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To Steeles Avenue East via Scarborough Centre station: To Kennedy station via Scarborough Centre station: Articulated service common; 130A Middlefield NB To Steeles Avenue East: SB To Scarborough Centre station: Malvern 130B To Steeles Avenue East via Maybrook Drive: To Scarborough Centre station via Maybrook Drive: Rush hour service; 131 Nugget EB
In the May 2015 timetable, weekday services on the branch can be found on table 21. The general pattern from Liverpool Street is a half-hourly all stations service to Enfield Town and a half-hourly service to Cheshunt (also all stations) with additional peak hour services. Journey time from Enfield Town to Liverpool Street is around 33 minutes.
In 1998 the route was extended south from Liverpool St station to London Bridge station. The service was converted to an articulated bus operation in 2004 with a fleet of Mercedes-Benz O530G and withdrawn north of Edmonton, with new route 349 taking over.
Routes are named after the street or area served. All of the TTC's regular routes, except for 99 Arrow Road, 171 Mt. Dennis and 176 Mimico GO, connect to a subway station or the Scarborough Centre station bus terminal; 99 Arrow Road and 171 Mt. Dennis serve the areas around their respective bus garages.
Liverpool Street is Britain’s busiest station according to the most recent Office of Rail and Road data, having seen 80.4 million entries and exits from its platforms between 1 April 2022 and 31 ...
The Toronto subway is a system of three underground, surface, and elevated rapid transit lines in Toronto and Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, operated by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC). It was the country's first subway system: the first line was built under Yonge Street with a short stretch along Front Street and opened in 1954 with 12 stations.
The estimated number of people entering and exiting the station from March 2023/24 was 94.5 million, said the Office of Rail and Road. This is 17.5% higher than the figure last year of 80.4 million.
The station at Liverpool Street (the street had been named after the Tory Prime Minister Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool in 1829) was to be built for the use of the GER and of the East London Railway on two levels, with the underground East London line around 37 ft (11 m) below this, and the GER tracks supported on brick arches.