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Cardiff Airport Express at Cardiff Central Bus Station. TrawsCymru previously operated the Cardiff Airport Express (Welsh: Gwennol Maes Awyr Caerdydd) from the airport to Cardiff city centre, which ran every 20 minutes during the day and hourly during the night. [60] Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the T9 has ceased to operate.
Cardiff West Park and Ride is based at the Cardiff City Stadium at Leckwith. Cardiff South Park and Ride operates from County Hall in Cardiff Bay. Cardiff North Park and Ride operates at Crown Way, off North Road between Gabalfa and Cathays. Cardiff East, which is the newest Park and Ride after opening in late 2009, runs to Queen Street station ...
Bus transport in Cardiff, the capital and most populous city in Wales, forms the major part of the city's public transport network, which also includes an urban rail network, Waterbus and international airport. Cardiff is a major city of the United Kingdom and a centre of employment, retail, business, government, culture, media, sport and ...
Avana Bakery (Grangetown) [3] National Stadium, Cardiff Arms Park; Cardiff Central bus station, Central Square (demolished 2008); Central Hotel, Penarth Road/St Mary Street, a Grade II listed hotel which closed after 120 years and was gutted by fire in 2003. [4]
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A stretch of the Vale of Glamorgan Line, on which passenger services were closed under the Beeching Axe, re-opened for passenger service, with services from Cardiff Central to Bridgend, via Barry, Rhoose Cardiff Intl. Airport and Llantwit Major. These services were originally advertised to start in April 2005, but commenced on 12 June 2005.
Location of the City and County of Cardiff in Wales. The list of standardised Welsh place-names, for places in Cardiff, is a list compiled by the Welsh Language Commissioner to recommend the standardisation of the spelling of Welsh place-names, particularly in the Welsh language and when multiple forms are used, although some place-names in English were also recommended to be matched with the ...
Following its recent reopening with a new name (the station was known as "Rhoose" before it closed in 1964), [1] this station now holds the distinction of having the longest name for a station as recognised by National Rail in the UK, in both English (33 letters, excluding spaces) and Welsh (Maes Awyr Rhyngwladol Caerdydd Y Rhws – 28 letters, as dd, ng and rh are single letters in Welsh).