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The planned Belfast Rapid Transit network was a set of three rapid transit routes planned for the city, including: EWAY as the eastern arm, with WWAY as the western arm, running 6-mile (10 km) to Dunmurry in County Antrim, [33] a short northeastern arm, the 1.7-mile (2.7 km) CITI route to the Catalyst Inc via the Titanic Quarter, and a shared 1 ...
An Ulsterbus Volvo B7R at former Europa Buscentre in October 2023. Ulsterbus is responsible for most of the bus services in Northern Ireland.They operate around 20 bus stations which include: Armagh, Antrim, Lisburn, Bangor, Newtownards, Downpatrick, Newry, Craigavon, Dungannon, Omagh, Enniskillen, Derry, Coleraine, Ballymena, Magherafelt, Larne and Newcastle and others within Belfast and ...
Alexander Dennis Enviro300 bodied Volvo B7RLE in Derriaghy in February 2024. Ulsterbus is responsible for most of the province-wide bus services in Northern Ireland. It operates 1,100 buses and twenty-two bus stations, several of which, such as those at Belfast Grand Central and Bangor, form integrated transport interchanges with Northern Ireland Railways stations.
The area is serviced by the 9B/9C Metro bus, which travels to and from Belfast city centre via Finnis Drive and Lisburn Road, [28] [29] and by the 8A (City Centre-Stranmillis-Malone), [30] 8B (City Centre-Malone), [31] 8C/8D (City Centre-Malone-Ladybrook) [32] [33] routes, which all have stops at nearby Dub Lane on Upper Malone Road.
A Citybus Bristol RE branded for the Citylink service on Great Victoria Street, 1976.. Bus services began in Belfast under the Belfast Corporation Transport Department. For a time in the early 1950s, these buses ran alongside both the tram and trolleybus networks run by the corporation until these networks were eventually abandoned, [1] and like most mainland operators, Belfast Corporation ran ...
The city has two airports: The Belfast International Airport offers domestic, European and transatlantic flights and is located north of the city, near Lough Neagh while the George Best Belfast City Airport is closer to the city centre, adjacent to Belfast Lough. In 2005, Belfast International Airport was the 11th busiest commercial airport in ...
Belfast Grand Central station (originally the Belfast Transport Hub [6]) is a railway and bus station in the city centre of Belfast, Northern Ireland. It has replaced Great Victoria Street railway station and the Europa Buscentre .
In 1954 seven 6-coach diesel units were put on the Belfast-Bangor line, making it the first completely dieselised passenger service in Ireland. [ 3 ] In 1955 the UTA closed the (by then freight-only) branches to Cookstown and Limavady, and the line between Castlewellan and Newcastle, County Down (which was still worked by the GNR).