the newest bus wrap is applied to a coach in the Campus-to-Campus Bus garage in May 2026

Campus-to-Campus Bus Designs Meld Art and Transit

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By Joe Wilensky

Photography & videography by Jason Koski

You might spot it on the highway—breezing along Route 81 near Scranton or Route 80 in New Jersey, or rolling through the Lincoln Tunnel into NYC. It’s occasionally at rest, pausing to pick up or drop off passengers on the Hill or in Manhattan.

But wherever you may see it, the Campus-to-Campus Bus evokes your alma mater. It sports not just carnelian red and the University insignia, but panoramic views of the Upstate and Downstate campuses—a picturesque traveling postcard.

view of the Campus-to-Campus bus with its first wrap outside Grand Central Terminal in New York City
The debut wrap at Grand Central Terminal in 2011 ...
View of a Campus-to-Campus Bus in 2013 at the Sage Hall stop on the Ithaca campus
... and a 2013 design outside Sage Hall.

Cornell launched the service (nicknamed C2C) in 2004, offering nonstop daily routes between the Ithaca campus and NYC, complete with wi-fi and comfortable seating.

Today, the fleet includes six 32-passenger buses that make 15 round trips weekly, with a reduced schedule in summer.

The fleet includes six 32-passenger buses that make 15 round trips weekly, with a reduced schedule in summer.

The service is available to the public, though Cornell-affiliated riders pay a lower fare. In the 2026 fiscal year, C2C tallied more than 30,000 passenger trips.

In addition to three stops on the Hill, the bus makes two in Manhattan: the Cornell Club in Midtown, and Weill Cornell Medicine on the Far East Side.

A timelapse of the newest design being applied.

The coaches initially sported just the C2C logo, but beginning in 2010, the University began giving them vinyl photographic wraps that transform them into stunning billboards, splashing views across the sides of the 45-foot-long vehicles.

The wraps are printed on a specialized 3M product that’s applied at the C2C facility just off campus. A wrap typically lasts a bus’s entire service life—about seven years and 400,000–500,000 miles—before it’s retired, says Billy Meade, C2C’s fleet manager.

Installation typically takes place over the course of two or three days, as pieces of the 1,200-square-foot wrap are carefully fitted to the bus’s sides and contours, and trimmed around ports and windows.

a Campus-to-Campus Bus, pictured in 2009, before they began using the wraps
Joe Wilensky / Cornell University
The buses once sported just a logo.

Red panels and University branding are added to the front and rear. The wrap is breathable, Meade notes, so air pockets can be eliminated during application.

“You can use heat to manipulate it to go around the corners, make it stretch a bit,” he says. “It’s tacky, so if you make a mistake, you can pull it away and rework the area.”

A wrap typically lasts a bus’s entire service life—about seven years and 400,000–500,000 miles.

Using images taken by the University’s photographers, the vibrant designs have typically juxtaposed a Big Apple view with similar Ithaca campus perspective.

Early versions featured both Upstate and Downstate on each side—with a visual transition, such as the branches of an Arts Quad tree fading into the deck of the Brooklyn Bridge—while more recent ones have put Ithaca on one side and NYC on the other.

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the ice resurfacer at Lynah Rink is pictured with a miniature version of the bus wrap the Campus-to-Campus Bus sports during the University’s sesquicentennial year in 2014–15
Cornell Athletics
In 2015, the C2C got a “mini-me”: a Lynah ice resurfacer.

The newest design shows the Midtown skyline rising behind autumnal trees, while the opposite side features a similarly seasonal slice of the Arts Quad and Goldwin Smith.

“Cornellians love seeing the buses, taking photos of them, and recognizing some of the buildings,” Meade says. “As soon as people see it, they know it’s the Cornell Campus-to-Campus Bus.”

Illustrations by Matt Fondeur, who also photographed the Botanic Gardens (seventh from top); all other photos by Jason Koski.

a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap design showing a view of the Cornell Tech campus at dusk on one side and a view of the Ag Quad on the other

The Tech campus and Queensboro Bridge (top) and the Ag Quad.


a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap design showing the Weill Cornell Medicine campus on one side and a Minns Garden and Weill Hall view from Ithaca on the other

Weill Cornell Medicine (top) and Weill Hall seen through Minns Garden.


a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap design showing an interior study area view from the Cornell Tech campus and its window views on one side and an interior view of the Ithaca campus's Law Library on the other

A Tech space (top) and the Law Library.


a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap design showing the Cornell Botanic Gardens on one side and a Manhattan skyline and river view on the other

The Botanic Gardens (top) and Manhattan and the East River as viewed from Roosevelt Island.


a Campus-to-Campus bus wrap design showing a Brooklyn Bridge and NYC skyline view on one side and a Bailey Hall and plaza view on the other

The Brooklyn Bridge (top) and Bailey Hall.

Top: The latest wrap design is applied.

Published June 30, 2026


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