With its unique geography, the Bay Area boasts an unconventional public transport system. The network includes historic cable cars, the underground BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit), Caltrain, Muni, Amtrak service from Oakland, and the Golden Gate and San Francisco Bay Ferries. In 2017, the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit (SMART) joined the mix, linking Larkspur with the Sonoma County Airport. Weaving through Northern California’s renowned wine region — an area famous for its pinot noir and chardonnay production, most of which is cultivated on small, family-run farms — this is the first time San Francisco has been directly connected to Sonoma County by a seamless public transport route. In classic Bay Area fashion, the project also features a recreational bike and walking path alongside the tracks.
The SMART train offers a safe, reliable alternative to Bay Area traffic while passing through some of Northern California’s most scenic landscapes. It runs 45 miles between Larkspur, San Rafael, Novato, Petaluma, Cotati, and Santa Rosa, ending at the Sonoma County Airport. The recreational pathway parallel to the tracks forms the southern portion of the Great Redwood Trail, a 307-mile route that will eventually connect San Francisco and Humboldt Bay.
Phase one of the SMART project was completed in 2017. The addition of the Larkspur station in 2019 bridged an important public transport gap between the Golden Gate Ferry Terminal (San Francisco’s iconic waterfront marketplace) and Sonoma County, effectively integrating the North Bay into a cohesive transportation network. A second phase of the SMART project is expected to extend the line from 45 to 70 miles, adding new stops in Windsor, Cloverdale, and Healdsburg, an underrated California wine town reminiscent of Tuscany.
Everything you need to know about traveling on the SMART train
The SMART train runs parallel to Highway 101 — one of San Francisco’s two main highways that travels through the city, across the Golden Gate Bridge, and through Marin County, ultimately linking Los Angeles with Washington state. This road is notorious for heavy traffic, which is no surprise considering San Francisco’s population of over 840,000 people and the 200,000-plus commuters traveling to work in the city every day…