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Formerly route B; Newton Avenue; 452 Camden 36th Street: Camden The Salvation Army Ray & Joan Kroc Corps Community Centers: State Street, Market and Federal Streets, Kaighns Avenue, Baird Boulevard Formerly route C; Newton Avenue; 453 Camden Federal St / Delaware Ave Camden Ferry Avenue PATCO: Broadway No Sunday service; Formerly route E ...
NJ Transit Bus Operations is the bus division of NJ Transit, providing local and commuter bus service throughout New Jersey and adjacent areas of New York State (Manhattan in New York City, Rockland County, and Orange County) and Pennsylvania (Philadelphia and the Lehigh Valley). It operates its own lines as well as contracts others to private ...
The list of New Jersey Transit bus routes has been split into 11 parts: Routes 1 through 99; Routes 100 through 199; Routes 300 through 399; Routes 400 through 449; Routes 450 through 499; Routes 500 through 549; Routes 550 through 599; Routes 600 through 699; Routes 700 through 799; Routes 800 through 880; Routes above 881 (Wheels routes)
US 1 Bus. 2.73: 4.39 US 1 in Trenton: US 1 in Lawrence Township: 1988: current US 1-9 Truck: 4.35: 7.00 US 1-9 in Newark: US 1-9 / Route 139 in Jersey City: 1953: current US 206 Byp. 2.77: 4.46 US 206 in Hillsborough Township: US 206 in Hillsborough Township 2013 [6] current US 322 Bus. 1.53: 2.46 US 322 / Route 45 in Mullica Hill
NJ Transit recently added or modified 11 routes in Essex and Hudson counties that were previously serviced by DeCamp, the oldest private bus company in the state, Coach USA and A&C, all private ...
814 bus route (west of Bonhamtown) 813 bus route (east of Bonhamtown) 5 Rahway Perth Amboy: Westfield: 7 Carteret junction with Newark-Trenton Fast Line: Carteret: part of the 62 bus route 9 Highland Park New Brunswick: Piscatawaytown: roughly part of the 810 bus route (east of downtown New Brunswick) 11 Elizabeth Newark: Elizabeth: 13 Easton ...
The surface-level bus transfer center opened on May 17, 1989 as Camden Transportation Center and was renamed in 1994 for Walter Rand, a former New Jersey State Senator, who specialized in transportation issues while serving in both houses of the New Jersey Legislature. River Line service began on March 15, 2004.
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]