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JR Bus Kanto Company: Kantō region: JR Tokai Bus Company: Tōkai region: Central Japan Railway Company: West Japan JR Bus Company: Hokuriku region, Kansai region: West Japan Railway Company: Chugoku JR Bus Company: Chūgoku region: JR Shikoku Bus Company: Shikoku region: Shikoku Railway Company: JR Kyushu Bus Company: Kyūshū region: Kyushu ...
Airport and Aviation Services (Sri Lanka) Limited; The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd; B.C.C. Lanka Ltd; B.O.C. Bank; CTB BUS; Lynx BUS; Building Materials Corporation Ltd
The Neoplan Megaliner was a quad-axle double-decker luxury coach built by the German coach manufacturer Neoplan Bus GmbH between 1983 and 2000. Primarily intended for the European and Latin American market as the larger counterpart of the Neoplan Skyliner, it was built on lessons learnt from the experimental Neoplan Jumbocruiser.
A September 2009 view of the bus-only roadway near Bansawa-Onsenguch. Hakuhō Line (Japanese: 白棚線) is a JR Bus Kanto bus route. It connects Shirakawa Station in Shirakawa, Fukushima, with Iwaki-Tanakura Station, Higashishirakawa District. The route was originally a private railway, taken over by Japanese Government Railways in 1941.
Pages in category "Bus companies of Sri Lanka" ... History of Sri Lanka Transport Board This page was last edited on 25 October 2018, at 16:30 (UTC). ...
Kanto Railway is also a bus company with coverage in the south and central Ibaraki and east Chiba. The bus department occupies 70% of benefit of the Kanto Railway. The company has ten offices and the service distance is 2,788.8 km. The bus department used to have vast bus routes, but some were discontinued after proving unprofitable.
PASMO Card (reverse) Pasmo-compatible ticket gates at Otorii Station (Keikyu Line) KANACHU bus touch sensor for Suica and Pasmo IC cards next to the driver's seat and fare box Pasmo ( Japanese : パスモ , romanized : Pasumo ), stylized as PASMO , is a rechargeable contactless smart card electronic money system.
Roads account for about 93 percent of Sri Lanka's land transport. In 2022, there were 12,255.401 kilometres (7,615.153 mi) of A- and B-class roads and 312.586 kilometres (194.232 mi) of expressways. The main modes of transportation in Sri Lanka are bus, motorcycles and passenger cars (including taxi service).