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Central Station was in use until 25 May 2015, when Christchurch's new $53 million Bus Interchange building opened, [11] with half of the 16 bays operational. On 20 August, the building was physically completed and further opened to the public, including bike parking and more seating.
Hamilton has a bus system under the name BUSIT covering most of its urban area, with around 25 routes. [23] There are also bus services to (and sometimes between) other towns in the Waikato region — TaupÅ, Huntly, Coromandel, Thames, Tokoroa, Meremere, Te Kauwhata, Cambridge, Paeroa, Raglan, Mangakino, and Te Awamutu are among the ...
Construction of the Bus Interchange started in July 2014, after the projected completion date for the building. [6] The recovery plan identified ECan (Environment Canterbury, the regional council), CCC (Christchurch City Council), CERA (Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority), NZTA (NZ Transport Agency), and the private sector as project partners, [7] but the project was carried out by CERA. [8]
Go Bus Christchurch Ltd. [1] is a bus company owned by Go Bus Transport Ltd. The company started off as Christchurch Bus Services Ltd in 2004. In November 2010, it was sold to Go Bus Ltd after it was found that Christchurch Bus Services had failed to maintain vehicles and put commuters in danger. [2]
Sunday services had already been switched to bus operation from 10 April 1949, and in December a route to Clyde Road via Ilam Road had started to serve State housing developments. This latter service became part of the Fendalton route when the new bus timetable was introduced on 6 February 1950.
The Bus Exchange was the main public transport facility in the central city of Christchurch, New Zealand. Part of it was indoor and featured airport-style lounges. The Bus Exchange opened in November 2000 and closed due to the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake, which damaged the building beyond repair.
In early February 2014, Go Bus Transport agreed to purchase the urban, school, charter and special needs operations of Invercargill Passenger Transport, gaining around 200+ buses and depots in Christchurch, Queenstown, Dunedin, Invercargill and Gore. Go Bus took over Invercargill Passenger Transport on 1 April 2014. [citation needed]
Trams from Dallington continued to run to the railway station via Colombo Street until economic conditions compelled the Board to close under-performing lines which included the Dallington–Christchurch Railway Station route on 1936-11-1. A replacement bus service on the route commenced on 1936-11-2 but ran via Manchester Street instead of ...