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TfL: Bus ⚓️

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◤ Travel. ✚ Transport. ✚ TfL. TfL: Bus ⚓️ ⚫ UK. ⚫ England. ⬤ London. ☠️ UK-GOV. ⬛ TfL. London Buses. London Bus Routes. Home | Bus routes | Operational details | Service changes | Operators & Garages | Photo gallery Information correct to 19 April 2014 If this date is much more than a week old you are probably looking at an archived version.Try clicking your browser's re-load button. For a full set of official London Buses panel summary timetables in printable PDF format, please visit the Busmap site. Alternatively timetables for all routes, but in a mixture of formats, can be accessed by clicking the route numbers below. The routes are divided up as follows: Main daytime bus network - 1 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 401 507 A10 E1 K1 U1Tram servicesNight buses - N1 102 250Mobility busesSchool buses - 313 601 650Non-TfL routes are amalgamated within the main route groups, but marked non-TfL.

This refers to routes for which TfL is not responsible for marketing and ticketing, not the contractual position of the routes. For a summary of frequencies and operating information about all routes see the details page. Greater London Timetables. TFL Bus Count Down. East London Transit. Bus rapid transit scheme in London East London Transit (ELT) is a part-segregated[1] bus rapid transit system in London, England, operated as part of the London Buses network. The East London Transit opened in phases between 2010 and 2013. The scheme for this system was developed by Transport for London to meet the existing and anticipated demand for public transport in east London caused by the Thames Gateway redevelopment, and has been planned to allow for a possible future upgrade to tram operation.[2] It connects National Rail, London Underground, the Elizabeth line and London Overground stations in the London boroughs of the Redbridge, and Barking and Dagenham with other major population centers, such as Barking Riverside, that were currently only served by bus routes.

The first stage of the scheme opened on 20 February 2010. There are three routes in the East London Transit system. Phase 1 Ilford — Barking — Thames View Estate — Dagenham Dock station Phase 2 Extension to Barking Reach.

TfL: N5 ⚓️

TfL: N8 ⚓️ TfL: 13 ⚓️ TfL: N15 ⚓️ TfL: N9 ⚓️ TfL: N11 ⚓️ TfL: N44 ⚓️ TfL: 5 ⚓️ TfL: 25 ⚓️ TfL: 86 ⚓️ TfL: 108 ⚓️ TfL: 128 ⚓️ TfL: 139 ⚓️ TfL: 204 ⚓️ TfL: 205 ⚓️ TfL: EL3 (387) ⚓️ TfL: 364 ⚓️ ↂ YouTube ▶️ How do London bus numbers work? Buses branded with their own route colours going down well in Barkingside - Latest Ilford News - Ilford Recorder. PUBLISHED: 11:02 20 July 2017 | UPDATED: 11:02 20 July 2017 Ellena Cruse One of the new-look route150 buses.

Picture: TfL TfL Professor Albus Dumbledore, headmaster in the Harry Potter series had a scar the exact shape of the London underground and said it was immensely useful. TfL may have not have drawn inspiration from the imagination of author J.K Rowling but their vision for transport across the capital is similar - having coloured routes on a map helps. With that thought in mind buses in Barkingside were given a trial make over and each route was bestowed with a colour. A tube map for road use, TfL hoped that residents will know that the 150 is blue in the same way that they know the central line is red. Prospective passengers can also see the colour from a distance, and even if they can’t read the number they will know which route the bus serves. “I think they are absolutely amazing, I really don’t know why someone didn’t think of it sooner,” said Marie Dunnage of Barkingside.