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Glider is a Bus rapid transit system in Belfast, Northern Ireland, designed to improve the efficiency of mass transit in the city by connecting East and West Belfast and the Titanic Quarter via the city centre. [1] The service is operated by Translink. [2] [3] There are two routes, G1 (West to East Belfast) and G2 (city centre to Titanic Quarter).
The route will be served by several new 18-metre Glider vehicles, specifically designed for Belfast, which will feature real time passenger information, destination announcements, CCTV, free Wi-Fi, USB charging facilities and air conditioning. These Glider vehicles are expected to operate every 7–8 minutes throughout the working day.
Glider Van Hool articulated bus at Dundonald Park and Ride, June 2021. The Belfast Rapid Transit System, which became operational on 3 September 2018, is a bus service run by Translink. The routes are served by 34 18-metre bendy buses, branded as Glider, built by Van Hool and specifically designed for Belfast.
Transport and travel. Public transport service provider Translink cancelled all bus and train services during the red alert. A limited Metro and Glider service resumed in Belfast at 5pm on Friday ...
The Falls Road is designated one of the quality bus corridors (QBCs) within the city with a variety of different routes. [132] In 2018, the Glider bus service was introduced. It provides a service from Poleglass via the Falls Road-City Centre and Newtownards Road to Dundonald. It was the first cross-city bus service.
Dundonald Park & Ride Template documentation This template's documentation is missing, inadequate, or does not accurately describe its functionality or the parameters in its code.
A Citybus Bristol RE branded for the Citylink service on Great Victoria Street in 1976. Bus services began in Belfast under the Belfast Corporation Transport Department. For a time in the early 1950s, these buses ran alongside both the tram and trolleybus networks run by the corporation until these networks were eventually abandoned, [1] and like most mainland operators, Belfast Corporation ...
Dundonald acquired rail links to Belfast and Newtownards in 1850, Downpatrick in 1859 and Newcastle in 1869. The town was located on the once extensive Belfast and County Down Railway mainline. The rail link with Belfast encouraged Dundonald to expand as a commuter town, but in 1950 the railway line running through Dundonald was closed.