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  2. Brighton & Hove (bus company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_&_Hove_(bus_company)

    The Regency Route is one of Brighton & Hove's branded routes. It began as route 729 by the nationalised Southdown Motor Services subsidiary of the National Bus Company, of which Brighton & Hove was a part, and the route was part of the NBC's cross-country "Stagecoach" network. The Regency Route currently consists of the following services: [10]

  3. Brighton & Hove Coaster routes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_&_Hove_Coaster_routes

    Coaster is the brand name given to a series of bus routes operated by the Brighton & Hove bus company, running between Brighton and Eastbourne in East Sussex, England.. The service has been praised for its scenic route, which takes riders along the Sussex coast atop the Brighton to Newhaven Cliffs, with Richard Coles declaring it "the best bus in the world" in 2022.

  4. Brighton & Hove Regency Route - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_&_Hove_Regency_Route

    25 September 2005 - Stagecoach and Arriva withdraw from joint service, route entirely Brighton & Hove. 9 April 2009 - A night bus service running three days a week, the N29, was introduced over the route between Brighton and Uckfield. [3] 17 April 2011 - 28 and 29 both branded as Regency Routes; combined 10-minute frequency between Brighton and ...

  5. Trolleybuses in Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trolleybuses_in_Brighton

    The Brighton Hove and District vehicles generally worked the route from Black Rock to Seven Dials, and some of the circular route to Brighton railway station and Queens Park Road. [6] The main operator of the system was Brighton Corporation Transport, which owned the wires, and at its peak had a fleet of 52 trolleybuses.

  6. Transport in Brighton and Hove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Brighton_and_Hove

    They operated like a bus service, following set routes and picking up at dedicated stops, with a "dial-a-ride" taxi-like option. The routes ran from Brighton Marina to Hove Town Hall via Brighton railway station. [16] The auto rickshaws came in two sizes, were painted in distinct styles, and were powered by compressed natural gas.

  7. Brighton & Hove Breeze routes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_&_Hove_Breeze_routes

    Breeze is a brand name given to a group of three tourist-oriented bus routes, numbered 77, 78 and 79, operated by the Brighton & Hove bus company.The routes operate under the slogan "breeze up to the Downs and beyond" and link the city of Brighton with three popular countryside destinations within the South Downs National Park – respectively Devil's Dyke, Stanmer Village and Ditchling Beacon.

  8. Coastliner 700 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastliner_700

    Coastliner 700 is a bus service operated in West Sussex and south east Hampshire, England, by Stagecoach South between Brighton and Portsmouth via Hove, Shoreham-by-Sea, Worthing, Littlehampton, Wick, Bognor Regis, Chichester, Havant, and Portsmouth with a daytime frequency of every 12 minutes on Mondays to Saturdays; the service runs every 20 minutes on Sundays. [1]

  9. Brighton Corporation Tramways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brighton_Corporation_Tramways

    Brighton Corporation Tramways [2] operated an extensive network of routes in the first four decades of the 20th century. The first route to operate, from 25 November 1901, ran from the main terminus at the Aquarium (outside Brighton Palace Pier) to Lewes Road, a major route to the north-east; other routes were quickly established, so that by 1904 its full extent had been established.