Gaia Trafikk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gaia Trafikk AS | |
---|---|
Fate | Merged |
Successor | Tide |
Founded | 1998 |
Defunct | 2006 |
Location | Bergen, Norway |
Industry | Transport |
Gaia Trafikk was the largest public transportation provider in Bergen and Os, Norway until it merged with HSD forming Tide.
Gaia was formed by the 1998 merger of Pan Trafikk, the bus company serving northern and southern Bergen, and Bergen Sporvei, the company serving Bergen's inner city. The route network covered most of Bergen, but the western suburbs were serviced by Hardanger Sunnhordlandske Dampskipsselskap (HSD). This resulted in a fixed fleet between the yellow buses of Bergen Sporvei and the red buses of Pan Trafikk being operated by the same company, and coordinated, making a more user-friendly bus system. The largest owners of Gaia was Bergen City Council (43.6%), HSB (7.9%), Yrkestrafikkforbundet (7.3%) and Os City Council (7.3%).[1]
Among the fleet of about 300 buses are 8 trolleybuses (two of them are dual-mode buses), making Bergen the only city in north-west Europe to have them. Gaia fleet also contained 36 natural gas buses.
Gaia Trafikk is merged with HSD forming the company Tide. The general assembly at HSD approved the merger on June 29, 2006, while the approval at Gaia came on July 17, 2006. The new company is listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange. Both British Arriva and the Norwegian Nettbuss had announced a wish to buy Gaia, indicating a price around NOK 400 million.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Gaia Trafikk. Eierstruktur (Norwegian). Retrieved on 2007-01-24.
- ^ Bergens Tidende. Lang vei (Norwegian).
[edit] External links
- Official website (Norwegian)