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In the future, routes will be organized by a color-coded, letter system. RELATED: SEPTA's $2.6B budget plan includes improvements to safety and services SEPTA says this will eliminate language ...
SEPTA is taking steps toward simplifying its ... "The redesign aims to maintain familiarity where appropriate, such as retaining the color green for the West Philly trolleys while introducing ...
SEPTA has been trumpeting this for months now ... Signs are also being installed on the rail transit routes, which will all be color-coded as well. The old names/route numbers and new letters ...
SEPTA wants to add some color to your trip. The authority is preparing to release a new transit map that combines subway, bus, regional rail — even the PATCO lines — all in one place. It’ll also ...
SEPTA will associate each line with a color and a letter. The shortcuts include the Market Frankford Line as the letter "L." "The Market Frankford Line already uses blue," Powers said ...
each route will be identified by a new color and a single letter. They hope this will make it easier to navigate for people with disabilities and those who don't speak English. But SEPTA wants the ...
A SEPTA rider passes through the turnstile at the 8th and Market ... criminologists have discredited the strategy for having a disparate impact on low-income people of color while failing to reduce ...
The Metro Wayfinding System that incorporates color-coding and revised language, such as "L" representing the Market-Frankford Line, that SEPTA began rolling out last year will be reflected in ...