Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Oranmore is a stop on the Dublin – Galway intercity service and the Galway – Athenry/Athlone and Galway – Limerick Commuter services. Journey time is approximately 10 minutes from Oranmore to Galway Ceannt. Bicycle parking and car parking facilities are provided.
Galway Advertiser: Planning Approval granted for Oranmore train station, retrieved 13 March 2011; Galway Public Transport Feasibility Study, retrieved 13 March 2011; Limerick-Galway Rail Timetable 2010, retrieved 13 March 2011; Dublin-Galway Rail Timetable 2010, retrieved 13 March 2011
Bus routes: 6: Bus operators: ... Oranmore: Galway: Roscommon: Castlerea: Ballyhaunis: ... The station lies on the Dublin to Galway and Dublin to Westport or Ballina ...
226: [20] Kent Station – Parnell Place Bus Station – Cork Airport – Kinsale; 225: [20] Kent Station – Parnell Place Bus Station – Cork Airport - Ballygarvan - Carrigaline - Haulbowline; Some other Bus Éireann services use a stop across from the station on Lower Glanmire Road, which is listed on timetables as "Lwr Glanmire Rd (Opp ...
Bus Éireann Logo 1987–2000 Bus Éireann Logo 2000–2007. Bus Éireann was established in February 1987 when it was split out from Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ). [2] The logo of Bus Éireann incorporates a red Irish Setter, a breed of dog that originated in Ireland. A Bus Éireann Wright Gemini 3 operating service 103 in Dublin, September 2017
Galway railway station (Ceannt Station, Irish: Stáisiún Cheannt) is a railway station which serves the city of Galway in County Galway. The station itself is located in the centre of the city in Eyre Square. It is the terminus station for the Dublin to Galway intercity service and the Limerick to Galway and Athenry to Galway commuter services ...
Ennis railway station serves the town of Ennis in County Clare, Ireland.. Ennis is the terminus station of the Limerick to Ennis Commuter service (intermediate stop Sixmilebridge) and a station on the Limerick to Galway intercity service.
The Galway line was opened by the MGWR in 1851, which became the primary route to the west coast city from Dublin. The GSWR route to Athlone opened in 1859, but the company also ran another route in the west of the country, when it purchased the Waterford, Limerick and Western Railway , which operated the Waterford-Collooney route that called ...