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Then Taoiseach Brian Cowen at the opening of Brides Glen station in 2010. The stop is served by Dublin Bus routes 7 and X2, and by Go-Ahead Ireland route 111. [2] These bus routes provide access to the Cherrywood development, Loughlinstown, and St. Columcille's Hospital, as well as further destinations such as Sallynoggin, Dalkey, and Dún Laoghaire.
Glencairn (Irish: Gleann an Chairn) is a stop on the Luas light-rail tram system in Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, County Dublin, Ireland. It opened in 2010 as a stop on the extension of the Green Line south from Sandyford to Brides Glen. [1]
The TFI Leap Card, introduced in December 2011, is a smart card that can be used on Dublin Bus, DART, suburban rail services in the Dublin area and the Luas. In addition to Dublin Bus, a number of private operators provide services to Dublin Airport from all over the city and a small number of suburban routes are also provided by independent ...
Dublin Bus Routes: 7 / 7A from Mountjoy Square to Bride's Glen / Loughlinstown. Route 7 provides a connection to the Luas Green Line terminus at Bride's Glen; 7N Nitelink from Dublin city centre to Shankill, via Blackrock (Fri & Sat only) Go-Ahead Ireland Routes: S8 from Citywest to Dún Laoghaire, via The Square and Sandyford Business District
Broombridge (Irish: Droichead Broom, previously Droichead na Scuab) is a railway station beside a Luas Tram stop serving Cabra, Dublin 7, Ireland.It lies on the southern bank of the Royal Canal at the western end of what had been Liffey Junction station on the erstwhile Midland Great Western Railway (MGWR).
Historically, bus services in Dublin were operated mainly by the Dublin United Transport Company, which was incorporated into CIÉ in 1945. Today, two subsidiary companies of state-owned Córas Iompair Éireann operate most of the bus services in and around Dublin but many other private companies also provide services.
Broadstone railway station (Irish: Stáisiún An Clocháin Leathan) was the Dublin terminus of the Midland Great Western Railway (MGWR), located in the Dublin suburb of Broadstone. The site also contained the MGWR railway works and a steam locomotive motive power depot. A Luas tram stop opened at the front of the station in 2017.
Transport 21 signage for the M7/M8 motorway scheme in County Laois.. Transport 21 was an Irish infrastructure plan, announced in November 2005. [1] Its aims were to greatly expand Ireland's transport network.