Green Line Coaches

Green Line is a commuter coach brand in the Home counties of England. It is owned by Arriva.

Reading Buses Alexander Dennis Enviro400 on Hammersmith Bridge Road in January 2018
ParentArriva
Founded9 July 1930
Service areaGreater London, Home counties
Service typeCoach services
HubsGreen Line Coach Station
OperatorArriva Shires & Essex
Reading Buses
Websitewww.greenline.co.uk

Green Line had its origin in the network of coach services established by the London General Omnibus Company (LGOC) in the 1920s and 1930s. After World War II, the network was part of London Transport Executive/London Transport Board, and from 1970 to 1986 was operated by London Country Bus Services.

History

Preserved Metro Cammell bodied AEC Regal IV
Plaxton Prima bodied DAF SB3000 in April 2008
Wright Gemini 2 bodied Volvo B9TL in October 2013

Early history

Green Line Coaches Limited was formed on 9 July 1930 by the LGOC, which from 1927 had built up a network of coach services from London to towns up to 30 miles away, comprising 60 vehicles on eight routes. These services were largely started in response to the emergence of numerous small independent operators, often running single routes. As well as express services operated by LGOC, some were run by subsidiary companies such as East Surrey Traction & Autocar Services and some on LGOC's behalf by the National Omnibus & Transport Company. The Green Line livery and fleetname was rolled out across the existing express services.[1][2]

New services quickly followed, with the number of routes increasing to 27 by October 1931 and the number of coaches to 275. Green Line also began to acquire some of its independent competitors. The laying over of coaches in central London began to create congestion, so, to relieve this, some routes were linked to form cross-London services, and a short-lived coach station was opened in Poland Street, Soho at the end of 1930.[1][2]

On 1 July 1933, Green Line passed to the new London Passenger Transport Board and competing services within the London Passenger Transport Area were absorbed into the network. Various vehicles of numerous different types were inherited, and much effort was made in replacing these with a standardised fleet of vehicles from late 1936. Poland Street coach station was closed, and almost all routes were linked to run across London.[1][3]

Post-war era

Services were suspended during World War II, resuming in February 1946. More services were added, and the routes were given numbers in the 700 series. Ridership increased to a peak of 36 million passenger journeys a year between 1957 and 1960. In 1962, AEC Routemaster double-deck coaches were introduced on some routes, notably route 721 which ran every 12 minutes at peak times, and route 704 conveying tourists to Windsor and Royal Tunbridge Wells.[4][5][6][7] Orbital coach routes commenced:[8]

In 1970, London Transport became the responsibility of the Greater London Council, so control of Green Line was passed from London Transport to London Country Bus Services, part of the state-owned National Bus Company. Patronage was declining, partly as a result of increasing car use and quicker parallel rail services, and the last cross-London routes ceased in 1979.[1]

The Transport Act 1980 deregulated coach services, and Green Line expanded services beyond its traditional area, to Cambridge (route 797), Oxford (routes 290 and 790, in conjunction with the Oxford Bus Company), Northampton and Brighton. New airport services also commenced:

By this time, the orbital services 724 and 726 (a variant of the 725) had been revised to serve Heathrow.[8] Green Line also became a National Express operator.

Privatisation

In 1986, London Country was divided into four operating companies to prepare for privatisation.[9] They were sold separately, and ownership of the Green Line network became fragmented, with only a few routes surviving. The airport services passed to Jetlink and are now operated by National Express.

The orbital route 726 was taken over by London Regional Transport in a reduced form and in April 2005 was renumbered London Buses route X26.[10] By the mid-1990s, Arriva had become the owner of most of the London Country successor companies and became the owner of the Green Line brand. It licensed the brand to other operators: First Berkshire & The Thames Valley (700, 701 and 702), New Enterprise Coaches (routes 781 and 784 from 2005 to 2009) and Stephensons of Essex (routes X1 and X10 from 2002 until 2008).

Following closure of their Bracknell depot in 2015, First Berkshire services were revised and routes 700 and 701 were discontinued. Reading Buses took over operation of route 702 on 24 December 2017. On 8 May 2018, the 702 was withdrawn between Legoland Windsor and Bracknell. On the same day, route 703 was introduced under the Green Line brand, running between Heathrow Terminal 5 and Bracknell, replacing the withdrawn section.[11]

Current services

Reading Buses

Arriva Shires & Essex:

gollark: No, you're wrong.
gollark: Or out of game and download it, I suppose.
gollark: You write code in the game. On the ingame computers.
gollark: What? You wouldn't have to.
gollark: But it *can* do what you want'.

References

  1. History Archived 14 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine Green Line Coach Services
  2. Jones, DWK; Davis, BJ (1980). Green Line 1930-1980. Reigate: London Country Bus Services. pp. 4–17. ISBN 978-0-905009-02-5.
  3. Jones, DWK; Davis, BJ (1980). Green Line 1930-1980. Reigate: London Country Bus Services. pp. 22–35. ISBN 978-0-905009-02-5.
  4. The Coach RMs Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Country Bus
  5. The Long Coaches Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Country Bus
  6. Routemaster Double-deck Coaches for Green Line Routes Archived 2 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Commercial Motor 29 June 1962
  7. Larger Routemaster Coaches for Green Line Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Commercial Motor 30 October 1964
  8. Green Line Coach Routes 724-799 Archived 16 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine E Plates
  9. Out on its own Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Commercial Motor 6 December 1986 page 54
  10. "Slow death of a Green Line orbital" Buses |issue 603 June 2005 page 19
  11. Reading Buses
  12. Greenline
  13. Greenline
  14. Route 724 timetable Greenline
  15. Routes 755 & 757 timetable Archived 10 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine Greenline
  16. Route 758 timetable Archived 18 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine Greenline
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