Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Route Description 2X: New Richmond Express Travels twice in each direction per day, providing express service along the US 52 corridor between two park and ride lots in the suburb of New Richmond and Downtown Cincinnati. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the route has been running once daily. 4X: Amelia Express
$4 Metro/TANK 24-Hour Pass $5 Hamilton County Express 24-Hour Pass $5.30 Suburban County Express 24-Hour Pass $7.50 5-ride Hamilton County Local & Commuter Service Ticket $10 Half Fare 24-Hour Pass (Child Fare, Fare Deal, UC, Cincinnati State) $2 Hamilton County Local 30-day Pass $80 Hamilton County Express 30-day Pass $105 Metro/TANK 30-day Pass
#7176 on the 319 in Toms River, New Jersey. New Jersey Transit operates the following bus routes, which are mostly focused on long-distance travel, special-event service, school trippers, or park-and-ride service.
[4] [5] and has a multi-story parking facility that is open at all times. [6] [7] The station, built by the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) and the United States Department of Transportation, opened on November 14, 1971, as Garden State Metropark. It was built as a suburban park-and-ride stop for the then-new high-speed rail ...
To update just five of NJ Transit's current 16 bus garages with charging infrastructure will require more than $1.3 billion. NJ Transit launched seven electric buses in 2023 — a fraction of its ...
100-199: Routes from central and northern New Jersey to New York City. 200-299: No routes with these numbers; a few existed in the 1980s but were soon renumbered. 300-399: Special-event and park services, school tripper services, park-and-ride services, long-distance suburban routes from Philadelphia, New York-Atlantic City express. Beginning ...
Service from Middletown to West Chester and Cincinnati has been proposed numerous times in recent years. [4] The service would utilize commuter buses and provide express service to downtown Cincinnati. [5] Previously commuter buses connected Middletown, Monroe and Dayton, where riders could transfer to the Dayton RTA. [6]
A Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 train, built for the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1930s–1940s, hauls a commuter train into South Amboy station in 1981. NJT was founded on July 17, 1979, an offspring of the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), mandated by the state government to address many then-pressing transportation problems. [5]