NightRide (bus service) explained

NightRide
Owner:Transport for NSW
Locale:Sydney, Australia
Transit Type:Bus
Lines:16
Stations:120
Operator:Busways
CDC NSW
Transit Systems NSW
U-Go Mobility

NightRide is a network of bus routes in operation between midnight and 4.30am in Sydney, Australia. The sixteen routes are run by bus operators as listed below and allow for a nightly shutdown of the Sydney Trains suburban rail network. The NightRide network was established in mid-1989 as low-patronage late-night train services were progressively withdrawn.[1] [2] Services follow major roads, and some stops are some distance from the railway stations they replace. In addition, some routes serve stations on multiple railway lines. In the city, most services depart from George Street, above Town Hall station.

Normal bus fares apply to NightRide journeys.[3]

The suspension of train services overnight allows for maintenance to occur on tracks. Passengers reportedly feel safer on buses than mostly-empty trains late at night. However, in 2014, it was reported that patronage on most NightRide routes was falling. The Tourism and Transport Forum has called for 24-hour train operations to resume.[2]

History

The first NightRide routes, to Riverwood, Campbelltown and Sutherland, commenced in June 1989. Services to Penrith, Hornsby and Cronulla began two months later.[4] New services were introduced to Bondi Junction in 2009; and Carlingford and Richmond in 2011.

A city loop route, called N1, was established in 2000 and cancelled two years later.[5]

New contracts for all routes commenced 1 March 2018 with a number of routes going to different operators. The routes then became normal commuter routes under the administration of Transport for NSW instead of Sydney Trains. Changes included N100 Railway Square to Bondi Junction which commenced in 2009 ceasing, replaced by route N91 in conjunction with frequency changes to some routes.[6]

From 23 August 2020, two additional routes, N31 and N92 were introduced, and all N71 services standardised to operate to Richmond.[7]

Network

As of 2023, the NightRide network operations are as below:[8] [9] [10]

Route Origin/destination Replaces Operator First Introduced
N10 U-Go Mobility1989
N11 U-Go Mobility1989
N20 Town Hall to Riverwood via Sydney Airport1989
N30 1989
N31 T2 Leppington Line, T5 Cumberland Line2020
N40 1989
N50 1989
N60 1989
N61 2011
N70 CDC NSW1989
N71 2011
N80 1989
N81 2018
N90 1989
N91 2018
N92 2020
Note: Routes N61 and N81 operate early morning on Friday, Saturday and Sunday only.

Notes and References

  1. Nightride services Fleetline August 1989 page 120
  2. http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/late-night-travellers-vote-with-their-feet-to-dump-nightride-20140308-34e0v.html Late night travellers vote with their feet to dump NightRide
  3. Web site: Transport NSW Adult Opal Fares .
  4. Nightride Bus Service Starts Railway Digest August 1989 page 271
  5. http://www.aptnsw.org.au/cgi-bin/item.cgi?20021026Sat112920.txt Changes to NightRide Buses: 1 November 2002
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20180413102849/https://transportnsw.info/news/2018/nightride-bus-changes NightRide bus changes
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20200810001010/https://transportnsw.info/news/2020/bus-service-changes-in-august Bus service changes in August
  8. Web site: Transport for NSW . Customer Experience Division . Late night services . 2023-09-20 . transportnsw.info . en.
  9. Web site: Timetables Complete GTFS - TfNSW Open Data Hub and Developer Portal . 2023-09-20 . opendata.transport.nsw.gov.au . en.
  10. Web site: Timetable N20 Riverwood to City Town Hall via Airport . 15 October 2023 . transportnsw.info.