Bus transport in Cardiff explained

Bus transport in Cardiff, the capital and most populous city in Wales, forms the major part of the city's public transport network, which also includes an urban rail network, Waterbus and international airport. Cardiff is a major city of the United Kingdom and a centre of employment, retail, business, government, culture, media, sport and higher education.

Most of the city's comprehensive bus network is operated by Cardiff Bus, which is owned by Cardiff Council. The main hub and terminus of the network was Cardiff Central bus station, which closed for redevelopment of the site in the autumn of 2015. The new Cardiff Bus Interchange opened in June 2024.

Operators such as Stagecoach South Wales and Newport Bus link the city with other urban areas in South Wales. Adventure Travel operates services including the Fflecsi demand responsive service in north Cardiff. TrawsCymru operates a long-distance route to Aberystwyth, Cardiff Airport (currently suspended) and West Wales, while National Express, Megabus and FlixBus operate long-distance coaches to towns and cities throughout Wales, Scotland and England.

History

Trams

See also: Cardiff Corporation Tramways. Horse buses ran in the city from 1845 to 1909 and horse trams from 1872 to 1904. The first tram route ran from High Street in the city centre to the Cardiff Docks and was operated by the Cardiff Tramway Company.[1] In 1898, Cardiff County Borough Council obtained Parliamentary powers to take over all the tramways in the area and to launch electric trams. The new routes formally opened in May 1902 with the first recorded accident later that month – a collision with a cyclist. More than 23 million passengers were carried in 1904, up from 18 million the previous year. When Cardiff became a city in 1905, 131 electric trams were operating on the network, mainly focusing on the busy Cardiff Docks.[2] In 1928, the network peaked at 142 cars and routes covering 19.5 miles (31.3 km). By 1929, the tram network stretched from Victoria Park in the west, to Grangetown and Cardiff Docks in the south, to Roath and Splott in the east, and to Gabalfa in the north.

The council initially refused to allow motor buses to operate in the city, but reversed this decision in 1910 and operated its own from 1920. 81 tramcars were also introduced by Cardiff Corporation Transport to negotiate the city's low railway bridges. By 1939, these vehicles were becoming worn out and it was decided to phase out tramcars.

Trolleybuses and motor buses

See main article: Trolleybuses in Cardiff. In 1942, trolleybuses began to replace tramcars. The last tram service ran to Whitchurch in February 1950, making it the last place in Britain to commence trolleybus operation after Glasgow.[3] Trolleybus routes were generally the same as tram routes although extensions were made. The furthest and final extension of the network came in 1955, to Ely, where trams had never run. At this point, the system peaked at 79 vehicles and 18 route miles.

In 1959, the Cardiff Corporation Transport (later City of Cardiff Transport) routes, with trolleybus routes in bold, were

Trolleybuses stopped on Wood Street, rather than at Cardiff Central bus station. A full transition to motor buses began in 1962 and was completed by 1970, bringing to an end 68 years of electric traction on the streets of Cardiff. The city has been served by motor buses ever since. Cardiff had the largest municipal bus fleet in South Wales with 253 buses. The fleet of 1960s and 70s maroon and cream double-deckers included AEC Regent V, Daimler Fleetline and Guy Arab V. The company also operated single deckers including AEC Swift.

Other operators

Between the 1960s and 1980s, Cardiff had many small coach operators:[4] [5]

Western Welsh was formed in 1929 and grew to cover an area from St Davids in West Wales to the English border, operating 319 buses in its South Wales fleet by 1970. In 1978 it became National Welsh/Cymru Cenedlaethol which also ran Red & White. The two companies closed in 1992.

Neath & Cardiff's brown and red AEC Reliance fleet operated to towns to the west, to Bridgend, Neath and Swansea in the 1970s. Its coaches were known as brown bombers'.

In June 1970, Alan Barrington Smith operated the 59 service from Newport to Cardiff, previously operated by Davies and Baldwin and Red & White, using Bristol vehicles. This route was acquired by Smiths in 1972 and incorporated into their route 31 that circled Newport, but dropping the extension to Cardiff.

CK Coaches Ltd was formed in 1974. In 1981, it gained two routes in the capital, charging lower fares and offering the first competition for the Cardiff municipal fleet within the city since 1927. Leyland buses were bought from London Transport (Daimler Fleetlines) and Leicester City Transport for these routes; one of these was the 54 to Cyncoed, which had a white and orange livery similar to that of Cardiff Bus, but made more use of the white colour. Its blue and white double-deckers served the heavily populated eastern suburb of Llanrumney. CK Coaches later operated a route to Llanedeyrn, and used Wood Street in the city centre rather than the main stands of Central station. The company's licences were revoked on 31 March 1982, ceasing the services.

Falconer and Watts operated tours and excursions, private hire and some contracts from Llanishen, a suburb to the north of Cardiff from 1919 to 1982, when they were taken over by Warners Fairfax of Tewkesbury.[6]

Thomas Motor Services, a Barry-based company, at one time operated the sole bus link between Barry and Cardiff via Dinas Powys. Its Leyland Tigers ran on the route 304 from 1959 until 1970, with Leyland Leopards taking over until 1982. Thomas continued to operate the route using coaches.

Greyhound's fleet consisted of around a dozen coaches in a blue and ivory livery. Some were used for local school contracts, such as at St Teilo's in the Penylan area of Cardiff. Coastal Continental Coach Hire, which ceased trading in 2008, operated Leyland Atlanteans in a red and cream colour on school routes for Ysgol Gyfun Gymraeg Glantaf in Llandaff North.

Bus stops

Over 300 city bus stops have passenger information panels that display the estimated arrival times of bus services.[7] This information can also be found online.[8]

School buses

Many school buses are operated by companies such as Adventure Travel, Cardiff Bus and Edwards Coaches. These are operated by school coaches or low floor double-deckers.

Cardiff Central bus station

Cardiff Central bus station, on Wood Street, was formerly the hub of the city's and South Wales' bus and coach network. With 34 stands, it was the largest bus station in the city and in Wales. It was located adjacent to Cardiff Central railway station, forming a major bus-rail-cycle-taxi interchange.

Demolition began in 2008 with the terminus building being demolished. Before work began, there were 8 concourses lettered A–F and W (on Wood Street) with each concourse having numbered stands. Then, the stands were numbered B1–F2, JA–JD and JT–JQ.

The station handled the vast majority of bus and coach services that run in and through the city. Cardiff Bus accounted for 72 per cent of all bus services that stopped at the station by frequency.[9]

Eating and drinking facilities, such as a Burger King and other shops and bus company offices, faced the concourses on Central Square. Taxi ranks were located on both sides of the station. Toilets and a newsagent were located at stand A, which was demolished in summer 2008 as part of the redevelopment of the station. Some services remained available in the adjacent Cardiff Central railway station.

On 1 August 2015, the remaining parts of the bus station were closed and demolished as a part of wider developments in the central Cardiff area. A remodelled Central Square and BBC Cymru Wales New Broadcasting House now occupy the site.

Several schemes for a replacement bus station were proposed and scrapped until a final scheme was agreed between the Welsh Government, financiers Legal & General and developers Rightacres in 2019.[10] The new £89 million, 14-bay bus station[11] is currently under construction by ISG Ltd, adjoining Central Square and facing the southern end of Westgate Street. It forms part of The Interchange, a curved eight-storey building which will include 318 for-rent apartments, two floors of office space and a retail unit on the ground floor.[12] It is expected to be completed by the end of 2023.[13]

City centre

Most city bus services call at other significant bus stops in the centre.[14] [15] All city centre bus stops have a two letter code and most are found in clusters.

Interchanges and integration

Cardiff's transport network also includes rail, taxi, cycle, water and air transport.Cardiff Central bus station was located next to Cardiff Central railway station, facilitating bus-rail interchanges. Many bus services stop at the 20 railway stations within the city.

The Cardiff Waterbus connects with bus services at Central Station and at Cardiff Bay.

The T9 TrawsCymru bus service connected the city centre to Cardiff Airport but was suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and is yet to be reintroduced.[16]

Local services and operators

Cardiff Bus

Cardiff Bus is the dominant bus operator in Cardiff and also serves Penarth, Sully, Barry and Llantwit Major. Its network consists of 64 routes[17] using Scania OmniCity, Scania N230UD, East Lancs Olympus, Alexander Dennis Enviro200, Enviro300 and Enviro400 MMC, Dennis Dart MPDs LMPDs and SPDs and Mercedes-Benz Citaros. Cardiff Bus carries 100,000 passengers daily, has a turnover of £27million and employs around 720 people.[18] The fleet and drivers are managed against a timetable using software systems supplied by UK based software supplier Omnibus Systems,[19] which allows the real-time digital information displays positioned at many stops around the city, to inform people when the next bus is due and alerting waiting passengers of any delays. Raised kerbs have been installed at the majority of stops.

In addition to scheduled city buses, Cardiff Bus is contracted to operate some school routes in the city.[20]

A smart card for Cardiff Bus passengers was trialled in spring 2009[21] and launched as the Iff card in October 2010.[22] In March 2018, Cardiff Bus introduced contactless payment across its services.[23]

In January 2022, Cardiff Bus began to introduce 36 Yutong E12 electric buses to the city, part funded by the UK Department for Transport's ultra-low emissions bus scheme.[24]

Stagecoach

Stagecoach South Wales, which has its headquarters in Cwmbran, operates routes mainly to the South Wales Valleys from central Cardiff.

It also operates the TrawsCymru T4 between Cardiff and Newtown in the county of Powys in Mid Wales.

Its fleet of over 400 buses is one of the most modern in the country, and includes many low-floor, easy access buses with step-free entrances, dedicated buggy areas and wheelchair access.

It does not issue return tickets. However it issues a megarider pass for all day travel, valid from four weeks until a year.[25] The Cardiff zone stretches to Taffs Well, Creigiau, Castleton and Travellers Rest.[26]

In 2009, Stagecoach launched Wi-Fi on its X4 Cardiff-Hereford ADL/MAN Enviro 300 buses, which are themselves new, replacing older coaches that operated on the route.[27]

Then in 2015, Stagecoach replaced the ADL/MAN Enviro 300's with new ADL/Scania Enviro 300's due to MAN Enviro 300's poor reliability.

First Cymru

First Cymru, the principal operator in South West Wales, operates inter-urban services west of Cardiff, and three services within the city.They currently operate the TrawsCymru T1C between Cardiff and Aberystwyth in Mid Wales (until April 2018), the X10 Swansea to Cardiff Express (previously called the Greyhound 100) between Cardiff and Swansea, and the Cymru Clipper X2 between Cardiff and Bridgend and Porthcawl.

Newport Bus

Newport Bus, the principal operator in neighbouring Newport, operates an hourly express service between Cardiff, University Hospital of Wales, and Newport. It also operates a non-express service to and from Newport jointly with Cardiff Bus. Like Cardiff Bus, it is a municipal bus company, owned by Newport City Council.

City Sightseeing

City Sightseeing operates timetabled open top double-decker bus tours around the city centre and the Bay, including the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff Castle, the Civic Centre, the National Museum of Wales and Alexandra Gardens on the route. The tour takes 50 minutes[28]

Adventure Travel

Adventure Travel, formerly the NAT Group, operate the X1, X5 and X8 Crosscity services, with the X1 being launched in 2015 which connect the western, central and eastern parts of the city, serving populous areas such as Pentwyn and Llanedeyrn, as well as Canton.

NAT Group updated their services in Cardiff in March 2017; The X11 (no longer operates) had received an extension to Grangetown and Cardiff Bay, and the X8 service was launched connecting Thornhill, Llanishen, Birchgrove, and Maindy to Cardiff City Centre, as well as leading to Cardiff Bay, providing a northern-southern Crosscity service for the capital.

Their latest addition to the Crosscity services was in early September 2017, and it introduced the X5, which now operates between Cardiff City Centre and Newport, serving many new stops in Adamsdown and Trowbridge. They also altered the X11 service's southern terminus, changing the route from the city centre from Cardiff Bay to serve Canton along with the X1, and extending further west to Pentrebane.

They also operate the TrawsCymru T9 Cardiff Airport Express between Cardiff Bay, Cardiff City Centre and Cardiff Airport, until the route was suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020,[16] the TrawsCymru T1C between Cardiff and Aberystwyth in Mid Wales from April 2018, as well as Service 304 to Barry and some home-school coaches in the Cardiff area. In partnership with Transport for Wales, and the local council, they also operate the G1 Fflecsi route.

Edwards

Edwards Coaches operates the 400 bus service between Beddau and Greyfriars Road bus stop in Cardiff.

National operators and services

Megabus

Megabus is a low-cost no-frills intercity coach network in the United Kingdom operated by Stagecoach that commenced operations in 2003, including non-stop services to London in a journey time of three and a half hours. Other longer routes to London stop in Newport and Bristol. Cardiff is also linked by Megabus coach to Newcastle via Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Middlesbrough and Sunderland.

National Express

Birmingham based National Express has operated |intercity coach services across the United Kingdom since 1972 and sub-contracts to Edwards Coaches the operation of routes from Cardiff to:

FlixBus

In April 2021, German-owned low-cost coach operator FlixBus launched a twice-daily service connecting Cardiff with Swansea, Bristol and London.[29]

TrawsCymru

See main article: TrawsCymru. TrawsCymru are a set of routes, set up by the Welsh Government but operated by private bus companies using the TrawsCymru branding. This service is similar to a previous service, TrawsCambria.

Service T1C launched in December 2016 on a six-month trial basis, is operated by First Cymru and connects Cardiff with Carmarthen and Aberystwyth. It is a replacement for the former 701 service that ceased operating in August 2016 when its final operator, Lewis Coaches, ceased trading. Unlike the 701 however, the T1C only operates once a day in and out of Cardiff, does not operate on Sundays, does not stop at Port Talbot and a single deck city bus is used, not coaches.

Service T4 launched in May 2011 and is operated by Stagecoach South Wales. It connects Cardiff with Brecon and Newtown and operates up to 7 times a day.

Service T9, also known as the Cardiff Airport Express, launched in August 2013 and is operated by New Adventure Travel. It connects the centre of Cardiff with Cardiff Airport and operates up to every 20 minutes. When launched, this route was originally operated by First Cymru. It was suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and is yet to be reintroduced.[16]

Snap

Snap operated an on-demand service that chartered coaches from local operators. It provided services from several pick-up points in and around Cardiff to various cities in England.[30] It stopped operating in March 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic and announced in August 2021 that it would not be restarting.[31] [32]

Other bus services

Bus passes

Residents of Cardiff (and Wales) who are over sixty or suffering from certain disabilities, injuries or impediments are entitled to a bus pass enabling free travel across most bus services in Wales. For the Cardiff area, the following buses are exempt from this facility: National Express (including Airport Buses 200, 201 and 202), Eurolines and Megabus.

Park and ride

Park and Ride services run every weekend in Cardiff throughout the year. The cost includes bus travel to the City Centre, usually less than many multi-storey car parks. There are four Park and Ride services in the city:

The Park and Ride services are part of Cardiff council's Sustainable Travel City initiative, which is partly funded by the Welsh Assembly Government. There are plans to extend the number of space from 340 to 1,100 due to its sudden increase in usage.[33]

Iff card

See main article: Iff card. Iff card is a contactless smart card introduced by Cardiff Bus in October 2010, allowing customers to travel on its services after having pre-paid. The first 30,000 cards were issued free of charge and pre-loaded with £3 of credit, after which the cards will be charged at £5.

An amount of money is electronically loaded onto the card, either upon boarding a bus or at the Cardiff Bus customer service centre. A passenger then chooses a ticket type. The card can also be used as a season ticket. The card should be topped-up when the balance is low, however the card allows the customer to acquire a negative balance up to £3.[34]

The card can be topped-up in units of £1, £2, £3, £4, £5, £10, £15 and £20 up to maximum amount of £50. The card may be used by persons aged between 6 and 60. The Iff card cannot be used to pay a partial amount. The card would be cancelled if not used for a continuous period of one year[35]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gould, David. Cardiff's Electric Tramways. The Oakwood Press. Oxford. 1996. 0-85361-487-3.
  2. Book: Davies, Roger. Streets of Cardiff. Ian Allan Publishing. Hersham, Surrey. 2006. 0-7110-3098-7.
  3. Book: Lockwood, Stephen. Cardiff Trolleybuses. Middleton Press. Midhurst, West Sussex. 2005. 1-904474-64-0.
  4. Book: Booth, Gavin. Bus Operators 1970s Midlands and Wales. Ian Allan Publishing. Hersham, Surrey. 2006. 978-0-7110-3035-0.
  5. Book: Wiltshire, Andrew. Independent Buses of South & West Wales. Bernard McCall. Bristol. 2009. 978-1-902953-43-4.
  6. Web site: Robert Falconer.
  7. Web site: Steve Harrhy . Home, Bus Stop Real Time Travel Information, Bus stop Real-time Travel Information . Cardiff . 24 August 2006 . 9 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110609183635/http://www.cardiff.gov.uk/content.asp?nav=2870%2C4048%2C4187%2C4237&parent_directory_id=2865 . 9 June 2011 .
  8. Web site: Real Time Information – Cardiff . Cardiff.acislive.com . 9 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090427161214/http://cardiff.acislive.com/ . 27 April 2009 .
  9. Web site: The Office of Fair Trading: Cardiff Bus . Oft.gov.uk . 9 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090416061755/http://oft.gov.uk/advice_and_resources/resource_base/ca98/decisions/cardiffbus . 16 April 2009 .
  10. Web site: Mosalski. Ruth. 2019-07-30. Cardiff's bus station is finally going to be built - but won't open for another four years. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline. en.
  11. Web site: Barry. Sion. 2019-12-05. Cardiff's new bus station will be eight storeys tall and cost £89m. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline. en.
  12. Web site: Lewis. Ffion. 2021-12-01. Cardiff's long-awaited bus station finally taking shape as windows added to towering development. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline. en.
  13. Web site: Completion of long-awaited Cardiff bus station delayed again. Ffion. Lewis. 20 July 2023. WalesOnline. 5 August 2023.
  14. Web site: Archived copy . 8 May 2009 . 9 June 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110609183659/http://www.cardiff.gov.uk/ObjView.asp?Object_ID=9610&language= . dead .
  15. Web site: Archived copy . 8 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090521040951/http://www.cardiffbus.com/pdfs/cardiff_centremap.pdf . 21 May 2009 . dead .
  16. Web site: TrawsCymru T9. 7 September 2022.
  17. Web site: Archived copy . 8 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090205234954/http://cardiffbus.com/pdfs/networkmap.pdf . 5 February 2009 . dead .
  18. Web site: Staff turnover plummets to record low levels. https://web.archive.org/web/20150610221345/http://www.wtuclearn.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=86&Itemid=49. dead. 10 June 2015. TUC Wales. 2 November 2008.
  19. Web site: Case Study – Cardiff Bus (Bws Caerdydd). omnibus-systems.co.uk. 2 November 2008.
  20. Web site: Nina Stedman . Home, School Bus Routes . Cardiff . 9 October 2008 . 9 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110609183739/http://www.cardiff.gov.uk/content.asp?nav=2869%2C3047%2C3063%2C5167&parent_directory_id=2865 . 9 June 2011 .
  21. Web site: James. David. 2009-01-28. Cardiff set for its own Oyster card. 9 May 2009. WalesOnline. en.
  22. Web site: 2010-10-06. Cardiff Bus smartcards are unveiled. 7 September 2022. BBC News. en.
  23. Web site: Hughes. Marcus. 2018-03-08. Cardiff Bus is introducing contactless payments this month. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline. en.
  24. Web site: Thomas. Elizabeth. 2022-01-14. First look at new zero-emission electric buses as they're launched in Cardiff. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline. en.
  25. http://www.stagecoachbus.com/shop/index.php?action=&sid=20090512224948-7319&product_id=14&location_id=180&x=67&y=3{{Dead link|date=June 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  26. Web site: Stagecoach - Home . 10 November 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091002094320/https://www.stagecoachbus.com/ . 2 October 2009 .
  27. Web site: Stagecoach new buses offer commuters internet access. 19 April 2009.
  28. Web site: City Sightseeing Worldwide – the world's largest open top bus tour operator . City-sightseeing.com . 9 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090321002541/http://www.city-sightseeing.com/index.phtml?command=search&clear-search=true&destinations=Cardiff . 21 March 2009 . dead .
  29. Web site: Barry. Sion. 2021-04-15. New Swansea to Cardiff coach service launches. 7 September 2022. WalesOnline Business Live. en.
  30. Web site: Get a Coach to Cardiff . . 9 June 2020.
  31. Web site: Twitter:SnapTravelTech. 19 August 2021.
  32. Web site: Why Snap's not coming back. Thomas Ableman. 19 August 2021. Freewheeling.
  33. Web site: New park and ride is a 'resounding success'. 4 December 2009.
  34. Web site: Cardiff Bus | Iff. https://web.archive.org/web/20101007204320/http://www.cardiffbus.com/smartcard.shtml. dead. 7 October 2010.
  35. Web site: Cardiff Bus | Iff: Terms and Conditions. https://web.archive.org/web/20101010044719/http://www.cardiffbus.com/terms_conditions.htm. dead. 10 October 2010.