Heated Bus Shelters

Heated bus shelters are essential on routes where waits exceed 10 minutes and outdoor temperatures drop below -15 °C — which is most of Canada from November…

Heated bus shelters are essential on routes where waits exceed 10 minutes and outdoor temperatures drop below -15 °C — which is most of Canada from November through March. BusShelters.ca heated shelters use radiant ceiling panels rated 800–2400 W with a wall-mounted thermostat and PIR motion sensor that runs the heat only when a rider is present and dims to standby when empty.

The heater is mounted to an insulated ceiling cassette to cut downward radiant losses and protect the heating element from condensation. Wall and roof glazing is double-glazed insulating glass unit (IGU) with argon fill and low-E coating, giving a U-value of 1.4 W/m²K versus 5.7 for single-pane — about 75% less heat loss through the walls. The bench can be specified with 250–400 W radiant heating in the seat surface, which is a Quebec-popular feature for elderly transit users.

Heated shelters require a 240 V single-phase service drop with a 15 A or 20 A circuit, GFCI-protected. We provide the electrical schedule, panel schedule, and stamped electrical-on-utility-pole diagram for the AHJ review. For sites without grid access, see our solar-heated combo which uses a 1500 W heater on a 600 Ah / 48 V battery — runs about 4 hours per day at -20 °C, sized for peak commute windows.

Heated shelters are most often specified by STM (Montréal), OC Transpo (Ottawa), Edmonton Transit, Winnipeg Transit, Saskatoon Transit, hospital transit nodes, and university campuses. Lead time is 8–12 weeks. Pricing adds $3,000–$7,000 to the standard structure depending on heater wattage, bench heat option, and IGU spec.

Installation, energy use, and warranty

Heated-shelter installation is 3–5 working days including the electrical service drop, panel commissioning, and thermostat / PIR-sensor calibration. Energy consumption depends heavily on duty cycle: a 1500 W heater running 8 hours per day during a 5-month Canadian winter at PIR-driven 40% duty cycle uses about 720 kWh per shelter per season — at the typical commercial rate of $0.13/kWh that's $94 per shelter per winter. Smart-thermostat shelters cut this 30–45% by tightening the rider-presence window. Warranty is 10 years on the structure, 8 years on the IGU (sealed-unit failure), 3 years on the heater element, 5 years on the thermostat / PIR control, and 2 years on the bench heat. Annual maintenance is a fall pre-season heater test and gasket inspection — typically $250–$500 per shelter per year, plus winter call-out if the heater faults.

What's Included

800–2400 W radiant ceiling panel sized to shelter footprint and design temperature
Insulated ceiling cassette + double-glazed argon-filled IGU walls (U=1.4 W/m²K)
PIR motion sensor and wall thermostat — heat only when rider present, 20% standby
Optional 250–400 W heated bench surface (popular for STM and AODA-elderly specifications)
240 V single-phase, 15A/20A GFCI circuit; full electrical drawings for AHJ review
Solar-heated combo available: 1500 W on 600 Ah / 48 V battery, ~4 hr/day at -20 °C
Operates to -45 °C with cold-rated gaskets and ceramic-element heaters
Smart-thermostat option with cellular telemetry for fleet-wide energy reporting

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In Canada, standard freestanding bus shelters typically run **$6,500–$14,000** for the structure plus **$2,500–$6,000** for installation, including footings and electrical. Solar-powered units add **$1,500–$3,500**, and heated shelters add **$3,000–$7,000** depending on heater wattage and bench heat. Custom architectural shelters for heritage districts or campuses can reach **$25,000–$60,000+**. Volume orders of 20+ units typically reduce per-unit pricing by 15–25%. Lifecycle cost is the better lens than first-cost: a stamped-engineered shelter with a 10-year structural warranty and a 48-hour parts SLA typically delivers a **15–18 year service life** on the structure and **5–8 years** on glazing and benches before refresh, which works out to roughly **$1,000–$1,800 per shelter per year** total cost of ownership including maintenance. Off-grid solar and heated configurations carry a higher first-cost but eliminate trenched-electrical and ongoing utility charges, which on rural sites pays back inside 6 years.

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