University Medical Center (UTA Station) - Bus Connections

Bus Connections

  • UTA Route 21 (University of Utah, including Fort Douglas Station - Sugar House, including Sugar House Park - Salt Lake City, including Salt Lake County Government complex - South Salt Lake, including Central Pointe Station )
  • UTA Route 213 (University of Utah, including Fort Douglas, University South Campus, and Stadium stations - Sugar House - Millcreek - Murray - Midvale, including Midvale Center Station )
  • UTA Route 473 (Ogden, including Ogden Intermodal Transit Center and Weber State University - South Ogden - Uintah - South Weber, including Park and Ride lot at Highway 89 and South Weber Drive - Fruit Heights, including UDOT's Park and Ride lot at 300 North & Country Way - Farmington, including Farmington Station - Downtown Salt Lake City, including Library, Trolley, and 900 East & 400 South stations - University of Utah, including Stadium, University South Campus, and Fort Douglas stations and University Medical Center )
  • UTA Route 902 (Downtown Salt Lake City, including Salt Lake Central Station - University Medical Center - Park City, including Jeremy Ranch, Canyons Transit Hub, Park City Mountain Resort, Park City Transit Center, and Dear Valley Resort)
    Seasonal bus with reduced schedule in non-ski season - this route is part of PC-SLC Connect and has limited stops

Read more about this topic:  University Medical Center (UTA Station)

Famous quotes containing the words bus and/or connections:

    There was an old man from Darjeeling
    Who got on a bus bound for Ealing.
    It said at the door,
    “Please don’t spit on the floor,”
    So he carefully spat on the ceiling.
    Anonymous.

    ... feminism is a political term and it must be recognized as such: it is political in women’s terms. What are these terms? Essentially it means making connections: between personal power and economic power, between domestic oppression and labor exploitation, between plants and chemicals, feelings and theories; it means making connections between our inside worlds and the outside world.
    Anica Vesel Mander, U.S. author and feminist, and Anne Kent Rush (b. 1945)