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It runs every 10 minutes between Stockport and Manchester in the afternoon and early evening, with journeys in the early morning and late night between Hazel Grove and Stockport. Having part routes mean that the busiest part of the route is between Stockport Mersey Square and Manchester, with a bus coming on average every 3.5 minutes.
The majority of services were operated by Stagecoach Manchester, with High Peak Buses, Little Gem, Selwyns Travel and Stotts Tours also using the station. [5]There were frequent buses running to Manchester, Altrincham, Ashton-under-Lyne, Hyde, Levenshulme, Longsight, Manchester Airport and Wythenshawe, plus several parts of the Stockport area including Bramhall, Bredbury, Brinnington, Cheadle ...
GM Buses North was then purchased in March by FirstBus for £47 million, [28] [29] later being rebranded as Greater Manchester FirstBus, with buses repainted into a deep orange livery featuring a blue stripe. [30] By 1997, the company would be rebranded again as First Manchester, with the corporate FirstGroup livery soon being adopted.
Stagecoach Manchester [1] is a major bus operator in Greater Manchester, operating franchised Bee Network bus services on contract to Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM). It is the largest UK bus subsidiary of Stagecoach Group outside of Greater London , as well as the largest within the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester by ...
The development partners for the project comprised Stockport Council, TfGM, the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, Homes England and developer CityHeart. [6] The overall scheme was designed by BDP , [ 1 ] the interchange by The Harris Partnership, [ 7 ] and the mixed use residential and commercial building by Manchester architects Leach ...
On 1 January 1972, SELNEC PTE acquired most of National Bus Company's North Western Road Car subsidiary with buses, services and depots in Altrincham, Glossop, Oldham, Stockport and Urmston. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The corporate orange and white livery was applied, with the 'S' logo in brown and the name "Cheshire".
Greater Manchester Transport Centreline bus on display at the Museum of Transport, Greater Manchester. Transport across the Greater Manchester conurbation historically suffered from poor north–south connections due to the fact that Manchester's main railway stations, Piccadilly and Victoria, [2] [3] were built in the 1840s on peripheral locations outside Manchester city centre.
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