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Perry Street, State Street, Front Street Weekday service only (Lunchtime service formerly provided; discontinued June 2009 due to low ridership) Free rides for State of New Jersey employees with ID; 612 Princeton Junction Rail Station Lawrence Township Loop Clarksville Road Weekday Peak Hour Service only; Renumbered from 976 in June 2010. 613 ...
Market Street; 175 Ridgewood Bus Terminal: Route 4, Cedar Lane, Passaic Street, Maple Avenue Select trips serve Garden State Plaza and Bergen Community College in Paramus. Garden State Bus Lines (1935) as 45; Market Street; 178 Hackensack Bus Terminal: Route 4, Grand Avenue, Forest Avenue, Englewood Avenue Acquired by Public Service Coordinated ...
Northbound S59 buses use Main Street to return to Hylan Boulevard. The S89 is the only-non express MTA bus route to run in New Jersey and the only MTA bus route to have a stop in New Jersey. It only operates on weekdays during peak hours. Occasionally, an express bus may also operate the route, while still charging the local fare of $2.90.
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Bayonne. 54th Street Bergen Avenue, Old Bergen Road . Began service under Bergen Avenue IBOA. Transferred to Montgomery and West Side IBOA in 2011, numbered #33 in 2016. Service under New Jersey Transit began October 28, 2023. Kearny Point; 9 Jersey City Society Hill Drive Newport Mall: West Side Avenue, Montgomery Street, Marin Boulevard.
1980 (purchase of Transport of New Jersey) Headquarters: Newark, New Jersey: Service area: New Jersey (statewide) Service type: Local and commuter bus transit, Newark Light Rail: Routes: 267 (See list below) Stations: 26 bus terminals, 19,500 bus stops, 17 light rail stations [1] Fleet: 3,052 buses, 696 leased to private operators 21 light rail ...
Hudson County, New Jersey, is the sixth-most densely populated county in the U.S. [7] and has one of America's highest percentages of public transportation use. [8] [9] During the 1980s and early 1990s, planners and government officials realized that alternative transportation systems needed to be put in place to relieve increasing congestion [10] along the Hudson Waterfront, particularly in ...
go bus go bus 25 runs between Irvington Bus Terminal, NJT's second busiest, and Penn Station Newark. NJ Transit began service on its first BRT line, go bus 25, in 2008. [3] [4] During peak periods, the line makes limited stops at eleven points between Newark Penn Station and the Irvington Bus Terminal, running for most of its length along Springfield Avenue, a minor thoroughfare.