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Introduced by NJ Transit in 2010 as a variant of the 139; Howell; 133 Old Bridge: Route 34 or Route 516: Weekday peak hour service only (AM to New York, PM to Old Bridge) Introduced by NJ Transit in 1983 as a variant of the 139; Service to Marlboro and Freehold split off into the 135 in 1991; Howell; 135 Freehold Center: Matawan Avenue, Route 79
Bridge Plaza is a busy transit hub served by several bus lines, though there is no centralized bus station or stop. Routes operated by NJ Transit primarily connect Bergen, Hudson, and Passaic counties with Manhattan, while Rockland Coaches connect Bergen and Rockland counties with Manhattan. mostly terminating at the George Washington Bridge Bus Station or Port Authority Bus Terminal.
Route 4, New Bridge Road, Reichelt Road (alternate trips), Tryon Avenue, Fort Lee Road Formerly the B6 East Bergen route and the B10 route. Section between Bergen CC and The Outlets at Bergen Town Center was the B10 route before it was combined with the B6. 758 Passaic Bus Terminal: Paramus Park
A 60-year-old man was struck and killed by a New Jersey Transit bus in Fort Lee Wednesday morning. According to NJ Transit, the crash occurred at 5:20 a.m. at the intersection of Lemoine Avenue ...
3 Fort Lee Leonia: part of the 755 bus route 5 Englewood Tenafly: part of the 166 bus route (north of Palisades Park) 5 Paterson-Suffern Paterson Broadway Terminal: Suffern, New York: roughly the 746 bus route (south of Ridgewood) 9 Coytesville: Edgewater Ferry Terminal, Edgewater Coytesville: History: Replacement buses
#7176 on the 319 in Toms River, New Jersey. New Jersey Transit operates the following bus routes, ... Fort Lee Linwood Park: Port Imperial Ferry: River Road, ...
Buses head north from the Bergenline Avenue Hudson-Bergen Light Rail station in Union City along Bergenline Avenue, Woodcliff Avenue, and Palisade Avenue (Hudson Palisades) to Fort Lee via West New York, Guttenberg, North Bergen, Fairview, and Cliffside Park, and cross the George Washington Bridge to the George Washington Bridge Bus Station in Upper Manhattan.
Hudson County, New Jersey, is the sixth-most densely populated county in the U.S. [7] and has one of America's highest percentages of public transportation use. [8] [9] During the 1980s and early 1990s, planners and government officials realized that alternative transportation systems needed to be put in place to relieve increasing congestion [10] along the Hudson Waterfront, particularly in ...