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Scottish Citylink [1] is a long-distance express coach operator in Scotland and Ireland (where it operates as Irish Citylink) and formerly England (where it operated as Stansted Citylink). The company was formed as a subsidiary of Scottish Transport Group in March 1985.
The number 19 on Auchterarder's High Street (2011), operated by Docherty's Midland Coaches. There are fourteen routes in Auchterarder and Crieff. [5] Six services begin in Perth: the 14 (from Kinnoull Street to Almondbank and Pitcairngreen), 15 (from Perth bus station to Crieff, Comrie and St Fillans), [6] 15A (from Perth bus station to Crieff, Braco, Dunblane and Stirling) [7] and 17 (from ...
The route is operated under the Scottish Citylink brand, using vehicles supplied by Stagecoach West Scotland and Park's of Hamilton. [5] [6] The 900 operates every 15 minutes during the day, every 30 minutes in the evening, and hourly overnight. [7]
As well as local buses within the city, several companies offer inter-city buses between Edinburgh and various other cities within Scotland and the UK. Scottish Citylink runs buses from Edinburgh to places such as Stirling, Perth and Glasgow (900 Edinburgh–Glasgow), and Megabus operates budget services between Edinburgh and Glasgow and London.
Stagecoach East Scotland operates under six different brands: Stagecoach in Perth, a trading name of Stagecoach (Scotland) Ltd, is used for services in and around Perth. Stagecoach in Fife is used for services throughout Fife and beyond to Dundee and Edinburgh, and is a trading name of Fife Scottish Omnibuses Ltd. It has operated a number of ...
As a consequence, passengers who previously used parallel Citylink services from the bus station in Perth town centre were required to use Broxden Park & Ride on the outskirts of the town, with little to no onward connections to the town centre. Tickets for the combined Megabus/Citylink services are available through both companies' websites ...
The Fife to Edinburgh autonomous bus service is to be pulled because of a lack of passengers. 'World first' driverless bus service to be dropped Skip to main content
Glennie was inspired by a bus journey he took from Namibia to South Africa. The name Ember was chosen because it describes "the end of fire". [4] Ember's first route, numbered the E1 [a], between Dundee and Edinburgh, was planned to start operating in March 2020, but this was set back by the COVID-19 pandemic delaying the delivery of its first ...