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Citybus Limited (Chinese: 城巴有限公司) is a bus company which provides both franchised and non-franchised service in Hong Kong.The franchised route network serves Hong Kong Island, cross-harbour routes (between Hong Kong Island and Kowloon/New Territories), North Lantau (Tung Chung and Hong Kong Disneyland), Hong Kong International Airport, Kowloon, New Territories, Shenzhen Bay Port ...
Citybus route 12A is a bus route on Hong Kong Island. Operated by Citybus , it is a loop route originating from Admiralty (Tamar Street), passing through Cotton Tree Drive , MacDonnell Road , Kennedy Road and Central before returning to Admiralty.
At the time of the opening of Hong Kong International Airport in 1998, the fleet consisted of 62 Dennis Trident 3 double decker buses (fleet numbers 2100-2161), of which 11 had Alexander ALX500 bodies and the other 51 had Duple Metsec DM5000 bodies. Ten MAN NL262/R single deckers (fleet number 1560 - 1569) were added to the fleet in 2006 for ...
via Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge Hong Kong Port A22: Lam Tin station: ↔ Airport: CTB via Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge Hong Kong Port A23: Tsz Wan Shan (North) ↔ Airport: CTB via Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge Hong Kong Port A25: Kai Tak: ↔ Airport: CTB via Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge Hong Kong Port A26: Yau Tong: ↔ ...
Preserved Citybus Network 26 ex-Singapore Leyland Atlantean in November 2022. Network 26 is a network of 26 bus routes on Hong Kong Island, which were previously operated by China Motor Bus (CMB) before being annexed to Citybus by the Government of Hong Kong on 1 September 1993.
Route 13 service was started by China Motor Bus (CMB) on 16 April 1974, when the first bus lane in Hong Kong, the one along westbound Caine Road, came into operation. The fare at that time was 50 cents, without child fare concession or section fare arrangements. At that time, the main bus fleet on the line was Guy Arab Mk V (LX class).
Route 2 was classified as an urban flat-road route in 1972, with a ticket price the cheapest amongst the then three types of CMB routes. In the same year the first rear-powered bus in Hong Kong, a Daimler "Jumbo" (RXF1, later SF1) was assigned to the route. The Central terminus was changed to Hong Kong-Macau Ferry Pier on 1 September 1982.
Route 8 was handed over to NWFB on 1 September 1998 following the end of CMB franchise on Hong Kong Island bus services. Later the Siu Sai Wan terminus was changed to Island Resort . Patronage on the route started to suffer from slow speed after the establishment of express routes 8X in 1996 and later 8P in 1998.