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These stations were served by Greyhound Canada, the Canadian subsidiary of Greyhound Lines, which ceased operations on May 13, 2021. Ajax Plaza Bus Terminal, Ajax, Ontario; Barrie Bus Terminal, Barrie, Ontario; Belleville Transit Terminal, Belleville, Ontario; Downtown Brampton Terminal, Brampton, Ontario; Edmonton station, Edmonton, Alberta
Greyhound Canada also operated a number of services to the United States, but through services to large US cities were provided by the US-based Greyhound Lines. [49] Most routes operated by Greyhound Canada were to border cities, such as Buffalo , and Detroit , with service further into the US provided by Greyhound Lines.
In 1936, already the largest bus carrier in the United States, Greyhound began taking delivery of 306 new buses. [16] In 1941, the company acquired Greyhound Canada. [15] Between 1937 and 1945, Greyhound built many new stations and acquired new buses in the period in the late Art Deco style known as Streamline Moderne.
Ottawa Central Station was the main inter-city bus station in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was located 1.5 km south of downtown Ottawa in the Centretown neighbourhood and served buses from Greyhound Canada , Ontario Northland and Autobus Gatineau . [ 1 ]
Union Station Bus Terminal provides regional and long-distance bus services. As of 2023, seven carriers were using the terminal: GO Transit, Ontario Northland, FlixBus, Greyhound USA, Megabus/Coach Canada, Red Arrow and Rider Express, with GO Transit accounting for approximately 60% of trips arriving or departing from the station. [42]
It is located on the block between Chatham Street and Pitt Street on the east side of Church Street in downtown Windsor, Ontario, Canada. [2] Transit Windsor redeveloped its downtown transit terminal through a public-private partnership involving federal, provincial and local governments and Greyhound Canada. The new bus station, built at a ...
A bus sits at the Greyhound station, in El Paso, Texas, in 2021. Greyhound stations are closing across the country, threatening the intercity bus system. - Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters
The TTC managed the station directly until July 8, 2012, when it was leased out in its entirety to bus lines Coach Canada and Greyhound Canada for CA$1.2 million annually, in what was initially a five-year contract. As a result, the coach lines took over the operational control of the terminal and opened their own ticket booths, where ...