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An Ulsterbus Volvo B7R at former Europa Buscentre in October 2023. Ulsterbus is responsible for most of the bus services in Northern Ireland.They operate around 20 bus stations which include: Armagh, Antrim, Lisburn, Bangor, Newtownards, Downpatrick, Newry, Craigavon, Dungannon, Omagh, Enniskillen, Derry, Coleraine, Ballymena, Magherafelt, Larne and Newcastle and others within Belfast and ...
In 2008 Bus Éireann stated that they also intended to develop similar services to the 24-hour Dublin-Belfast route on the following routes: Donegal-Dublin, Ballina-Dublin, Sligo-Dublin and Drogheda-Balbriggan-Dublin Airport-Dublin. [4] Due to the post-2008 economic downturn in Ireland these plans were never realised. On 20 January 2009, Bus ...
It comes after two buses were burnt out in loyalist areas amid tensions over the Northern Ireland Protocol.
The briefing papers also looked at the arrival times of Metro bus services. On 30 November, it was recorded that 37.3% had an "early/on time arrival". The figure fell to 22.9% during the peak ...
Bustimes.org is a transportation information website created to take advantage of Bus Services Act 2017 requirement for bus operators in England to provide bus timetables, fares and vehicle locations in an open data format, which can be utilised by app and website developers. [2] This DfT service is called the Bus Open Data Service.
The planned Belfast Rapid Transit network was a set of three rapid transit routes planned for the city, including: EWAY as the eastern arm, with WWAY as the western arm, running 6-mile (10 km) to Dunmurry in County Antrim, [33] a short northeastern arm, the 1.7-mile (2.7 km) CITI route to the Catalyst Inc via the Titanic Quarter, and a shared 1 ...
The entire West Cork Railway network closed, as were most branch lines in the Republic. The main route network survived intact, with a relatively even distribution of cutbacks. The main routes from Dublin to Belfast, Sligo, Galway and the West of Ireland, Limerick, Cork and Kerry, Waterford and Wexford survived. The cross country route from ...
In 1905, the Belfast Corporation took over and electrified the city's tram network. [2] The trams were partially replaced by trolleybuses from 1938, and finally replaced by buses in 1954. [2] Recent developments have been proposed in the Belfast Metropolitan Transport Plan, launched by the Minister for Regional Development in November 2004. It ...