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Guelph Transit added holiday service in 2007 as well as additional routes serving the south end of the city. Services on these routes (56, 57, and 58) were suspended in April 2008, and the 54 Arkell route was extended to St Georges Square in July 2008.
The Guelph Bus Terminal was the main intercity bus station in Guelph, Ontario until May 13, 2012, when it was replaced by Guelph Central Station. Operators using the terminal included Aboutown, GO Transit and Greyhound. Coach Canada also served the station until early 2010. Guelph Transit local bus services stopped nearby at St. George's Square.
Both transfer centers and transit centers are locations that facilitate transfers among routes and includes amenities such as a climate-controlled waiting area. [2] The main portion of the West Transfer Center is located north of the DART light rail tracks and has 13 bus stands (also known as bus bays) laid out in a circle, lettered A through M ...
On January 1, 2012, all the Guelph Transit routes were changed. [15] While it was originally planned to have the new bus routes meeting at the new station on the same date, this change was delayed until May 6, 2012. [16] In September 2016, Guelph Transit began offering early morning shuttle service for those connecting with early GO Trains.
After opening, all MiWay bus routes where adjusted to service the terminal, with the exception of route 26 Burnhamthorpe. In December 2007, a draft memorandum of understanding was created between the City of Toronto , the Toronto Transit Commission , GO Transit , and Mississauga Transit for the construction of a new regional terminal at Kipling ...
a second platform at Guelph Central GO Station; an extension of the north platform at Guelph Central GO Station; a new storage track for maintenance vehicles west of Guelph; a new passing track 2.6 kilometres (1.6 mi) long in Breslau (Woolwich Township) a new passing track at Acton GO Station; a new storage track for maintenance vehicles near ...
The Hanlon Expressway or Hanlon Parkway is a limited controlled-access expressway connecting Highway 401 with the city of Guelph in the Canadian province of Ontario.The 17 km (11 mi) route travels in a generally north–south direction on the city's west side.
Possible future routes that could be created by around 2023–2028 would include a route from Barrie to Bradford running along Ontario Highway 27 through Cookstown (roughly paralleling the GO Route 68 bus, which runs to the east) and a route from the possible future Collingwood–Wasaga Beach transit hub to Fennell, which would pass through ...