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The rapid transit system was then revisited two decades later and proposed during the Singapore-Malaysia Leaders' Retreat on 24 May 2010. The RTS would link Tanjung Puteri, Johor Bahru and Woodlands, Singapore, aiming to ease traffic congestion on the Johor–Singapore Causeway and enhance connectivity between the two countries. It was targeted ...
The operator is based in Johor Bahru, and is the largest bus operator in Johor. It operates cross-border public buses into Singapore through the Johor–Singapore Causeway and Malaysia–Singapore Second Link. The company also operates local public buses in the Klang Valley, Malacca and Selangor, as well as express buses connecting these ...
Singapore Changi Airport: Johor Bahru CIQ [64] Cross-Border Service Transtar Travel [65] [66] Cross-border bus services. TS3 Marina Square: TS6 Buona Vista (The Star Vista) GP Sentral Bus Terminal [64] TS8 Resorts World Sentosa: Johor Bahru CIQ [64] SJE Queen Street Bus Terminal Larkin Sentral — — LCS1 [67] Tampines Avenue 9 [AM Peak]/
The Johor–Singapore Causeway is a 1.056-kilometre (0.66 mi) causeway consisting of a combined railway and motorway crossing that links Malaysia's second largest city of Johor Bahru across the Straits of Johor to the district and town of Woodlands in Singapore.
Queen Street Bus Terminal (location: ), also known as Ban San Bus Terminal, is a bus terminal in Singapore. Queen Street Bus Terminal serves as the terminal for cross-border bus and taxi services to Johor Bahru, Malaysia. [citation needed] It opened on 13 October 1985.
The Larkin Sentral (Jawi: لرکين سينترل) (formerly Larkin Bus and Taxi Terminal) is a bus terminal located in Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia. It has direct bus services to and from many cities and towns in Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore and Hat Yai in Thailand. This T-shaped terminal has three levels and about 50 bus bays.
Completed along with the other Woodlands extension stations on 10 February 1996, it is the largest among the stations, designed to handle a large volume of visitors to the Singapore Turf Club. Designed with a kampung-style roof, the station is integrated with other transportation modes and serves cross-border bus services to Johor Bahru.
The Johor-Singapore Causeway, built in the 1920s to connect Johor Bahru in Johor, Malaysia to Woodlands in Singapore, carries a road and a railway line. The Tuas Second Link, a bridge further west, was completed in 1996 and links Tuas in Singapore to Tanjung Kupang in Johor.