bvg-route

Verified·Scanned 2/18/2026

Route planning for Berlin public transport (BVG) using the v6.bvg.transport.rest API. Use when the user asks for: (1) route suggestions between two addresses or stops, (2) live next-departure info for a stop, (3) arrival-time–based journey planning (arrive-by or depart-at). Supports outputting 2–3 options ranked by travel time, transfers, and walking, and returning step-by-step directions and refresh tokens for live updates.

from clawhub.ai·v6f9d78a·5.9 KB·0 installs
Scanned from 0.0.2 at 6f9d78a · Transparency log ↗
$ vett add clawhub.ai/jaysonsantos/bvg-route

BVG Route Planner Skill

Purpose

  • Provide concise, actionable public-transport directions in Berlin using the v6.bvg.transport.rest API.

When to use

  • User asks for directions between two places in Berlin (addresses, stop names, or coordinates).
  • User asks for next departures from a stop/station.
  • User requests to arrive by a specific time (arrive-by) or depart at a specific time.

Core behavior

  1. Resolve from and to into either stop IDs (preferred) or address/POI objects using GET /locations or /locations/nearby.
  2. Call GET /journeys with arrival or departure parameter as requested, request results=3 and stopovers=true to construct step-by-step legs.
  3. Format 2–3 options: show total travel time, number of transfers, walking time, and estimated departure/arrival times.
  4. Provide step-by-step instructions for the selected journey: walk to stop A (distance/time), take line X toward Y, get off at stop B (platform if available), final walk to destination.
  5. When appropriate, include the journey refreshToken and a GET /journeys/:ref refresh step to update realtime delays.
  6. For simple next-departure queries, use GET /stops/:id/departures with duration=20 (or configurable) and return the nearest 3 departures.

Outputs

  • Human-readable routes with departure times, transfers, walking distances, estimated arrival, and concise step list.
  • Machine-friendly JSON (optional) containing journey id, refreshToken, legs, and stop IDs for programmatic refreshes.

References

Examples (triggers)

  • "How do I get from Invalidenstraße 43 10115 to Leibnizstraße 62 by public transport?"
  • "When is the next U-Bahn from U Rosenthaler Platz?"
  • "Find journeys that arrive at Deutsche Oper by 17:50 tonight, fastest option first."

Notes for implementers

  • IBNR format (CRITICAL): The /journeys endpoint requires base IBNR codes only (6 digits), not the full ID with :: suffixes.
    • ❌ Wrong: de:11000:900110001::3 or de:11000:900110001
    • ✅ Correct: 900110001 (extract base 6-digit code from /stops results)
    • Process: Call /stops?query=... first, extract the 6-digit id from results, use that for /journeys.
  • URL encoding (CRITICAL): All query string parameters must be properly URL-encoded using urllib.parse.quote() or equivalent. Examples:
    • Space → %20
    • ö%C3%B6
    • ü%C3%BC
    • Ä%C3%84
    • Special chars like &, ?, # → their percent-encoded equivalents
    • Example: Schönhauser AlleeSch%C3%B6nhauser%20Allee
    • Every API call with address/stop name strings in query params must encode before building the URL.
  • Prefer stop/station IDs when calling /journeys (more reliable than fuzzy names): Use /stops?query=... to resolve names → base IBNR.
  • Use stopovers=true to build readable step lists; include entrances=true when walking-to-entrance accuracy is important.
  • Request results=3 then offer the top 2–3 to the user.
  • Handle timezone-aware ISO datetimes; default to Europe/Berlin if none provided.