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Bus Éireann introduced the first NGV on 17 July 2012 in Cork. It operated on the 216 (Cork University Hospital - City Centre - Monkstown) route until mid-August 2012 on a trial that was undertaken in partnership with Ervia. The Eco-city bus was made by MAN. [50]
Bus Éireann route number 350 links Fanore to several locations: Ennis, Ennistymon, Cliffs of Moher, Doolin, Lisdoonvarna, Kinvara and Galway. There are a number of journeys each way daily. Onward rail and bus connections are available at Ennis and Galway.
Neither firm retained these routes, with Go-Ahead Ireland winning both contracts [2] [3] Some additional routes are tendered where a need is identified by the National Transport Authority. These are public service obligation routes and occasionally replace sections of withdrawn or altered Bus Éireann Expressway services.
Intercity bus travel in Serbia, as well as in other countries of former Yugoslavia, is very popular in proportion to travel by rail and air. In some regions, data has shown that intercity bus routes have transported over ten times the number of passengers carried by intercity trains on the same competing routes. [56]
Regional bus services from Parnell Place Bus Station; Destination Operator Route number Via Knockraha: Bus Éireann: 221 [6] Tivoli, Glanmire, Riverstown, Hazelwood Kinsale: Bus Éireann: 226 [7] Cork Airport: Cork Airport: Bus Éireann: 226A [7] Macroom: Bus Éireann: 233 [8] Rylane: Bus Éireann: 235 [9] Cloghroe, Donoughmore, Stuake ...
The group first ordered 100 Enviro300 bodied MAN 18.240s in 2007, [14] with the first eight production Enviro300s entering service with Stagecoach in Perth to launch the Stagecoach Goldline bus service in October 2007. [15] Further orders boosted the total number of MAN-chassised Enviro300s operated by Stagecoach Group companies to over 350.
The estimate, which amounts to $7,900 per foreign national in the city, includes spending from the city, schools, and health care systems. Denver has seen an influx of almost 43,000 migrants since ...
The M1 Dublin–Belfast motorway passes along the eastern edge of the town and is the main route to/from Dublin City, Drogheda, Dundalk, Newry and Belfast. The M50 Dublin semi-orbital motorway passes to the south of the town and provides connections with all of the other main roads out of Dublin (N2, N3, N4, N7, N81 and M11).