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Seasonal routes (200-series): Routes operating during the warmer months serving and named after a city attraction such as Toronto Zoo, Bluffer's Park, and Cherry Beach; Blue Night Network routes (300-series): Routes operate from 1 am to 6 am (8 am on Sundays), which are also the times that the Toronto subway system does not operate. Service ...
The Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) uses buses and other vehicles for public transportation. In 2018, the TTC bus system had 159 bus routes carrying over 264 million riders over 6,686 kilometres (4,154 mi) of routes with buses travelling 143 million kilometres (89 million mi) in the year. [4]
In 1974, after the subway had been extended beyond the Toronto city limits in three directions, the same was done for overnight bus service. But large areas of Metro still remained without 24-hour transit – Etobicoke , North York , and Scarborough each had only one or two routes – as late as 1986, when the TTC's planning department issued a ...
The bus stands in February 2019. Wrexham bus station (Welsh: Gorsaf fysiau Wrecsam) is an eight-stand indoor bus station in Wrexham city centre on King Street. Services provide transit within the city, elsewhere in north Wales, and to Cheshire and Shropshire in England.
Promenade Terminal & Centre St. Wilson TTC station: Orange: Monday–Sunday: Operated by the TTC. 165: Weston: Major Mackenzie West Terminal: Pioneer Village station: Orange: Monday–Sunday: 300: Business Express: Finch GO Bus Terminal: Town Centre Blvd. Blue, Purple: Rush Hour Only: Operates from Finch in AM and to Finch in PM. 301: Markham ...
One Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) route, 52B/52D Lawrence West, is operated by the TTC contracted on behalf of the City of Mississauga. The fare payment method is the same as for regular MiWay buses; via a Presto card, contactless, or cash.
Most bus routes connect to one or more subway stations, save a few routes that serve bus depots or GO stations. A more distinctive feature of the TTC is the streetcar system, one of the few remaining in North America with a substantial amount of in-street operation. The city of Toronto has the largest streetcar system in the Americas.
After the Williams Omnibus Bus Line had become heavily loaded in 1861, the city of Toronto issued a transit franchise (Resolution 14, By-law 353) for a horse-drawn street railway. The winner was Alexander Easton's Toronto Street Railway which opened the first street railway line in Canada on September 11, 1861, operating from Yorkville Town ...