When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. New Jersey Route 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Jersey_Route_4

    Route 4 is a state highway in Bergen County and Passaic County, United States.The highway stretches 10.83 mi (17.43 km) from Route 20 (McLean Boulevard) in Paterson east to an interchange with Interstate 95 (I-95), U.S. Route 1/9 (US 1/9), US 46, and US 9W at the George Washington Bridge approach in Fort Lee.

  3. List of NJ Transit bus routes (100–199) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NJ_Transit_bus...

    Routes indicated as running during rush hour run to New York during AM rush and to New Jersey during PM rush, unless otherwise noted. Some of the routes to the Port Authority Bus Terminal also stop on 30th and 31st Streets in Union City to connect to local bus routes in Hudson County. Where this applies to cases where Union City is not served ...

  4. List of NJ Transit bus routes (700–799) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NJ_Transit_bus...

    Formerly went to Secaucus,NJ via Harmon Cove Outlet Center, service cut off in 2010 due to budget crisis. 780 Passaic Bus Terminal: Englewood Hospital: Main Avenue, Boulevard, Cedar Lane, Lafayette Avenue Formerly the B80 Englewood-Passaic route. Before that, it was the 80 and went into New York's GW Bridge Bus Terminal.

  5. List of county routes in Bergen County, New Jersey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_county_routes_in...

    Bergen County has one of the longest-lasting county route systems in New Jersey, being one of only two counties in the state not to switch to a 600-series system with the introduction of the 500-series routes. Bergen County's system dates to the 1920s, [3] and the current system has few changes from its first implementation.

  6. List of NJ Transit bus routes (1–99) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NJ_Transit_bus...

    Began under Transport of New Jersey in 1927. replaced the public service #37 streetcar Express buses added in 1946. Formerly route 102 "X" express route formerly route 104. Big Tree; 78 Secaucus: Raymond Boulevard, New Jersey Turnpike, Meadowlands Parkway, and Seaview Drive Weekday service only; NJ Transit started operating buses in 1984.

  7. Nungessers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nungessers

    Nungessers is a major transit transfer point and terminus for public bus transportation. [6] Several New Jersey Transit bus lines either originate/terminate or pass through the area, as do many privately operated jitney (dollar van) routes.

  8. Dollar vans in the New York metropolitan area - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar_vans_in_the_New...

    On July 30, 2013, an accident occurred at 56th Street and Boulevard East in West New York, New Jersey, in which Angelie Paredes, an 8-month-old North Bergen resident, was killed in her stroller when a full-sized [24] jitney bus belonging to the New York-based Sphinx company toppled a light pole. The driver, Idowu Daramola of Queens, was ...

  9. Atlantic City Jitney Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_City_Jitney...

    The Atlantic City Jitney Association (ACJA) is an association of operators of minibus service in Atlantic City, New Jersey, providing service at all times on 3 fixed routes, daytime service on a fourth fixed route, and bus-to-rail connections from the Atlantic City Rail Terminal, providing connections to Atlantic City Line trains. The jitney ...