Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fastway aims to improve bus services in the Crawley, Gatwick and Horley area. The project included construction of new bus lanes, including guided bus lanes, construction of new bus waiting shelters and provision of electronic real-time passenger information and a fleet of new low-floor buses for Metrobus (part of the Go Ahead Group)
The Greater Cork area has a population of 400,000 and is covered mainly by bus and suburban rail networks as well as a commuter ferry.. There are a total of 35 bus routes of which, 18 are Citybus routes serving areas like Cork City, Knocknaheeny, Ballinlough, Cork, Mahon, Cork, Mayfield, Cork, Frankfield, Cork, Ballintemple and Farranree, Cork and 17 suburban routes serving towns such as ...
However, several services stop at Merchant's Quay, less than 100m away – these include the 202, [22] 203, [23] 207A, [24] 209, [25] and 209A. [26] The 205 [ 27 ] service to University College Cork and Cork Institute of Technology has its terminus at Cork Kent railway station (750m walk), and multiple services stop on nearby St Patrick's Street .
East Worthing opened in September 1905 as Ham Bridge Halt and was renamed in 1949. It retained a ticket office until the 1990s, but is now unstaffed. [23] [24] [25] The town's main station, Worthing (formerly Worthing Central), is 0.9 miles (1.4 km) west. [21] It was opened on 24 November 1845, but the present structure dates from 1909. [26]
Public transport is mainly in the hands of a statutory corporation, Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ), and its subsidiaries, Dublin Bus, Bus Éireann (Irish Bus), and Iarnród Éireann (Irish Rail). On 1 November 2005, the Irish government published the Transport 21 plan which includes €18bn for improved roads and €16bn for improved rail ...
Coastliner 700 is a bus service operated in West Sussex and south east Hampshire, England, by Stagecoach South between Brighton and Portsmouth via Hove, Shoreham-by-Sea, Worthing, Littlehampton, Wick, Bognor Regis, Chichester, Havant, and Portsmouth with a daytime frequency of every 12 minutes on Mondays to Saturdays; the service runs every 20 minutes on Sundays. [1]
Parnell Place (Irish: Plás Parnell) [1] is a street in Cork, Ireland. It is a major south-to-north route across the city centre, and the location of Parnell Place Bus Station . In the south, it starts at the junction with South Mall , Lapp's Quay and Parnell Bridge, running to Merchant's Quay in the north.
Both the 216 and 223 are operated by Bus Éireann. [citation needed] A ferry service, the Cross River Ferry, operates from Glenbrook (near Passage) to Carrigaloe (near Cobh) across a channel of Cork Harbour. [31] The town was previously served by Passage railway station on the Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway line. This closed in 1932. [12]