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Eldon Square Bus Station is one of two bus stations serving Newcastle City Centre. It is owned by Newcastle City Council and is managed by Tyne and Wear PTE . [ 1 ] The current glass-roofed bus station was built adjacent to the former, and is accessible via the mall.
The airport is easily accessible by Metro (roughly 5am to 11pm), with up to five trains per hour serving Newcastle upon Tyne, Gateshead and Sunderland, with connections to North Tyneside and South Tyneside. It is also served by bus services [b] from Newcastle upon Tyne, Woolsington, Ponteland and Darras Hall.
The coach station is located on Churchill Street, and is a short walk from Newcastle railway station. It is one of three bus stations in the city centre – the others being Eldon Square and Haymarket. The coach station has five bays, with facilities including a booking office, waiting room, seating and toilet facilities.
Newcastle railway station, New South Wales Metadata This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
An IE 071 class locomotive brings Mk3 coaching stock into Kildare station forming the 14.05 Dublin - Cork passenger service.18 September 1988 Stopping train to Dublin, Kildare station 9 June 1997 A test train is calling at the up platform as a light engine (left) waits on the up main line.28 May 1984
The Angel 21 is a bus service operated by Go North East, which connects Newcastle upon Tyne, Gateshead, Low Fell and Birtley in Tyne and Wear with Chester-le-Street, Durham and Brandon in County Durham. The service is named after Antony Gormley's Angel of the North, which the route passes. [1]
Heworth Bus Station opened in November 1979, along with the British Rail station. It is located above the four platforms, and bordered by Sunderland Road and the A184 . It is served by Go North East 's local bus services, with frequent routes serving Gateshead , as well as Newcastle upon Tyne , South Tyneside and Washington .
Cork: The first 24-hour bus in the Republic of Ireland, route 220, was initiated in Cork city in January 2019. [41] [42] The 220 links the two major satellite towns of Ballincollig and Carrigaline with the city centre and after its half-hourly 23:55, 00:25 and 01:00 departures, operates once an hour between the hours of 01:30 - 05:30. [43]