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The following year, Amtrak launched an agreement with Greyhound allowing for passengers to buy combined bus and rail tickets for connecting services run by the two companies. These services were the predecessors of Thruway Motorcoach. The first Amtrak bus service to bear the name "Amtrak Thruway" was launched in California in 1993. [2]
Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach stations in San Bernardino County, California (2 P) Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach stations in San Luis Obispo County, California (3 P) Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach stations in Santa Barbara County, California (3 P)
Planned Amtrak and Caltrain station Gilroy† Gilroy [6] Capitol Corridor: Existing Caltrain station Hercules: Hercules: Capitol Corridor San Joaquin: Proposed to include ferry and bus terminal. Indio: Indio: Former Amtrak rail station planned to be reactivated for limited festival services Lodi† Lodi: 2027 San Joaquin: Planned Amtrak and ACE ...
Amtrak Thruway bus service, which connects to Amtrak trains at Emeryville station, moved from the Ferry Station Post Office Building to the Temporary Transbay Terminal on March 2, 2015. [35] Under a naming rights deal announced on July 7, 2017, the transit center was given the official name of Salesforce Transit Center; the adjoined City Park ...
The Highway 17 Express is an Amtrak Thruway route provided by a consortium of entities that provides regional service between San Jose and Santa Cruz County in the South Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area. The service is so called because it travels on California State Route 17. It is operated by the Santa Cruz Metropolitan Transit District.
Because Emeryville is the closest station to the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge, it is the primary connection point between Amtrak trains and Amtrak Thruway bus service in the Bay Area. Amtrak Thruway route 99 buses run between Emeryville station and the Salesforce Transit Center in downtown San Francisco, providing connections for all trains.
Amtrak showed off its new Venture passenger coaches for its San Joaquins line at the ACE Rail Maintenance Facility in Stockton, Calif., Tuesday, March 5, 2024.
On May 1, 1971, Amtrak took over all long-distance inter city passenger operations in the United States, discontinuing the MILW-UP-SP City of San Francisco. Amtrak retained the name for the thrice-weekly Denver–San Francisco/Oakland portion of the run until June 1972, when the entire Chicago-San Francisco/Oakland route became daily again as ...