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The Cribbs Causeway road is a historic route, as it follows a section of a Roman road from Sea Mills to South Gloucestershire, part of a longer Roman route from Gloucester to the south-west of England. [1] The modern road of that name is situated north of Bristol, and west of the town of Patchway, in the civil parish of Almondsbury.
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The route was cut short in 1950 to California and 2nd Avenue with the opening of the 1 California bus line, and was removed along with the B Geary on December 29, 1956. [8] [9] The 1 California and 55 Sacramento were combined to form the current 1 California line on January 27, 1982. [10] [11]
In 2014, Academy acquired Go Buses, which currently operates bus service between Boston and Washington, D.C., and in southern Florida. [1] On September 27, 2023, Academy acquired James River Transportation, which operates in Virginia. [2] Academy is the third-largest motorcoach operator in the United States and Canada. [3]
The Otago Regional Council designs routes and schedules, and contracts operation of bus services to two bus companies, Go Bus Transport and Ritchies Transport. The majority of bus routes in Dunedin normally operate at 30 minute headways, with 8 and 63 operating at 15 minute frequencies.
The former 74 bus route was merged with the 73 from 1 September 2013. The frequency of the combined route was a bus every 10 minutes during weekdays, every 15 minutes on Saturdays, and every 30 minutes on evenings and Sundays. [4] From 31 August 2014, the service frequency was reduced from 10 minutes to 12 minutes. [5]
Tempo is a bus rapid transit (BRT) service in Oakland and San Leandro in California.It is operated by AC Transit as Line 1T.The route has dedicated lanes and center-boarding stations along much of the corridor, prepaid fares, signal preemption, and all-door boarding.
In June 1956, the Willesden to Marylebone station section was replaced by route 176. [1] Despite subsequent route changes, it continues to serve part of its original route, between Elephant & Castle and Aldwych. [2] On 3 October 2009, East Thames Buses was sold to Go-Ahead London, which included a five-year contract to operate route 1. [3] [4 ...