Jerusalem - By any standard, Jerusalem’s first direct bus route to Ben–Gurion Airport represents a public transportation victory, if not a revolution, for the capital’s 850,000 inhabitants.

For decades, millions of residents and tourists were forced to rely on expensive taxis, indirect bus and train routes, or communal van rides known as sheruts, to get to and from the ever-elusive international hub, located outside of Tel Aviv.

On a rainy Tuesday, the Afikim Bus Company, aided by the Transportation Ministry, launched its first fleet of buses, which will run hourly in each direction, 24-hours a day, except for Shabbat, at a cost of NIS 16.

On Fridays, the line will run until 2 p.m., and resume service Saturday at 7 p.m.

The white and green No. 485 buses will travel from Ruppin Boulevard, down Jaffa Road towards the Central Bus Station, before taking Route 1 and making stops at the Hemed and Shoresh Interchanges, then driving directly to the airport’s Terminals 1 and 3.

According to Itamar Bernstein, 25, who waited with his wife Liron, 24, for her first ride at a Jaffa Road stop, some 50 meters east of the Central Bus Station, the service is long overdue.

“It’s the first time that a bus is going directly to Terminal 3 from the capital, and it should have been here for years already,” said Itamar, who works as a security guard. “I used to take Nesher [sherut service] for nearly NIS 70, or had to go to the bus station and then catch a different bus to Terminal 1, but [it didn’t go to] Terminal 3.”

While Itamar lauded the service for improving the quality of life for residents and tourists hoping to get to Ben Gurion Airport in a timely and cost-effective manner, he nonetheless said he remains incredulous that the initiative took so many years to go into effect.

“This [service] is a basic necessity,” he said. “This is not some random place – it’s the...read more at JPost