routes in Transitland.