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  2. Reading Buses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reading_Buses

    In autumn of that year, Reading Buses introduced its first branded Premier Route in the form of the number 17, running between the Three Tuns on Wokingham Road and the Bear Inn at Tilehurst via the town centre and Oxford Road, and the linear descendant of the old main line. This was intended as the first in a series of such routes, each ...

  3. Winnersh Triangle railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winnersh_Triangle_railway...

    The car park has capacity for 390 cars, and has a current usage of 70% bus and 20% rail park and ride users. 200 metres (660 ft) walk to the south of the station, on Wokingham Road, are stops on the local bus route that links Reading, Wokingham and Bracknell. [2] [7] [10]

  4. Trolleybuses in Reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trolleybuses_in_Reading

    The concept of the contra-flow bus lane proved successful, and was adopted in other places for motor buses. [5] The extended main line from the Three Tuns to the Bear still exists today as Reading Buses route 17, the town's busiest and most frequent route, [12] and the first to be designated a premier route. This was a scheme to upgrade the ...

  5. Cemetery Junction, Reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cemetery_Junction,_Reading

    Several major bus routes serve the Cemetery Junction, including: Reading Buses route 17, Tilehurst–Three Tuns ; Reading Buses routes 13 and 14, Reading–Woodley; Reading Buses route 4 and X4, Reading–Wokingham–Bracknell; Arriva route 850, Reading–High Wycombe; Thames Travel routes 126,127,128,129 Twyford-Wokingham

  6. Wokingham railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wokingham_railway_station

    A 1909 Railway Clearing House map showing (left) lines in the area of Wokingham. Wokingham railway station serves the market town of Wokingham in Berkshire, England. It is 62 miles 8 chains (62.10 mi; 99.9 km) down the line from London Charing Cross via Redhill. [1] It is at the junction of the Waterloo–Reading line with the North Downs Line.

  7. First Beeline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Beeline

    Wright Axcess-Ultralow bodied Scania L113CRB in Camberley in 2009. In January 1986 Alder Valley North Limited, later renamed, The Berks Bucks Bus Company [4] took over the Bracknell, High Wycombe, Maidenhead, Newbury, Reading and Wokingham operations of Alder Valley as part of the preparation for privatisation of the National Bus Company, trading as "Beeline" once the name was changed in ...

  8. Thames Valley Buses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Valley_Buses

    Thames Valley Buses Limited, [2] trading as Thames Valley Buses, is a bus company based in Bracknell, England.It was known as Courtney Buses until 2021. Founded in 1973, the company operates a network of commercial and contracted local bus services and school buses in Berkshire, north Hampshire and small parts of Oxfordshire, Surrey and Buckinghamshire.

  9. Wokingham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wokingham

    Most local bus services are provided by Thames Valley Buses, but the services from Wokingham to Reading and Bracknell are operated by Reading Buses, after First Berkshire & The Thames Valley closed their Bracknell depot in the summer of 2015. There is also a football bus run on Reading FC match days by Stagecoach South to the Madejski Stadium.