MK Metro explained

Parent:Arriva
Headquarters:Milton Keynes
Service Area:Bedfordshire
Buckinghamshire
Northamptonshire
Service Type:Bus operator
Fleet:120 (February 2006)
Operator:Arriva Shires & Essex
Ceo:Nigel Snow
Website:www.mkmetro.co.uk/
www.arrivabus.co.uk/mkstar

MK Metro[1] was a bus company operating in Milton Keynes from 1997 until 2010.

History

In 1997, Stagecoach was ordered by the Office of Fair Trading to divest of its operations in Milton Keynes and Huntingdon. This followed an investigation in 1996 into its acquisition of Cambus Holdings which was deemed to have led to an unacceptable monopoly of bus operations in Cambridgeshire, Corby, East Northamptonshire, Kettering, Wellingborough, Bedford and Mid Bedfordshire.[2]

The assets of Milton Keynes Citybus[3] were purchased on 2 May 1997 by bus entrepreneur Julian Peddle, using a new company Premier Buses Limited[4] both to operate in Huntingdon (under the Premier Buses brand name) and also as a holding company with which to purchase MK Metro.[5] The operation was rebranded as MK Metro with a bright yellow and blue livery introduced.

In February 2006, the business was purchased by Arriva and integrated into its Arriva Shires & Essex subsidiary.[6] [7] The MK Metro brand was retained with a new logo introduced in 2007.

On 25 April 2010, the Arriva brand and livery were introduced. Milton Keynes services began to operate under the sub brand of MK Star, and the change of name coincided with a number of controversial service changes.

Fleet

The fleet ranged from mainly Dennis Darts (high floor and low floor, with a variety of bodywork), to Mercedes-Benz minibuses and Optare Solos. Double-deck Optare Spectras, and Wright Solar bodied Scania L94UBs were also operated.

Fleet summary

Routes

MK Metro ran over 30 services. Most routes passed through or served Central Milton Keynes. However, routes 16 and 30/31 did not. The routes were generally numbered from 1 to 30, although there were some omissions and some routes in the 30s, as well as a new service numbered 300.[8] [9]

The key services were numbered 1 to 8, and ran every 10 to 20 minutes. Key services ran through the busiest parts of the city, for example to Bletchley and the District centres. Intermediate services ran from every 20 minutes up to every hour. These routes cover areas in more detail, for example serving through the grid squares, while key services mostly ran on the main roads. The other routes ran at a frequency of every hour or less. These services linked locations outside Milton Keynes into the city, or linked neighbourhoods into the nearest centre.

Note that this list of routes is for historical interest. It is not a list of the current routes operated by Arriva Shires & Essex.

Former key services

Intermediate services

These routes were operated by MK Metro after its take-over by Arriva, but before the rebranding and new timetable launch on 24 April 2010.

Other former services

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://data.companieshouse.gov.uk/doc/company/02493030 Companies House extract company no 2493030
  2. http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140402142426/http:/www.oft.gov.uk/OFTwork/mergers/register-fair-trading/lieu/stagecoach-holdings Stagecoach Holdings plc and Cambus
  3. http://data.companieshouse.gov.uk/doc/company/01963446 Companies House extract company no 1963446
  4. http://data.companieshouse.gov.uk/doc/company/03339369 Companies House extract company no 3339369
  5. http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/4/31/1823563.pdf Changes to competition law and policies adopted 1997
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20071028062541/http://www.arriva.co.uk/arriva/en/media_centre/press_releases/2006/2006-02-13/ Arriva acquires MK Metro Ltd
  7. http://www.busandcoach.com/news/articles/arriva-acquires-mk-metro-in-56m-deal Arriva acquires MK Metro in £5.6m deal
  8. http://www.milton-keynes.gov.uk/transport/displayarticle.asp?id=57102 Milton Keynes Council – Bus Timetables
  9. http://mkmetro.co.uk/timtables.html here MK Metro – Bus Timetables