Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
During the week it is served five times a day in each direction by Bus Éireann route 245 linking it to Clonmel, Mitchelstown, Fermoy and Cork. At the weekend there are three buses each way. The number 18 runs direct from Dublin city. [citation needed]
During the week it is served five times a day in each direction by Bus Éireann route 245 linking it to Clonmel, Mitchelstown, Fermoy and Cork. At the weekend there are three buses each way. At the weekend there are three buses each way.
The station is on the Dublin–Cork Main line, and is situated 86.5 miles (139.2 km) from Dublin Heuston. [1] It has two through platforms and one terminating platform. An average of 17 trains each day between Dublin Heuston and Cork Kent serve Thurles station. [2]
In 1880 the Southern Railway of Ireland opened between Clonmel and Thurles on the Dublin–Cork railway line, making Clonmel a junction. CIÉ withdrew passenger services from the Thurles – Clonmel line in 1963 and closed the line to freight in 1967.
The Dublin–Cork Main Line is the main InterCity railway route in Ireland between Dublin Heuston and Cork Kent. In 2018, 3.46 million passengers travelled on the line, a 10% increase from 2017 figures.
The original GS&WR station, Penrose Quay, was located directly in front of the portal of the Cork railway tunnel through which the railway into Cork passed, while Cork Summerhill, the original C&Y terminus was above the tunnel portal. The purpose of the new station was to allow through running of trains after the 1865 takeover of the C&Y by the ...
Regional bus services from Parnell Place Bus Station; Destination Operator Route number Via Knockraha: Bus Éireann: 221 [6] Tivoli, Glanmire, Riverstown, Hazelwood Kinsale: Bus Éireann: 226 [7] Cork Airport: Cork Airport: Bus Éireann: 226A [7] Macroom: Bus Éireann: 233 [8] Rylane: Bus Éireann: 235 [9] Cloghroe, Donoughmore, Stuake ...
The Cork Suburban Rail (Irish: Iarnród Fobhailteach Chorcaí) network serves areas in and around Cork city in Ireland. There has been a suburban rail system in Cork since the middle of the 19th century; however, it was subject to line closures in the 20th century. The city also had a tram network - a short-lived horse-tram service in the 1870s ...