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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. Began under Montgomery and West Side IBOA. Numbered #31 in 2016. Service under New Jersey Transit began October 28, 2023. 10: Journal Square: Bayonne 2nd Street Kennedy Boulevard
Port Authority Bus Terminal, New York (full-time) Jersey City-Journal Square (limited service) Garden State Parkway Express from New York City to Sea Isle City (stops in Toms River, Atlantic City, and Ocean City) On most trips, change at Atlantic City for buses south to Wildwood and Cape May. Formerly Route 119
NJ Transit Bus Operations is the bus division of NJ Transit, providing local and commuter bus service throughout New Jersey and adjacent areas of New York State (Manhattan in New York City, Rockland County, and Orange County) and Pennsylvania (Philadelphia and the Lehigh Valley). It operates its own lines as well as contracts others to private ...
New Jersey Transit 606 bus in Trenton, en route to Princeton. New Jersey Transit operates 247 bus routes throughout the state with 1785 buses under direct control and 327 buses leased to private operators. [17] New Jersey Transit provides local, commuter, and long-distance bus service in all 21 New Jersey counties.
Asbury Park: Monmouth University: New Jersey Route 71: Most of line discontinued, some covered by current 837. M29 Point Pleasant: Lakewood: New Jersey Route 88: Most of route covered by the 317 line. When NJT discontinued M29, route was turned over to Ocean County Area Transportation (OCAT) who operated it as their OC29 route. Today it is OC4. M31
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.
Asbury Park North Jersey Coast Line: Asbury Park: Central Railroad of New Jersey: August 25, 1875 [28] [29] Atco Atlantic City Line: Waterford Township: Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines: September 17, 1989 [21] Atlantic City Atlantic City Line: Atlantic City: Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines: September 17, 1989 [21]
A Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 train, built for the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1930s–1940s, hauls a commuter train into South Amboy station in 1981. NJT was founded on July 17, 1979, an offspring of the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), mandated by the state government to address many then-pressing transportation problems. [5]