OLD GOLD—Cambus: Getting from Point A to Point B for 40 years

UI student government hatched the idea, and pizza nurtured it. Today, 40 years later, Cambus is going strong, a student-operated transit service that provides nearly 4 million rides each year, according to its web site.

Starting modestly on Jan. 24, 1972, with a rented six-bus fleet, Cambus grew to 18 buses in just two years. Today the fleet is fully accessible for use by passengers with disabilities. In addition to the scheduled bus routes, Cambus also offers the Bionic Bus, a specialized curb-to-curb service offered on demand to those who are eligible.

Necessity, as they say, is the parent of invention. Iowa City’s bus service wasn’t meeting the growing needs of commuting students, and the idea of a campus-oriented transit service was inspired by growing traffic congestion and tightening parking spaces. The introduction of Cambus also coincided with completion of several bicycle pathways through the campus in late 1971. University leaders hailed both as steps toward better student-administration relationships at a time of student unrest. “[It shows that] students can see eye-to-eye” with administrators on some issues, student body vice president Mike Vance said at the time.

Following the 2008 flood, Cambus assumed even greater importance, linking the campus with temporary classroom sites for the art and music programs whose facilities were damaged or destroyed by the high water. In January 2009, for example, Cambus added a new shuttle serving the School of Music south of Burlington Street at Clinton.

Oh, about that pizza. The name “Cambus Shuttle” was the winning entry in a contest sponsored by the committee overseeing the new transit service. The winner, Rodney Speidel, a graduate student, won two free pizzas for submitting the winning name and design, according to the March 24, 1972, issue of The Daily Iowan. Some of the more colorful also-rans included: Winged Wheels, Whales on Wheels, Park and Take the Ark, Day Tripper, and Shuttle Bug. Old Gold supposes he could have lived with any of those brands but is pleased that Cambus won out.

And, um, make it pepperoni for Old Gold, please.

—David McCartney, University Archivist

March 24, 1972, Daily Iowan headline announcing the name of the new campus bus serviceMarch 24, 1972, Daily Iowan headline announcing the name of the new campus bus service [Subject Vertical File, Miscellaneous category, folder “Cambus” (RG 01.15.05), University Archives, Department of Special Collections, University of Iowa Libraries]

Cambus stops in front of Mayflower Hall on North Dubuque Street, 1981Cambus in front of Mayflower Hall on North Dubuque Street, 1981 [F.W. Kent Collection of Photographs, Buildings series, folder “Mayflower” (RG 30.01.01), University Archives, Department of Special Collections, University of Iowa Libraries]

Bookmark and Share

NEXT MONTH:
The class boulders of the University of Iowa’s Pentacrest

NEXT MONTH: The class boulders of the University of Iowa’s Pentacrest

Source—F.W. Kent Collection of Photographs, Scenes series, folder “Pentacrest” (RG 30.01.01), University Archives, Department of Special Collections, University of Iowa Libraries

If you’ve got memories to share, please send them to Spectator and we’ll run some next month.

Previous Old Gold editions: