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Outside of Toronto, these routes operate on behalf of either MiWay (Mississauga) or York Region Transit, and require a TTC fare within Toronto and either a Miway or a YRT fare beyond the Toronto city limits. [3] With Ontario's One Fare program, only one fare is required for such routes provided that the rider pays the fare by credit, debit or ...
Grand River Transit (GRT) is the public transport operator for the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. It operates daily bus services in the region, primarily in the cities of Kitchener, Waterloo, and Cambridge, alongside the ION rapid transit light rail system which began service on June 21, 2019. [3]
Bus Rapid transit Regional/commuter rail Toronto: Ontario: 2,794,356 Toronto Transit Commission (includes TTC streetcars) ... Waterloo Region: Ontario: 587,165
In 1982, the TTC acquired 12 articulated buses, the articulated version of the GM New Look bus. The Province of Ontario sponsored the buses as a trial. The bus had rear-wheel drive whereby the trailer section pushes the rest of the bus. The TTC sold all 12 of these buses to Mississauga in 1987, and chose the Orion Ikarus articulated bus. [14]
Selected peak-period trips start/end at the corner of Merivale and Slack and are signed 80 MacFarlane, these trips do not enter the Westage Shopping Centre. As part of the New Ways to Bus network change, service on Beatrice and Chapman Mills will be removed, and trips to Auriga, Antares, Deakin, MacFarlane will be replaced by route 86 and new ...
The initial Go Station site layout plans, alongside the proposed Toronto/Milton commuter rail service, was up for public review in 1980, with an open house session to review the service on August 5, 1980, in Meadowvale. [2] Milton Go Station had its inauguration day on October 25, 1981, [3] and the inaugural run offered a free ride to Union ...
From the 1970s to the 1990s, the Toronto hub for GO Transit bus services was the Elizabeth Street annex to the Toronto Coach Terminal at Bay and Dundas Streets, with some routes also stopping curb-side at the Union Station train terminal, or the Royal York Hotel opposite it, from the inception of the GO Bus service on September 8, 1970. [8]
Scarborough Centre is a bus terminal station in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, serving multiple bus routes of the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) and one Durham Region Transit (DRT) bus route. It was also a rapid transit station serving Line 3 Scarborough of the Toronto subway system until Line 3's closure on July 24, 2023.