Transdev London

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Transdev London is one of many operators of London Buses and is owned by Transdev Group of France, an international transport group, who operate urban, tram and light railway networks worldwide..

Their main address is:

Busways House
Wellington Road
Fulwell
MIDDLESEX
TW2 5NX

Contents

[edit] Company history

London United Busways was set up as a subsidiary of London Buses in 1989. The company was a "reincarnation" of the former London United Tramways, an operator of trams and trolleybuses in west and south west London absorbed by the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933. The company adopted the former tram company's device, based on the coat of arms of the City of London, as its logo. Upon privatisation in 1994, it was purchased by a management buyout and renamed London United.

In 1995 the company purchased Stanwell Buses Ltd (trading as 'Westlink') and took on its routes, vehicles and two garages - located in Hounslow Heath, Middlesex and Kingston-Upon-Thames, Surrey.

In 1997 the bus company was purchased by French transport group Transdev.

In 2003 London United purchased struggling bus operator London Sovereign, part of The Blazefield Group, and has since adapted its livery and vehicles to a similar style to its own. The buyout came with around a dozen routes operated on contract to Transport for London (TfL) as well as two garages at Harrow and Edgware in Middlesex.

In April 2006, the company commenced a rebrand of all of its vehicles with the Transdev name and logo effectivlely removing the London United name. This was completed in September the same year.

[edit] Overview

Transdev London operate approximately 60 routes on contract to TfL (Transport for London) and employs around 600 staff. Transdev also operate services on behalf of Surrey County Council.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] London United

Their legal name is London United Busways Ltd.

[edit] Garages

They have six bus garages.

[edit] Fulwell

Their address is:

Wellington Road
TWICKENHAM
TW2 5NX

This garage holds 107 buses, and runs London bus routes 71, 131, 216, 267, 290, 391, 24-hour routes 65 and 281, and school routes 371, 671, 681, and 691. Fulwell also operate shuttle buses to and from Twickenham Stadium on behalf of the RFU on event days.

[edit] History

When new, the 11 acre site was described as one of the finest plants in the country and was the main depot of London United Tramways with 20 covered tracks. The garage is nowadays divided into two sections, 1 used by Transdev & the other by Tellings-Golden Miller (the latter now owned by Travel London). The TGM side has been used by the Grundy company (manufacturers of metal school dinner trays), London Buses Sales Department (to sell of surplus London vehicles until privatisation in the late 1980’s), and Kelly construction before TGM moved in. Fulwell was the first garage in London to receive trolleybuses, and together with Isleworth was the last to operate them some 31 years later. The last trams operated from the depot in 1935, although some of the tram tracks were, until recently, still visible in the cobbled entrance surface. The garage has never reached it’s capacity, even taking in much of the work from Twickenham (AB) when it closed in 1970, and in 2001 107 buses were allocated. In 1999 the garage housed 13 London Country buses after Arriva Croydon & N. Surrey shut its Leatherhead Garage. The buses on route 85 were operated from the forecourt with Arriva Drivers.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Hounslow

Their address is:

Kingsley Road
HOUNSLOW
TW3

This garage holds 120 buses, and runs London bus routes 9, 27, 81, 110, 111, 120, 203, 222, H32, H37, H98, 24-hour route 27, and Night bus N9.

[edit] History

Hounslow garage was opened by the LGOC in 1913 on the former site of the District Railway's Hounslow Town station. The garage along with many others was requisitioned in the First World War. Hounslow was the subject of two firsts in 1925 and 1930 with the first Pneumatic tyre buses and the original Dennis Dart were allocated respectively. The garage had one problem though, the roof was too low and only open toppers and single deck vehicles could use the depot until the mid 1930s when the roof was raised. A London Transport survey in 1947 found that 92 vehicles were allocated to Hounslow, a garage with a capacity of 72!! This was mainly achieved by parking buses on a plot of land behind the garage that was also used to stand vehicles terminating there on layover. The garage was rebuilt in the early 1950s and included a new bus station in front of the garage. The planned allocation was now up to 120 vehicles, although the allocation in 2002 was 127. With the allocation still high Hounslow runs a number of night services on behalf of other LU garages to enable it to fit the buses into the garage. AV was also the first garage in London to operate a low-floor bus with the arrival of Dennis Lance SLF/Wright Pathfinder LLW1 direct from the Coach & Bus show.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Hounslow Heath

Their address is:

Unit 6 Pullborough Way
Green Lane
HOUNSLOW
TW4

This garage holds 57 buses, and runs London bus routes 116, 411, H22, H23, H91, 24-hour route 285, and school route 641.

[edit] History

Hounslow Heath was the original operating base of Stanwell Buses, a company set up by London Buses just prior to de-regulation. They traded as Westlink, hence the garage code WK, and initially operated routes 116/117/203 which were all joint London/Surrey contracts. Stanwell Buses was taken over by London United in 1999 and recoded HH. The depot has also been extended over the former Travellers Coaches yard next door.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Shepherd's Bush

Their address is:

Wells Road
LONDON
W12

This garage holds 111 buses, and runs London bus routes 49, 24-hour routes 72, 94, 148, 220, and Night bus N97.

[edit] History
This section of a bus-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Stamford Brook

Their address is:

72-74 Chiswick High Road
LONDON
W4

This garage holds 77 buses, and runs London bus routes 9, 27, 272, 283, 391, and 440.

[edit] History

Stamford Brook opened as a bus garage in 1980 after a 2 year project costing some £2Million started in 1978. Originaly built as Chiswick Tram depot, it had lately been used to operate the British Airways bus service between Heathrow Airport and the West London Air Terminal in Kensington. The original plan was to create a temporary home for the R (Riverside) buses and staff whilst that garage was re-built with a view to taking on the workload from Mortlake and Turnham Green which were to close. However this idea was changed and the garage took on the work from Turnham Green which closed and also inherited the garage code V. Following service reductions, Mortlake & Riverside closed in 1983, with some of their work moving to Stamford Brook.

Later that year Stamford Brook took on the A1 & A2 'Airbus' routes following the withdrawal of the existing British airways services from London - Heathrow Airport. These vehicles were transferred in 1994 to West Ramp (which became an outstation of V) leaving the garage with an allocation of MRL's, M's, L's and Darts.

The garage closed in 1996 and became a store for unlicensed vehicles for possible future use, and reopened in 1999 when it was reutilised to cater for increased demand in the area. In 2001 the allocation consisted entirely of Dennis Darts. When route 9 was converted form Routemaster to one person operation, it was moved from Shepards bush to Stamford Brook, and double deckers re-apered at the garage.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Tolworth

Their address is:

Kingston Road
SURBITON
Surrey
KT5 9NU

This garage holds 100 buses, and runs London bus routes 57, 265, 371, 406, 418, 467, K1, K2, K3, K4, K5 and school bus routes 613 and 665.

[edit] History

One of the newest bus garages and built on the site of a former coal yard behind Tolworth railway station.

Tolworth was originally planned in the late 1990s following the closure of Kingston Garage and the announcement that the site was to be part sold off and part converted into the new bus station. A recruitment centre was opened on Tolworth Broadway long before building work ever started.

The sale of the site was brought forward somewhat, and this appeared to catch out the operator as Tolworth Garage was not yet ready. Buses were temporarily parked in a car park in Kingston until the new 100 capacity bus garage finally opened in early 2002. In recent times the yard has been used to store Routemaster's coming out of service.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] London Sovereign

Their legal name is London Sovereign Limited.

[edit] Garages

They have 2 bus garages.

[edit] Edgware

Their address is:

Station Road
Edgware

This garage holds 62 buses, and runs London bus routes 13, 114, 183, 292, and Night route N13.

[edit] History

When Edgware garage was first opened by the LGOC in 1925 it had space for 24 buses, but there was plenty of room adjacent to the Underground station which had recently been built. In 1939 a new building was built next to the original building which was to become the new Bus Station, while the remaining open parking area was used to store vehicles for the trolleybus replacement program. In 1984 a new 100 bus garage was built on old railway land at a cost of £4.5 Million, However in 1992 Edgware garage was planned for closure, as Cricklewood garage was to become a fully functioning garage with new facilities. The outdoor parking area and the bus station then became a midibus base in 1993, with a new bus wash and light maintenance facilities provided in the yard. Then in 1999, London Sovereign, who had won some recent tenders in the North-East London area, took on a 10 year lease on half of Edgware garage and invested in new maintenance facilities which was to replace it's former base at Borehamwood. In late 2000 Metroline moved back into the other half of the garage, making it one of the few garages to be shared by two operators.

London Sovereign can trace its roots back to independent Borehamwood Tranvel Services (BTS), which ran a series of ex-Kelvin Central MCW Metrobuses, as well as new Leyland Olympian/Northern Counties Palatines and a collection of other vehicles. In 1994 it won its biggest London Buses contract, to operate the 13 (Finsbury Park - Aldwych) with leased AEC Routemasters in its orange livery. It then sold out in 1994 to The Blazefield Group's Sovereign subsidiary, and it became Sovereign London. In 2003 it was sold to The Transdev Group, which turned it into London Sovereign.

[edit] Bus types in use

[edit] Harrow

Their address is:

331 Pinner Road
Harrow

This garage holds 39 buses, and runs London bus routes 398, H9, H10, H11, H13, H14, and H17.

[edit] History
This section of a bus-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

[edit] Bus type in use

[edit] See also


Companies operating buses under contract to London Buses

Armchair | Arriva London | Arriva Shires & Essex | Arriva Southern Counties | Blue Triangle

CT Plus | Docklands Buses | Ealing Community Transport | East London | East Thames Buses

First London | London Central | London General | Metrobus | Metroline | NCP-Challenger

Quality Line | Selkent | Sullivan Buses | Thorpes | Transdev London | Travel London | Uno

Also, see London's Bus Garages for operating codes.

[edit] External links